Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Connectivism

Siemens, G. (2006). Connectivism: Learning theory or pastime for the self-amused? Retrieved from http://www.elearnspace.org/Articles/connectivism_self-amused.htm

1. Problems
  • Our educational model today is largely defined by the desire to achieve and produce in an economic system. Many of the nobler elements of learning, often found in the belief or faith domain, have yielded to the increased quest for efficiency and utilitarianism.
  • The space of shifting ideals presents challenges for society as a whole: (a) the erosion of existing structures of knowing and need for knowing, and (b) the yet to emerge characteristics of the new space are unknown, or speculative at best (p. 23).
  • Educators today face challenges relating to: (a) defining what learning is, (b) defining the process of learning in a digital age, (c) aligning curriculum and teaching with learning and higher level development needs of society (the quest to become better people), and (d) reframing the discussion to lay the foundation for transformative education—one where technology is the enabler of new means of learning, thinking, and being.
2. Technology is changing the society

Instead of knowledge residing only in the mind of an individual, knowledge resides in a distributed manner across a network. Instead of approaching learning as schematic formation structures, learning is the act of recognizing patterns shaped by complex networks. The networked act of learning exists on two levels:
  • Internally as neural networks (where knowledge is distributed across our brain, not held in its entirety in one location)
  • Externally as networks we actively form (each node represents an element of specialization and the aggregate represent our ability to be aware of, learn, and adapt to the world around).
3. Distinction between connectivism and other learning theories

We are social beings. Through language, symbols, video, images, and other means, we seek to express our thoughts. Essentially, our need to derive and express meaning, gain and share knowledge, requires externalization. We externalize ourselves in order to know and be known. As we externalize, we distribute our knowledge across a network—perhaps with individuals seated around a conference, readers at a distance, or listeners to podcasts or viewers of a video clip. Most existing theories of learning assume the opposite, stating that internalization is the key function of learning (cognitivism assumes we process information internally, constructivism asserts that we assign meaning internally—though the process of deriving meaning may be a function of a social network, i.e. the social dimension assists in learning, rather than the social dimension being the aim of learning). The externalization of our knowledge is increasingly utilized as a means of coping with information overload. The growth and complexity of knowledge requires that our capacity for learning resides in the connections we form with people and information, often mediated or facilitated with technology.

4. Media, Symbols, and Technology
  • While not quite in alignment with Vygotsky’s (1986) assertion that language gives birth to thought, Bandura (1986) stated, “power of thought resides in the human capability to represent events and their interrelatedness in symbolic form” (p. 455). Media, language, technology, and symbols are devices that enable humans the capacity to externalize the nebulous elements of private thought. The externalization of thought is an important concept to consider in light of traditional theories of learning largely emphasizing knowledge construction and cognition as primarily internal events (in the mind of individuals).
  • McLuhan (1967) suggested, “societies have always been shaped more by the nature of the media by which men communicate than by the content of the communication” (p. 8). The rapid growth of social-based technology tools creates an unprecedented opportunity for anyone with a computer and internet access to play the role of journalist, artist, producer, and publisher. If media truly does shape humanity, the changed nature of dialogue and information exposure created by the internet will have greater implications to our future than the nature of the content currently being explored. Much like tools shape potential tasks, the internet shapes opportunities for dialogue—outside of space and time—that were not available only a generation ago.
What is learning?
  • Most theorists approach learning as some type of change in performance due to acquisition of skills or knowledge. However, knowledge acquisition does not equate with learning. Completing a certain task may be a function of learning on a basic level (i.e., driving a car), but does little to address the larger, interconnected nature of learning in relation to other aspects of the learners competence, comprehension, and skills. In a society of information abundance, these definitions of learning seek to address primarily lower-level cognition and emotion. The greater need of learning is to make sense of the space in which the learner functions and the potential implications of acquired knowledge. Learning how to operate a forklift may be learning at a basic level. Skills of this level, while important, are declining in a societal context. Learning needs are currently driven by high volumes of data and information, requiring a shift to higher-level models of learning.
  • Learning is more than the acquisition of information. Our capacity to accept new information is hindered by existing mindsets and understandings. In a sense, what we believe influences our capacity to know more. Numerous factors—internal and external to the learner—influence the likelihood of learning occurring. Stokman (2004) explored social networks as structures that influence and foster learning, concluding that mutual interdependencies influence the potential for interaction or connection forming. Similarly, learning is a multi-faceted process that functions in a milieu of different needs, interdependent tasks, barriers, affordances, and numerous other contributors and detractors to the experience.
Theories
  • Educational technology is replete with theories. Some adapted from previous models (behaviourism, cognitivism, constructivism), blended theories1, emerging theories (connectivism), and related views of networked learning (Wikipedia, 2006). Blended and emerging theories counterbalance established theories in pursuing a theory in line with the nature of the society it purports to support. Tools change people. We adapt based on new affordances. To rely on a theory that ignores the networked nature of society, life, and learning is to largely miss the point of how fundamentally our world has changed.
Learning Theories

  • Behaviourists are largely concerned with the outcome, or observable elements of learning. Behaviourists see learning as a “black box” (Driscoll, 2000, p. 35). Instead of focusing on the internal mental activities, behaviourists focus on observable behaviour (Gredler, 2005, p. 28). Behaviour is managed through a process of strengthening and weakening of responses. Key theorists in behaviourism include: Pavlov, Watson, Skinner, Thorndike (Gredler, p. 29, Driscoll, p. 19).Cognitivists, to varying degrees, have posited a structured view of learning that includes the model of a computer (input, encoding, storage, outcome), a staged process of development, and schematic views of knowledge, with learning being the act of classifying or categorizing new knowledge and experiences.
  • Cognitivists see learning as information processing. The computer is often used as a metaphor for learning (Driscoll, 2000, p. 75). Sensory input is managed in short-term memory and coded for retrieval in long-term memory. Situated cognition, the view that thought is a function of, or adaptation to, the environment in which the thinking (or learning) occurs (p. 154), and schema theory, the view that meaningful learning (p. 116) is a process of subsumption in an internal hierarchy of concepts, are extensions of basic cognitivism. Piaget and Vygotksy are sometimes classified as cognitivits (Gredler, 2005, pp. 264 & 304; Driscoll, pp. 183 & 219). Other cognitivists include Bruner, Gagne, and Ausubel.
  • Constructivism is a frustratingly vague concept. The Centre for Research on Networked Learning and Knowledge Building (n.d.) suggested, "constructive “theory” of learning, generally, has not at all become more specific or articulated or gained any increased explanatory power or unification. There has not been any progressive problem shift after the 80s but a continuation of a very general and ideologically colored discussion." (¶ 2)
  • Constructivists hold learning to be a process of active construction on the part of the learner. Learning occurs as the learner “attempt to make sense of their experiences” (Driscoll, p. 376). The roots of constructivism can be found in the epistemological orientation of rationalism, where knowledge representations do not need to correspond with external reality (p. 377). Adherents to constructivism borrow heavily from theorists previously mentioned: Piaget, Vygotsky, and Bruner (Dabbagh, 2005; Driscoll, 2000).
  • Learning theories and theorist classifications are contradictory. For example, Driscoll (2000) listed Bruner as a pragmatist/cognitivist, while Dabbagh (2005) listed him as a constructivist. New entrants into this space quickly find a convoluted mix of psychology, philosophy, and theory pop-culture. Discerning theories with underlying assumptions of learning is challenging. Particularly confusing is the theory of constructivism, which researchers tend to treat as a banner under which to fly numerous aspects and new views. It has come to mean everything, anything, and nothing. While not as acerbic, Driscoll stated, “there is no single constructivist theory of instruction. Rather, there are researchers in fields from science education to educational psychology and instructional technology who are articulating various aspects of constructivist theory” (p. 375). Additionally, it may be unclear whether constructivism is actually a theory or a philosophy (p. 395).

Also see:
Siemens, G. (2004). Connectivism: A learning theory for the digital age. International Journal of Instructional Technology and Distance Learning. Retrieved from http://www.elearnspace.org/Articles/connectivism.htm

Connectivism (learning theory). (2008, August 17). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved August 27, 2008, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Connectivism_(learning_theory)&oldid=232432157

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

learning theories

Three competing theories
Others (Theories and Models)

Monday, August 11, 2008

Turning points in curriculum

Marshall, J. D., Sears, J. T., Allen, L. A., Roberts, P. A., & Schubert, W. H. (2007). Turning points in curriculum: A contemporary American memoir (2nd ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Merrill Prentice Hall.

Part 1 Contextual panorama for contemporary curriculum work (1897-1946)

Chapter 1. Prelude to contemporary curriculum theory and development
  • Curr. history is a continual recurrence of focus on subject matter, learners, and society throughout the 19 century
  • Two added elements
    • What is worth knowing and experiencing (and worth sharing)? - different responses shift the balance among SM, L, & S; e.g., Schubert's (1980) three schools of curri. - intellectual traditionalist, experientialist, & social behaviorist
    • Who decides (and should decide)? - null curriculum (Eisner, 1985); P. Freire
  • The birth of curr. studies
    • How to provide universal education (schooling for the elite until 1890s)
    • Horace Mann & Henry Barnard - promoting universal schooling
    • Charles Eliot led National Educational Association's (NEA) Committee of Ten - the best preparation for college was the same as the best preparation for life
    • Committee of Fifteen: developmental theories (Herbarians - e.g., Child development, recapitulation theory) v. the disciplines of knowledge (Hegelians - e.g., Harris: "five windows of the soul"). Result: a shift from subject to learner as a basis for curri. work.
    • Social behaviorist: G. Stanley Hall started America's first psychological laboratory
    • Dewey's curricular view: a balanced integration of emphasis on subject matter, society, and the child. His central curr. position: the progressive reorganization of subject matter. Arguing for the pedagogic necessity of starting with the psychological and moving to the logical
      • Psychological: the concerns and interests of the learner's life world of experience
      • Logical: both the disciplines of knowledge and knowledge accumulated by human beings through everyday experiences
      • Pedagogical process: identifying individual student interests, encouraging students to share these interests within a community of learners, excavating common human interests symbolized by the individually identified interests, tapping a broad array of experiential resources as precedent, and drawing on the fund of written knowledge in pursuit of original interests and the discovery of new interests
    • At the turn of the century, Dewey's pragmatic experimentalist educational philosophy, progressive social and educational theory, and experiential and reconstructionist curriculum thinking came to the fore
    • Joseph Mayer Rice (1913): Educational progress would only occur if teachers and their leaders were carefully guided, efficiently managed, and systematically controlled. He described the gross ineptitudes, similar to Kozol's (1991) "savage inequalities" between urban and suburban schools
  • Struggles surface
    • The overwhelming influence of Taylorism (technical efficiency); IQ=potential;
    • Edward Thorndike(1924) - founder of ed. psych., test & measurement
    • Dewey: intelligence cannot be reified as test scores
    • Frank Bobbit (social behaviorist): scientific curr. making - activity analysis
    • William Kilpatrick: The Project Method (1918) - integrate curr. around projects that grow from student interests
    • "What are the purposes of education?" (revived by the decline of faculty psychology, the move away from classic subjects, and the influx of new student populations
    • 1920s & 1930s: the heyday of progressive practices. but progressivism never dominated educational thinking or practice because the traditionalist position was kept alive (curri. makng was a top-down, expert-driven enterprise resulting in selection or creation of products to be systematically delivered to students who were assessed on their retention of knowledge and acquisition of skills
  • The progressives multiply and divide
    • The Eight Year Study (1933-1941): the performance of students from the experimental-progressive schools equaled or exceeded that of students from traditional schools
    • Reconstructionist progressives (foster critical thinking and social action around issues of ethics & justice): George Counts (Dare the school build a new social order? 1932- curricula must be designed to overcome injustice and oppression and create democratic, equitable, fulfilling way of life), Harold Rugg, Theodore Brameld
    • Child-centered ("apolitical") v. social reconstructionist. Dewey called for a deeper look into the difference and find reciprocal relationships between individual and political growth - failed and weakened the collective voice of progressives
Part 2 The rise and fall of curriculum specialists (1947-1960)

Chapter 2. Curriculum development at its zenith: curriculum people
  • Background: postwar America, an era of hope and optimism
  • 1947 Chicago Curriculum Theory Conference (Virgil Herrick & Ralph Tyler)
  • 1956 Benjamin Bloom: Taxonomy of Educational Objectives
Chapter 3. Transfer by eminent domain: National interest
  • As Cold War escalates, James B. Conant advocates national interest, rather than growth of the individual, as the primary purpose of schooling in Education in a Divided World
  • The 1950s: revolutionary upheavals in politics, business, pop culture, religion and tech (e.g., Catcher in the Rye, Salinger, 1951; I Love Lucy; My Fair Lady; Lord of the Rings; Brown v Board of Ed.; Little Rock Nine; Elvis Presley...)
  • 1957 the launching of Sputnik
  • Jerome Bruner (1960) The Process of Education - new curri Bible (ties between curr. & natl interest, the lure of science & tech., and public disappointment with school curricula) - a rekindled interest in curr. problems by ed psychologists and concern for school's ability to produce sufficient numbers of scholars, scientists, poets, & lawmakers
  • "The contribution of university scholars in the creation of the most advanced weapons systems had led the nation's political leadership to look to the university scholars for devising curricula in science and mathematics for the elementary and secondary schools" (Tanner & Tanner, 1980, p. 434)
  • Result: Teachers became either subject matter specialists or human conduits for the transmission of subject matter knowledge, students became child-scientists, and the curri. worker took a backseat to psychologists and other discipline scholars of the "first rank." Progressive ideals and the democratic aims of American ed. were disappearing
Part 3 Reestablishing agency and agendas (1961-1969)

Chapter 4. Muted heretics endure (1961-1964): "Outsiders" (Psychology contributors)
  • B. F. Skinner (1958): "Teaching Machines" - radical behaviorist
  • Hilda Taba's (1962) Curriculum development: Theory and practice
  • Technological view of curriculum - efficiency movement (Bruner "automatizing devices")
  • In spite of the dominant technorationality, progressive ideas were kept alive (e.g., Huebner: curri. field permits the use of all major disciplinary systems, not only behaviorist psychology; John Goodlad, 1964, critiqued the national curri. reform projects)
Chapter 5. Transcending a muddled juncture (1965-1969): Publications
  • Background: Godfather, 60 Minutes, Martin Luther King, Jr, ...a decade of political turmoil and social change (transformation from an era of New Frontier innocence and idealism to the realpolitik of the Nixon-Kissinger legacy)
  • Coroner for conventional curr. making - Joseph Schwab's (1969) The practical: A language for curriculum, diagnosing the curriculum field as moribund - a wake up call for new directions. It is the most significant curriculum publication since Tyler's Basic Principles in Curriculum and Instruction (1950)
  • 1965 Chicago curriculum meeting (bases and principles) - curr. field needed to shift from "objective" and empirically based issues to socially oriented, value-based questions by radical thinkers (Michael Apple)
Part 4 (Re)shaping the contemporary curriculum field (1970-1983)

Chapter 6. The Renaissance blossoms: Professional organizations and gatherings
  • Background: 1970s - overconsumption of tech and natural resources, overindulgence with sexual freedom and freedom of expression, overreliance on federalism and individualism
  • AERA (formed in 1916, the same year J. Dewey published Democracy and Ed.), Division B (formed in 1964) - "Curriculum & Objectives"
  • James Macdonald: A transcendental development ideology of education
  • Paulo Friere (1970) Pedagogy of the Oppressed
  • The 1970s - new people and ideas emerged in opposition to traditional practices and procedures
  • Paradigm: a conceptual framework or way to look at the world composed of knowledge, values, and assumptions that govern activity or inquiry in an academic field such as curri.
Chapter 7. From chorus to cacophony: Paradigms and perspectives (Multidimentional, eclectic)
  • Background: early 1980s - Michael Jackson, Madonna, Prince, Channel One, USA Today, Star Trek...
  • Analytically distinctive curriculum paradigms (3 from Schubert, 1986, and 1 from Lather, 1992)
    • Predict (the perennial paradigm)
    • Understand (the practical paradigm)
    • Emancipate (the critical paradigm)
    • Deconstruct (the poststructual or postmodern paradigm)
  • Reconceptualization (Henry Giroux)
  • Aesthetic perspective (Elliot Eisner, The Educational Imagination)
  • John Goodlad: Curriculum Inquiry: The study of curriculum practice
  • Glatthorn (1980)
  • Cronbach statistics
  • Michael Apple - Ideology and Curriculum
  • The multiple perspectives and sophisticated nuances contained within each of them
  • "Paradigm wars" (Pinar et al., 1995) - serious rifts
Part 5 The uncertainties of contemporary curriculum work (1984-2002)

Chapter 8. Implosion and consolidation: Marginalized voices
  • By the mid-1980s, teachers were center stage in the curr. field
  • Marginalized voices - the business-as-usual mode of improving curri.
  • The fracturing of theoretical unity & disciplinary cohesion (the end of science in the postmodern era)
Chapter 9. Difference that breeds hybridity: Race, reform, and curriculum
  • 1983 A Nation at Risk
  • 1989 President Bush's education summit: took up the cause of accountability and standards,
  • Goals 2000 and the NCLB (a pedagogy of poverty): from national goals to state assessments - educators lose control
  • Conflict over national values, priorities, and directions - "cultural wars" of the 1990s (what knowledge is of most worth - regarding growing racial, ethnic, and cultural differences)
  • Hybridity: the condition of heterogeneous assembly - the making of sth. out of disparate or incongruent parts or elements (national school reform & theoretical diversity)
Chapter 10. Imagining the postmillennial curriculum field
  • future & possibilities through the intersections of democracy, globalization, and technology
  • The paradox of "consolidated diversity" - communication & community have become not only more challenging but also more crucial to the work of curri.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Cultures of curriculum

Joseph, P., Bravmann, S., Windschitl, M., Mikel, E., & Green, N. (2000). Cultures of curriculum. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

1. Training for work and survival (connected to Kliebard's social efficiency - realism)
  • Goals: prepare students for future economic success, "play the game of life"
  • Roots: Contemporary American culture such as "success", "good work", and vision of economic and technological trends
  • Learners: Manually-minded, usually of working-class or minority origin
  • Teachers: Coaches and exemplars of skills
  • Content: Employability skills, work maturity skills
  • Context: The marketplace and industry
  • Planning: External control, work-oriented
  • Evaluation: Income improving effectiveness, test score comparisons
  • Dilemmas: Professional goal vs. standardized test; vocational vs. academic education; lack of business involvement
  • Critique: Fail to prepare the young for work; ignorance of work-life issues; class-based, limiting character; little vision of individual transformation
  • Samples: strengthening the economy, career-centered ed., in the 1840s Horace Mann appealed to employers to support public schools on the basis that education makes better workers; 1980s, community colleges
2. Connecting to the canon (Connected to Kliebard's humanistic - idealism)
  • Goals: Engage student with classic knowledge and develop understanding of the best way to live one's life
  • Roots: Historical Euro-American aspirations for grace, order, well-being, and justice
  • Learners: as athletes
  • Teachers: as elders and masters
  • Content: Repository of wisdom featuring thickness, adaptability, endurance, creativity, artistry, pedagogic value
  • Context: a community of scholars
  • Planning: teacher centered, thematic integrated
  • Evaluation: No critical examination (the content is good because it is good)
  • Dilemmas: Teachers' knowledge; controversies over the content of the curriculum; adverse public perception
  • Critique: Intangible outcomes; conservative nature, resisting innovation; deficient as a mono-cultural model
  • Samples: Tradition, renaissance, liberal arts; The McGuffey Readers (forging cultural identity - a truly American education); the Culture Wars against the dominant approach (the tradition of white, male, Western European thought)
Note: The debate between Booker T. Washington and W. E. B. Du Bois somehow symbolizes the battle between "Training for Work and Survival" and "Connecting to the Canon"

3. Developing self and spirit (Connected to Kliebard's child-centered - pragmatism)
  • Goals: nurture individual's potential, creativity, spirituality, and self-knowledge thus to proceed freely and naturally to greater knowledge of themselves and of their world
  • Roots: ideal of 'child-centered' or 'progressive education'; Dewey: schooling is not preparation for life but life itself (Plato, Dewey, Noddings, Greene, Miller)
  • Learners: those need love, safety, freedom, and guidance to be able to learn
  • Teachers: gardener, facilitator, authentic co-learner, role model, resources, nurturer, personal and intellectual support system, objective guide, coach, mentor
  • Content: psychological, emotional, spiritual, and social growth in academics, athletics, arts and aesthetics
  • Context: the physical-social environment in the classroom
  • Planning: teachers and students negotiate; under constant modification and revision so as to continue the inquiry to greater length and depths
  • Evaluation: non-standardized; subjective; problem-solving based
  • Dilemmas: teachers are obliged to be artists who have both commitment and skills
  • Critique: stereotypes of denying the importance of subject matter, rejecting of all authority, and making learners self-indulgent
  • Samples: educating the whole child, personal growth
4. Constructing understanding (Connected to Kliebard's child-centered - pragmatism)
  • Goals: encourage learners to utilize their experiences, intellectual strengths, and interactions with others to bridge the formal knowledge with the continually evolving individual mind
  • Roots: Constructivist belief that learners actively create and restructure knowledge, and that knowledge doesn't exist outside them as some objective, universal entity
  • Learners: continually involved in recognizing their world, actively imposing order and meaning on their experiences and 'creating' the world in which they live
  • Teachers: learning facilitators and co-developers of understanding with the student
  • Content: the learning approach is as important as the topics; less is more; integrated curriculum
  • Context: the focus is the learner rather than the subject matter; a "thinking about thinking" environment
  • Planning: teachers shape the curricular process; student negotiate with the teacher about the criteria; teacher-centered + student-centered instruction
  • Evaluation: based on student performances or artifacts generated as a result of substantial effort
  • Dilemmas: teachers need to reconceptualize view of instruction and to be infinitely skilled; "chaotic" and "correctness"
  • Critique: little more than thematic, project-based learning; incompatibility between standards; merely a set of guidelines for instruction; disconnected with larger issues of curriculum
  • Samples: questioning the unknown - creating restructuring knowledge; continual evolution of creating unique individual understanding
5. Deliberating democracy (Connected to Kliebard's social reconstructionist - pragmatism?)
  • Goals: understand and experience the process of democratic decision making
  • Roots: sociopolitical emphasis upon the group process of deliberating the curriculum (Dewey's theoretical formulation of democracy and education)
  • Learners: 'citizens' of the classroom community exercising explicit determination over the substance and processes of learning for their benefit and that of their peers at the same time
  • Teachers: catalyst for collaboration; negotiating learning procedures with learners
  • Content: civic participation; definition of rules and expectations; peer mediation of conflict and adjudication of disputes; creation of a classroom constitution
  • Context: using multi-dimensional, interdisciplinary and context-conscious learning to address problems and an audience beyond the school
  • Planning: a constant state of formation (to be constantly monitored and calibrated to avoid imbalances and neglect). Students = key players
  • Evaluation: focused on learning and the learner while broad enough to encompass other matters (student setting goals, unit and quarterly reviews, the collaborative assessment of students' achievements)
  • Dilemmas: constraints of official authority; planning and evaluation vs. study activities (time balancing); democratic teachers vs. traditionally narrow-minded and hierarchical institutions
  • Critique: hard to approach small-group democracy; undervalue authority; democratic culture vs. social reality (inequality or injustice)
  • Samples: community is the center; democracy is 'of the people, by the people, and for the people'; 'empowerment'
6. Confronting the dominant order (Connected to Kliebard's social-reconstructionist - pragmatism)
  • Goals: give each child the uncompromised opportunity to develop into a self-determining and rationally acting person; to empower the individual so as to transform themselves and society for better; to build a society that makes possible growth and development for everyone
  • Roots; British oppression; social ferment; the Great depression; Neo-Marxism; Postmodernism; the feminist movement; critical pedagogy (Giroux, Apple, Greene, Slattery, Doll, Freire)
  • Learners: individuals with unique personal histories that are dynamic, rich with the respective influences of family life, peer relationships, and popular culture; critical co-investigators in dialogue with the teacher
  • Teachers: Transformative intellectuals, engaged critics, partisans (not doctrinaire), provocateurs, co-investigators
  • Content: the organized and systematic depiction to learners of the things about which they want to know more
  • Context: honors supportive relationships, previous experiences, and multiple cultural and linguistic realities, a forum for critical analysis of the world
  • Planning: teachers invite students to generate ideas, to negotiate subject matter, and to find resources outside the school settings
  • Evaluation: qualitatively evaluating the ongoing work of students to provide feedback about communicative skills, content knowledge, and critical insights about the content
  • Dilemmas: disturbing the social order; learners' resistance of doing critical analysis; many dependent factors; the circumscribed worldview of teachers themselves; a discontinuity between theory and guidelines for practice
  • Critique: complexity and negativity
  • Samples: equal rights, social justice, transforming, empower individual so they may transform themselves and society for better

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Kliebard's four strands

Curriculum Trends Emerging from the Progessive Era (overview of Kliebard, 1986)

1. Humanistic
  • Advocates & issues
    • Charles Eliot (pre-1900): curriculum should "give one the intellectual mastery needed to make independent and sound judgments under a variety of circumstances." (later changed his mind)
    • William T. Harris: anti-vocational ed. - "curriculum should take its cue from the great resources of civilization."
    • Power of reason
    • Passing on Western cultural heritage
  • Philosophical Base
    • Idealism
  • Associated with
    • Faculty psychology
    • Classics/math, as in Harris' "five windows of the soul" (grammar, literature/art, math, geography, & history)
    • Connecting to the Canon
  • Criticisms
    • Impractical for the masses
2. Social Efficiency
  • Advocates & issues
    • Herbert Spencer: science is of most worth
    • Frederick Taylor: "scientific" management
    • Edward Thorndike: standardized testing
    • Appeal "objective" standards, precise, measurable outcomes, control (predictability)
    • Standardized techniques
    • Greater specialization in content
  • Philosophical Base
    • Realism
  • Associated with
    • The practical subjects
    • Graded classes
    • Subject divisions
    • Curriculum "differentiation"
    • Training for Work and Survival
  • Criticisms
    • Social predestination
3. Child-Centered
  • Advocates & issues
    • G. Stanley Hall: "cultural epochs" - in their individual development from conception, children pass through all the evolutionary stages in the development of the human species (Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny - stage theory - "science" of child development*)
    • "differentiated" instruction
    • William H. Kilpatrick: Project method (the project, based on children's interests, should replace the subject as the basic building block of curriculum)
    • Natural order of child's development
    • In harmony w/ child's interests
  • Philosophical Base
    • Pragmatism - the "scientific" emphasis aspect
  • Associated with
    • Child's interest
    • Child-initiated activities
    • Constructing Understanding
    • Developing Self & Spirits
  • Criticisms
    • Frivolous
    • Doesn't prepare for adulthood
*note: theory of G. Stanley Hall was based on the premise that growing children would recapitulate evolutionary stages of development as they grew up and that there was a one-to-one correspondence between childhood stages and evolutionary history, and that it was counterproductive to push a child ahead of its development stage. The whole notion fit nicely with other social Darwinist concepts, such as the idea that "primitive" societies needed guidance by more advanced societies, i.e. Europe and North America, which were considered by social Darwinists as the pinnacle of evolution.

4. Social Reconstructionist
  • Advocates & issues
    • Lester Frank Ward: "civilization is achieved by intelligent intervention"
    • George Counts: "Dare the schools build a new social order?"
    • Harold Rugg: social studies textbooks
    • Concern for social justice
    • Social change and justice
    • Issues of race, gender, class
    • New social vision
  • Philosophical Base
    • Pragmatism - the social emphasis aspect
  • Associated with
    • social problems
    • Confronting the Dominant Order
    • Deliberating Democracy
  • Criticisms
    • Too radical

Whose markets, whose knowledge

Apple, M. W. (2007). Whose markets, whose knowledge? In A. R. Sadovnik (Ed.), Sociology of education: A critical reader (p. 177-193). New York: Routledge.

Introduction

A leading critical educational theorist, Michael Apple is recognized for his affluent scholarly works which center on education and power, cultural politics, and curriculum theory and research. Following Apple’s previous studies on the New Right, this article critiques the current rightward educational reform efforts, analyzes neoliberalism, neoconservativism, authoritarian populism, and the professional and managerial new middle class that dominate the social field of power surrounding educational policy and practice, and reveals the complexities and imbalances in this field of power.

Purpose of Study

The conservative modernization movement in recent years has put egalitarian norms and values under attack. The simplistic interpretation of what’s happening to education from the perspective of economic elites does not present a holistic view of the major tensions surrounding education as it moves in conservative directions. In an effort to provide a conflict perspective on the struggles over curriculum and educational policies in the United States, this study addresses the following questions:

1. How have neoconservatives and neoliberals dominated public discourse over the past two decades?
2. What are the roles of authoritarian populists and the professional and managerial new middle class in alliance with neoliberals and neoconservatives?
3. How does the above four elements form a New Right hegemonic alliance to influence educational policies?

