[iDC] how to open up education
Matt Curinga
mxc1 at columbia.edu
Sat Jun 19 21:28:25 UTC 2010
W
----- Reply message -----
From: "Paul Prueitt" <psp at ontologystream.com>
Date: Sat, Jun 19, 2010 9:03 am
Subject: [iDC] how to open up education
To: <idc at mailman.thing.net>
On Jun 19, 2010, at 7:09 AM, Stephen Downes <stephen at downes.ca>t wrote:
>> We don't (as we all know, right?) consume an education, but our
>> education system has become based on the model of consumption, so
>> much so
>> that even the critics of it can articulate only about how hard it
>> is to
>> create the consumable.
>>
>> This is why we - George and I and David and Alec and Dave and
>> others - are
>> working on opening up education. Not because we think it will
>> reduce the
>> cost of the consumable to zero, not because we think we can
>> package and
>> deliver an education more cheaply and more efficiently, but
>> because we
>> understand that, unless an education is open, unless it's
>> precisely *not* a
>> consumable, it's not an education at all. And while *this*
>> observation, that
>> education is not a consumable, is hardly new or unique, our
>> approach to it
>> appears to have been (though you know if you go back into the
>> history of
>> education you can find a great deal about self-organizing learning
>> communities and the pedagogies based on such models).
In The Education Bridge, www.educationWorlds.com/bridge.pdf the
notion of induction is developed, along with the related notions of
non-locality and emergence.
A thesis is framed. Our educational system is an induction machine.
This induction is backward looking and centered on serving the supply
system. It is not anticipatory, and thus the education system does
not have the properties of an intelligent system. There is a denial
that individuals have unique qualities. It is within these unique
qualities that one sees "intelligence".
We trace this limited systemic nature of the current educational
philosophy to Dewey, Darwin and Newton. We see education is being
anti-democratic in its practice and consequences. It carries the
"big lie", that the physical universe is deterministic. This lie
then allows a few to pretend as if they are in control. It, the
educational system, has the nature of a fundamentalism. It, the
educational system, is hijacking the democracy. it does this while
also providing us with great benefits.
The distinction is then made that there is a supply mechanism called
advertising which allows supply to control demand. The systematic
violation of the individual is then enabled.
Part of the hijacking of the intention of the individual by these
mechanisms requires our citizens to be ignorant about the nature of
individual self. The action-perception cycle is interrupted to such
an extent that the individual (sometimes) becomes incapable of
understanding the self.
We give up the self so as to be a participant in a consumer based
social structure. The educational system assists us in giving up our
expectation that intention be expressed in a pure form. In fact we
are taught that intention is necessarily evil, unless shaped by the
supply side. This "teaching" is part of the fundamentalism. The
media and our literatures goes to great lengths to given evidence to
this assertion about individual intent. We are fed a continuous
supply of evidence as to our unworthiness. We accommodate this
feeding as we become ever more incapable. This process is one that
must eventually reach the point of absolute absurdity.
Maybe we are now "here". Maybe it is time to turn the corner and
evolve in the opposite direction, to re-establish the concept of
governance by the People and also to not over react. Might we reform
without extreme reaction?
The Education Bridge makes the proposal that teaching using supply
side methodology creates acquired learning disabilities, specific at
first (1950-1990) to mathematics and science, but now non-specific.
The entering freshman are rejecting the very notion of learning
anything. They wish to just graduate with the credentials that allow
them to earn a living and consume. We pretend to teach and they
pretend to learn.
We move away fro the notion of a meritocracy. The remediation to this
trend is also proposed.
The remediation is to develop Socratic,constructivist and
participatory pedagogy that asks the individual student to demand
specific topics to be discussed, rather than to be forced to consume
the material in a specific order and using a very rigid syllabus. If
the demand is from a desire to understand self, then this demand will
lead to capacity to serve self and others.
>> how hard it is to
>> create the consumable.
The Education Bridge suggests that we no longer create a regime of
consumables that are forced on the student, but rather develop a set
of focus topics, the complete set of which would be the
"curriculum". There is guidance, not all notions of "supply" are
lost! The framework for curriculums is provided, but choices are
allowed.
We then allow students to select which of these consumables he or she
wishes to internalize and then to re-exp
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