Neil Selwyn
@neilselwyn.bsky.social
2K followers 150 following 110 posts
sociology of education + digital | Monash University | research interests: automation, AI, datafication, digital degrowth | host of 'Education Technology Society' podcast: https://www.buzzsprout.com/1301377
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Reposted by Neil Selwyn
benpatrickwill.bsky.social
Cool parcel in the post of an "Ed-tech Agitprop Pack" unexpectedly sent by @neilselwyn.bsky.social

"The ed-tech that we're currently dealing with is not a done deal!" as the accompanying note says.
Photo of a tote bag with printed text "Distrusting educational technology" and stickers reading "Get AI out of education" and "Ed-tech is full of bullshit"
neilselwyn.bsky.social
Should teachers use AI to write emails to parents? ... listen to me talk with Brad Robinson about the rise of AI tools now offering to do teacher tasks, such as lesson planning, grading assignments and writing feedback. A way to 'work smarter' or a slippery slope?! www.buzzsprout.com/1301377/epis...
neilselwyn.bsky.social
For those who don't know, I produce a podcast featuring some of the latest thinking in the critical studies of education & tech.

We have just kicked off our third season with an episode on 'Technosolutionism' ... please take a listen & subscribe!

www.buzzsprout.com/1301377
A grey poster with black writing and a pixelated hand pointing to the text.

Season three now starting! Education Technology Society - a critical podcast about digital education.
Reposted by Neil Selwyn
benfictional.bsky.social
Frankie Focus is New York's mascot for phone-free schools, which is incredible but I feel like the design could have been work shopped a bit more.
neilselwyn.bsky.social
technologically advance a band.

Rocket from the Crypto
Reposted by Neil Selwyn
civicsoftech.bsky.social
Speaking of @neilselwyn.bsky.social, check out today's blog post with Adriana Szili sharing "New resources for teachers and student teachers: AI Dilemmas": www.civicsoftechnology.org/blog/2dp8ng2...

Materials include posters, handouts, & slides to help reflect on real-world dilemmas of AI in edu.
Reposted by Neil Selwyn
charleswlogan.bsky.social
New @civicsoftech.bsky.social book club!

I'm leading a discussion of @neilselwyn.bsky.social's new book "Digital Degrowth: Radically Rethinking Our Digital Futures" on Tues, Nov 11, from 8-9pm ET. Dr. Selwyn will be joining us too.

Register at our events page: www.civicsoftechnology.org/events
A photograph of me holding the book "Digital Degrowth: Radically Rethinking Our Digital Futures" by Neil Selwyn.
neilselwyn.bsky.social
new podcast episode! Why does education keep falling for techno-solutionism, despite the fact that technology does not seem to drastically improve education? Listen to Dr. Ezechiel Thibaud talk through the perennial problem of 'techno-solutionism' in education ... www.buzzsprout.com/1301377/epis...
Reposted by Neil Selwyn
disabilitystor1.bsky.social
Literally the entire point of a tattoo is the human element and interaction.
Working with your tattoo artist, personalizing your designs, its all so intimate and rightly so. Thats what its all about!
Why do techbros try to ruin EVERYTHING?
One of the last places we might expect artificial intelligence to show up is the tattoo parlor, with its mix of artistry, personal expression and permanent ink. But a high-end ink shop in New York City is now taking appointments for an AI-driven tattoo robot.

The technology is the product of Blackdot, an Austin, Texas-based startup that has been pursuing a vision of autonomous, AI-fueled tattooing since 2019.

Blackdot—which has raised roughly $7 million from a combination of strategic and angel investors, crowdfunding and venture capital—says its device’s precision boosts predictability and reduces pain.

“There are people that are wondering if technology should make its way into the tattoo industry,” said founder Joel Pennington. “But that was what happened when Gutenberg came out with a printing press, and everyone thought that books should be handwritten.”
neilselwyn.bsky.social
new blog post: Thinking differently – rather than dismissively – about AI and education.

... excerpt from the final chapter of my still-being-written book on AI & Education (out late 2026?) ... criticaledtech.com/2025/09/02/t...
full quote: "perhaps the most disheartening aspect of the recent push for AI is how it devalues and debases the status of schools, teachers, students and everyone else involved in education. Any insistence that current forms of AI can improve education is an insistence that we accept a hollowed-out version of education that is routine, formulaic and utterly mindless. Seen in these terms, then, good teachers and students are those who always maximise their time, diligently respond to feedback and can be nudged to make correct decisions. Good education is simply a matter of repeatedly and efficiently doing the same things ‘at scale’. This is a robotic version of education that appeals to managerialists, consultants and tech-bros with little experience and/or interest in the unavoidable messiness of schools and classrooms. Much of the enthusiasm for ‘transforming education through AI’ is rooted in thinly-veiled contempt for the forms of education that we currently have. As Anthony Moser (2025) put it, “the makers of AI aren’t damned by their failures, they’re damned by their goals”."
Reposted by Neil Selwyn
anthonymoser.com
I considered writing a long carefully constructed argument laying out the harms and limitations of AI, but instead I wrote about being a hater. Only humans can be haters.
I Am An AI Hater
I am an AI hater. This is considered rude, but I do not care, because I am a hater.
anthonymoser.github.io
Reposted by Neil Selwyn
ketanjoshi.co
Even Bitcoin never 'burst'. It just switched to quietly racking up environmental harm

bsky.app/profile/keta...
ketanjoshi.co
The people at CBECI were kind enough to send me a copy of their updated Bitcoin power consumption data

At the end of 2024, Bitcoin's total consumption for 2024 *did* end up matching that of Pakistan. 2024 saw the biggest jump in power consumption ever. Absolutely wild stuff ->

ccaf.io/cbnsi/cbeci
Global Bitcoin power consumption
120
2004
2023
3:14
Day of yuat a chart showing Bitcoin's rising power consumption
neilselwyn.bsky.social
AI Dilemmas for Teachers - *free resources & posters* ... a set of high-def colour resources featuring real-life examples from our research on teachers' experiences of AI ...

