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  1. Outputs

Teaching Action as a Space for the Enhancement of Diversity Through Educational Technologies: A Critical-Reflective Approach

Chapter
Publication Date:
2025
abstract:
From an inclusive perspective, teaching practice (Paparella, 2014; Parmigiani, 2010) -
understood as the teacher’s theoretical-practical-reflective knowledge or as the science of
teaching-learning (Damiano, 2012; 1999) - represents a moment and space for promoting the
valorization of anthropological and cultural diversity. However, pedagogically and ethically
misaligned approaches often impede the development of transformative potential. Contexts
intended for students’ holistic growth can devolve into spaces of necrodidactics (Liverano,
2025; Barca, Liverano & Romeo, 2025), generating exclusionary education. This drift
produces hegemonic and subaltern dynamics characterized by paralyzing discrimination,
confinement, and systemic marginality. True education, conversely, fosters critical
autonomy, ethically guides the use of knowledge, cultivates intellectual emancipation, and
liberates‒or, as Noam Chomsky (2017; 2019) argues, "helps people think for themselves"
and "assume intellectual autonomy." Developing an ethically and pedagogically grounded
culture prepares individuals for deep hermeneutical engagement with events, interpreting
their formative significance while maintaining epistemic openness to the unprecedented,
emerging phenomena, and scientific progress. For instance, an older teacher with robust
pedagogical training may demonstrate greater readiness to integrate innovative educational
technologies than a younger but less culturally structured colleague, despite the latter’s
chronological proximity to the age of artificial intelligence. This underscores how epistemic
competence determines adaptability in critical situations. Anthropological nature and
personal culture thus profoundly influence behavior and, specifically for teachers, their
pedagogical actions. This theoretical study, drawing on formative experiences in schools
participating in a dropout-prevention project, first highlights intrinsic criticalities in teaching
that may manifest as necrodidactics (a complex construct whose epistemological validity will
be examined), generating exclusion. It then clarifies the author’s stance on technology
integration in education‒a current pedagogical debate‒and conducts a critical-reflective
analysis to demonstrate how embodiment, culture, and educational technologies, under the
teacher’s pedagogical direction, can serve as formative resources for valuing anthropological
and cultural diversity.
Iris type:
2.1 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
List of contributors:
Liverano, Giuseppe
Authors of the University:
LIVERANO Giuseppe
Handle:
https://ricerca.unich.it/handle/11564/874817
Book title:
Anthropos y Cultura: Claves para una Educación
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