Social Theory/Methodology

The social theory that lies behind this study is critical theory, which focuses on the origins of social, political and economic oppression and aims to unmask sources of oppression, to promote understanding of causes and consequences of oppression, and to encourage participation in liberation (citation of Dr. Beilke’s handout). This theory well serves the author’s goal as to critique the social, political, and economic inequities brought by the New Right trend in education.

The methodology of this study is critical inquiry with interpretive discourse in particular. Critical inquiry calls current ideology into question, and initiate action, in the cause of social justice. It interrogates commonly held values and assumptions, challenges conventional social structures, and engages in social action, with the spotlight on power relationships within society so as to expose the forces of hegemony and injustice (Crotty, 1998). In critical discourse the beliefs, norms and values that are taken for granted in everyday interaction are “expressly thematised and subjected to critique” (Crotty, 1998, p. 144). This methodology is exactly what we see adopted in this article, as Apple unmasks the false consciousness that attempts to justify the conservative modernization and its oppressive policies through his thoughtful analysis and careful critique.

Findings/Conclusion

In this article, Apple closely examines how the social, political, economic, and cultural movements of “the rightward turn” have succeeded in forming a “new hegemonic alliance” to influence educational policies in the United States. At the beginning, he discusses what Rightist movements have done and why they have been so successful, along with the identification of the new alliance that contains four major social, political, and ideological elements – neoliberals, neoconservatives, authoritarian populists, and the professional and managerial new middle class. Among them, each element has different and sometimes conflicting interests. However, they come together and form a “broad-based alliance” when “conservative modernization” becomes the suture of the four. One by one, Apple discloses and critiques the central tenets that underlie the four elements.

Neoliberals, proponents of the “economic rationality,” uphold a vision of students as human capital and education as a product. They criticize that not only are schools and other public services failing our children as future workers, but also they are wasting financial economic resources of our society. The solution is centered on “either creating closer linkages between education and the economy or placing school themselves into the market” (p. 179). However, Apple points out that the economic decline is not caused by government or poor people but by mergers and leveraged buyouts manipulated by economic elites. And there is a risk that the neoliberal “economizing” and “depoliticizing” efforts may reproduce traditional hierarchies of class, race, and gender when neoliberals attempt to transform responsibility for decision-making from the public to the private sphere. For example, the voucher and choice programs may end up with the long-term effects that the affluent white families switch to private schools and refuse to pay taxes to support public schools. Therefore, the educational apartheid will be exacerbated consequently.

Neoconservatives, the second major element in the conservative alliance, emphasize on a return to traditional values and “morality,” which neoconservatives refer to as “real knowledge.” With a fear of the “Other” and a sense of cultural pollution, Neoconservatives are determined to enforce traditional curriculum and national standards across the country, making a shift from “licensed autonomy” to “regulated autonomy.” No Child Left Behind, for example, is an outgrowth of the “regulated autonomy” which contributes to the “deskilling of teachers, the intensification of their work, and the loss of autonomy and respect” (p. 185). Apple articulates, however, that this perspective that underpins the mistrust of teachers and the fear of the loss of cultural control is often an “ethnocentric, and even racialized, understanding of the world” (p. 185).

Authoritarian populists, representing the “Christian Right,” are motivated by a desire to integrate religion and God within the school curriculum. Abiding by biblical authority, “Christian morality,” gender roles, and the family, this group rejects any “unorthodox” ideals such as modernism, liberalism, feminism, and humanism. In concert with neoconservativism and in order to take advantage of educational marketization and privatization to create communities of their own belief, authoritarian populists find a place in the conservative alliance. Apple believes that the growing authoritarian populist influence in federal and state educational policies privileges students from religious segments of society over students from economically disadvantaged backgrounds.

Finally, the professional and managerial new middle class is associated with maintaining social and economic inequality by supporting educational policies that are favorable to their class standing within society. The majority members of this class are likely to be mobilized by the right especially when the future of their jobs and children is ensured by the shifts to the latter.
In conclusion, Apple reiterates the complexity of educational policies in the United States. While he admits that the hegemonic alliance is powerful, Apple, with cautious optimism, indicates that many teachers, academics and community activists are still defending emancipatory educational programs, and our educational policies and practices are going in multidimensional directions. All these facts are shedding a light of hope for us to fight against the New Right forces.

Critique

As an abstract of Apple’s studies on the conservative movements in education, this information-rich article is clearly written and well organized. With a straightforward format, it is not hard to read and comprehend.

The key concepts for the four elements that form the new hegemonic alliances are well addressed, not only with the terminologies such as “arithmetical particularism,” “reprivatization,” and “value and sense legitimation,” but also with examples such as voucher and choice plans, No Child Left Behind, The Bell Curve, and Channel One. They are very helpful in terms of making connections between theory and practice. Interestingly, I found that the Chinese communist leader Mao’s description of the new middle class in the 1920s China is somehow similar to Apple’s description of the professional and managerial new middle class. However, given the fact that Apple was deeply influenced by neo-Marxism, I do not feel too surprised to see this coincidence.

