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Children, Youth and Environments Vol. 19 No. 1 (Spring 2009) ISSN: 1546-2250 Teaching with Hidden Capital:
Agency in Children's Computational Explorations of
Cornrow HairstylesRon Eglash Department of Science and Technology Studies
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Audrey Bennett Department of Language, Literature, and Communication
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Citation: Eglash, Ron and Audrey Bennett (2009). "Teaching with Hidden Capital:
Agency in Children's Computational Explorations of
Cornrow Hairstyles." Children, Youth and Environments 19 (1): 58-74. Retrieved [date] from http://www.colorado.edu/journals/cye/
Read this Article (PDF) | Comment on this Article AbstractBourdieu and Passeron (1973) famously defined cultural capital as the accumulated
cultural knowledge that confers power and status. Their original work explained
many of the intangible advantages that allowed the upper class to obtain better
status jobs, education, etc. Here we extend this concept to include “computational
capital”—the concepts, skills, and other resources that facilitate participation in
computing activities, education and careers. We posit that hidden sources of
computational capital can be found in some cultural practices of disadvantaged
groups, and that a suitable learning environment can make this capital available to
its owners. In the study presented here, the cultural practice is cornrow hairstyles,
and the learning environment is based on Cornrow Curves, a web applet that allows
children to use math and computing principles to simulate the patterns of these
braids. This paper analyzes the interactions of African-American children with
Cornrow Curves, in particular their reflections on the relationship between their
heritage identity and the experience of learning math and computing through
cultural resources. We use Bennett’s (2008) concept of “design agency” to describe
the ways in which the students’ creative explorations in this computational
geometry converge with their cultural construction of the self. Keywords: ethnomathematics, culturally situated design tools, design agency, graphic design, culture
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