magical power that computer technology has offered 
us. What we knew about computer technology two 
decades ago now becomes things of the past and 
there will be many magical wonders ahead in the 
next two decades. History is measured in terms of 
time and events, but for digital technology, history is 
short but full of magical events and inventions.  
In education, firstly the proliferation of software 
items and computer-based projects showing their 
positive impacts on teaching and learning is like 
constant tidal waves. The numerous papers on 
various aspects of computer-supported learning and 
teaching strongly reinforce this optimistic view. An 
internet search will prove this unstoppable 
phenomenon! A quick glance at several proceedings 
of the conferences on computers in education in 
2007-2008 period shows thousands of research 
papers on how to use computer technology 
effectively and creatively in teaching and learning. It 
would be a daunting task for a researcher to conduct 
a comprehensive literature review of all the 
publications on computers in education in recent 
years.  
Secondly, computer technology is rapidly 
growing at such a fast speed that what we consider 
as ‘current development’ will soon become outdated, 
metaphorically like images of yesterday. Computer 
educational software depends heavily on hardware. 
A new development in hardware can trigger changes 
in software development and implementation and 
vice versa. This interactive wheel gets bigger and 
stronger. The real challenge for educators is to 
examine how computer software and hardware are 
used to enhance learners’ development 
intellectually, emotionally and socially.  
3 COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY: A 
CRITICAL DISCOURSE 
CONSIDERATION  
Modern technology is no more neutral than 
medieval cathedrals or The Great Wall of China; 
it embodies the values of a particular industrial 
civilization and especially of its elites, which rest 
their claims to hegemony on technical mastery. 
We must articulate and judge these values in a 
cultural critique of technology. By so doing, we 
can begin to grasp the outlines of another 
possible industrial civilization based on other 
values (Feenberg 1991, p.3). 
Computer, like many other products of different 
technologies, is an instrumental entity which is 
subjected to good use or abuse by social agents. It is 
a product and an instrument which cannot be 
divorced from its historical background and 
functioning. It can be exploited by some social 
institutions to serve their growing needs and to 
reinforce their power control on others. IT, 
particularly the Internet, does not exist in a 
harmonious global village. There are different social 
groups, locally and internationally, politically and 
religiously, in competing discourses and they can 
exert power on the use of IT to their advantages. 
According to Rolf (2008), the Internet is also a 
subject of discourse in its own right. Just as 
controlling the mass media of newspapers, television 
and radio gives the controllers the power to 
influence the masses, the control of the Internet also 
has this powerful influences. However, the 
distributed nature and scale of the Internet make 
such control very difficult as communication is no 
longer unidirectional. The Internet is a medium 
where those privileged to have a connection can 
‘speak their minds’ on a global stage and therefore 
be viewed as a threat by, and to, those who fear the 
freedoms of speech and expression. It is important to 
understand how some would manipulate the 
meaning and position of the Internet within their 
society and, also, how discourse across the Internet 
can be influenced by those same groups. The recent 
events on control battles of the Internet between the 
government, Internet providers and users in a 
number of countries show that the Internet cannot be 
immune from discoursal influences. Its impacts are 
manipulated by different interest groups and those 
with great social power tend to exert stronger 
influences on the discourses across which the 
Internet travels. 
Learning is not just about obtaining information 
and absorbing knowledge. Learning is 
fundamentally making sense of information and 
knowledge, to free the mind from hegemonic 
imposition of knowledge, and most importantly to 
empty our prejudices and presuppositions. At the 
International Conference on Education and 
Globalisation: Technology Innovation and New 
Learning Environment in 2008, Dr. Ayudhya, a 
prominent Thai scientist, gave a keynote speech, not 
on technology innovation, but surprisingly and 
admiringly on education and inner peace. His 
message was embedded in the following retold story 
about human vulnerability.  
A wife and her husband were having 
breakfast at their home. She looked at the clothes 
line in the garden of their neighbor and 
commented: