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Open Education: A Colonial or Decolonial Movement?

Author
  • Marx Jose Gomez-Liendo (Laney College)

Abstract

The idea of openness in education has sparked a growing body of discussions, research, and policies. Rooted in critical pedagogy, the topic revolves around promises and challenges related to access, equity, social justice, and removing barriers, to name a few (Zawacki-Richter, O. et al., 2020). The commitment of professional educators and activists to these goals reflects a transformative movement against restrictive (nay, closed) educational paradigms. Yet, as we keep promoting all these efforts, a necessary self-reflective question arises: is open education perpetuating colonial frameworks, or is it a decolonial movement that genuinely empowers all learning community members? This column, rather than providing a definite answer, is a critical invitation to bridge the open education movement with decolonial theory and practice. 

Keywords: Open pedagogy, Representation, Diversity, Inclusion, Decoloniality, Cognitive justice

How to Cite:

Gomez-Liendo, M. J., (2025) “Open Education: A Colonial or Decolonial Movement?”, Journal of Open Educational Resources in Higher Education 3(1), 9-13. doi: https://doi.org/10.31274/joerhe.17986

Rights:

CC-BY 4.0

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Published on
2025-01-10

Peer Reviewed