Feel free to print off, share widely and use in your own professional learning sessions!

www.monash.edu/education/re...
blue poster with picture of robot teacher - title "AI dilemmas - real life examples from Australian teachers" - vignette and questions for use in professional learning sessions
Reposted by Neil Selwyn
nsousanis.bsky.social
My drawn statement on Ai as standalone from my now finished minicomic as syllabus for new liberal studies class! As promised this is shareable, printable - all from my site, feel free to make use of it, cite me & let me know how it’s received. Share away all here! spinweaveandcut.com/fall-2025-sy...
a snippet of a mini-comic, at top - straight line stretches from point A to B. Immediately below, same dot at A, then becomes a curving, meandering line that winds through the page and ends at a point with rays and a question mark emanating from it. Text reads: "Nothing can do this for you - that robs you of experience and conflates answers with learning. Rather, it's all the decisions you make along the way, the mistakes, struggles, and surprises! These pathways you create - this is learning. Pages from a mini comic Pages from a mini comic Pages from a mini comic
Reposted by Neil Selwyn
politybooks.bsky.social
“How might we develop digital #technology that is better for people, communities and the planet?”

Find out in Neil Selwyn’s ‘Digital Degrowth’. Out now!

www.politybooks.com/bookdetail?b...

@neilselwyn.bsky.social
neilselwyn.bsky.social
We need to get more nuanced conversations going around AI and teaching ... as a start, we're producing a series of provocation posters featuring real-life examples that have cropped up in our ARC research on teachers' experiences of AI ... will post links to high-def downloadable versions soon!
bright red poster featuring an illustrated 'AI dilemma' for teachers - would you use GenAI to provide feedback on your students' work?
neilselwyn.bsky.social
We are now seeing the rise of AI-obfuscation apps ... such as this 'Don't Record Me' plug-in that injects your voice with random sounds to sabotage any AI-recording software that people might be using in the background ... who needs decent regulation, laws and public oversight! dontrecord.me
dontrecord.me
We don't like having our conversations recorded either. Here's a simple app to use during voice chat to stop recording and transcribing
dontrecord.me
Reposted by Neil Selwyn
claresoutherton.bsky.social
Absolutely loved this paper from Tanja Bosch - "As a method, decolonisation demands more than critique. It requires a commitment to building alternative ways of knowing, citing, collaborating and theorising that do not extract from the margins to enrich the centre"
Decolonisation is not a vibe: On anti-capitalist praxis, citation politics and epistemic refusal - Tanja Bosch, 2025
This paper argues that decolonisation in media and communication studies must be rooted in anti-capitalist praxis, not just symbolic critique. While the field i...
journals.sagepub.com
neilselwyn.bsky.social
new paper 🔓! Teachers are having to put *considerable* amounts of work into making GenAI outputs suitable for their classrooms ... amidst the going hype we need to talk more about what GenAI clearly *cannot* do, and the uniqueness of teacher expert knowledge: www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
When the prompting stops: exploring teachers’ work around the educational frailties of generative AI tools

Neil Selwyn, Marita Ljungqvist and Anders Sonesson [1]



Abstract: Teachers are now encouraged to use generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) tools to complete various school-related administrative tasks, with the promise of saving considerable amounts of time and effort. Drawing on interviews from 57 teachers across eight schools in Sweden and Australia, this paper explores teachers’ experiences when working with GenAI. In particular, it focuses on the large amounts of work that teachers put into reviewing, repairing and sometimes completely reworking AI-produced outputs that they perceive to be deficient. Rather than reflecting teachers’ lack of skill in prompting GenAI effectively, the paper shows how this work foregrounds the educational limitations and frailties of AI and other automated technologies – with teachers having to act on a wide range of complex professional judgements around pedagogical appropriateness, social relations and overall educational value to bear on AI-generated content. The paper concludes by considering the need to challenge ongoing industry and policy claims around the labour-saving benefits of artificial intelligence in education, and instead focus on the ways in which these technologies are dependent on the hidden labour of humans to co-produce the illusion of automation.
neilselwyn.bsky.social
We have a new paper coming out in the next few days about all of the work that teachers have to do around GenAI tools ... I'll post the abstract and link when it is out - for the time being, this quote from the article pretty much sums up our main conclusion!
quote from an article: "As the philosopher John Haugeland notably observed: "the trouble with AI is that computers don't give a damn". In theory, the value of teachers is that they do.

from a forthcoming paper published in Learning, Media & Technology - title: "When the prompting stops: exploring teachers' work around the educational frailties of GenAI" (Neil Selwyn, Marita Ljungqvist, Anders Sonesson 2025).
neilselwyn.bsky.social
A plea for the education community to "move beyond real ignorance in the face of the environmental impacts of artificial intelligence" ... www.bera.ac.uk/blog/the-env...
Blog post

The environmental ethics of Generative AI: Artificial intelligence or real ignorance?

Sarah Clayton, PhD Graduate at University of York  
Lynda Dunlop, Senior Lecturer in Science Education at University of York  
Elizabeth Rushton, Head of Education Division at University of Stirling 

20 Jun 2025