A reflection upon the cultures of curriculum (Joseph, Bravmann, Windschitl, Mikel, & Green, 2000) also helps in making connections. For neoliberals, I believe that they have a shared vision with that of the culture of “training for work and survival.” While for neoconservatives, it is “connecting to the canon.” As for this article, there is no doubt that Apple’s endeavor is “confronting the dominant order”- with a language of critique, hope, and possibility which calls for moral discourse.

While I agree with Apple’s in-depth analysis of the conservative modernization in education and his criticism of the New Right’s attempt to shape the landscape of educational policies in the United States, I remain skeptical as he claims that the neoliberals change people’s common sense by simply redefining the key concepts (e.g., democracy) through the strategy of “sense legitimation” (p. 182). (Based on my common sense, I doubt people’s common sense can be shaped only by passive alternation of the meaning key concepts.) It might be more convincing if he can provide more evidence to demonstrate how the neoliberals “change the very meaning of the sense of social need into something that is very different” (p. 182) and show “the extent of acceptance of such transformations of needs and needs discourses” (p. 183).

Although Apple has successfully analyzed and interpreted the causes and consequences of the conservative trend, he does not provide a solution. He does give us some hope at the end of the article. However, “in a time when it is easy to lose sight of what is necessary for an education worthy of its name” (p. 190), who can promise that this hope will not be transformed by the neoliberal strategy of sense legitimation?

References

Crotty, M. (1998). The foundations of social research: Meaning and perspective in the research process. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Joseph, P., Bravmann, S., Windschitl, M., Mikel, E., & Green, N. (2000). Cultures of curriculum. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

Citation of Dr. Beilke’s handout.

Constructing understanding

Windschitl, M. A. (2000). Constructing understanding. In Joseph et al. Cultures of curriculum.

Three themes of constructing understanding
  • centrality of the learner
    compare new knowledge with their past knowledge; learners as capable agents of knowledge production
  • complexity
    PBL; richer, more integrated view of the world; teacher incorporate student diversities into classroom
  • engagement
    experiencing the content; projects; interacting with teachers and peers
The characteristics of this curriculum culture
  • Encourages learners to utilize their lived experiences, intellectual strengths, and interactions with others to bridge the domains of formal knowledge with the rich, continually evolving world of the individual mind
Visions
  • Constructivism: learners actively create and restructure knowledge, constantly comparing ideas introduced in formal instruction to their existing knowledge, which has been assembled from personal experiences, the intellectual, cultural, and social contexts in which these ideas occur, and a host of other influences that serve to mediate understanding
  • Objectivism (in opposition to Constructivism): an external world independent of human consciousness. Language as a precise, neutral tool to describe the real world and effectively map knowledge from the minds of instructors to the minds of learners. These two beliefs supported transmission models of instruction (direct instruction, didacticism). E.g., behaviorism - knowledge and skills may be decomposed, the components removed from from context, acquired separately by learners through systematic reinforcement of incremental target learning behaviors, and then concatenated by the learner to form a coherent whole
  • Sense of agency in learners related to Piaget's larger view of the purpose of education: to develop intellectual and even moral autonomy in learners
  • Critical constructivism: questioning the value of individualism, objectivity, rationality and efficiency as well as the resulting forms of pedagogy and curriculum. It suggests that teachers should convey to learners that all knowledge is provisional and make explicit the political and social context of this knowledge.
  • encourage learners to expand on the ideas of other - to explore the possibilities not only of how to solve authentic problems, but consider alternative ways of seeing what problems 'exist' in a given situation
  • Lager vision: citizens collaborate effectively, understand and appreciate other's viewpoints, incorporate diverse ideas into problem solutions, negotiate with open mind, life-long learners, respect children's way of seeing the world
History
  • John Dewey's progressive schools: lab school in Chicago, 1896, to 'test, verify, and criticize' educational theory as well as to contribute new ideas to education
    • the curriculum should spring from the "genuine" experiences of children
    • authentic problems should be identified within these experiences to serve as stimuli for thought
    • students should be allowed the freedom to gather the info necessary to deal with these problems
    • students should be given opportunities to test these ideas through application to make their meaning clear and test their validity (Dewey, 1916)
  • Montessori schools (1967)
    • teachers as facilitators, architects of the environment, resource persons, supportive
    • Children as free pursuer of learning experiences, natural learners in a better position to make learning choices than their adult mentors
  • Reggio Emilia schools (1946)
    • projects involving teachers, family, and community members
    • objective: to increase the possibilities for the child to invent and discover
    • children as capable of making meaning from daily life experiences through mental acts involving planning, coordination of ideas, and abstraction
  • Piaget
    • learning as a way of constantly reorganizing one's world, reconciling new info with past experience
    • Knowledge is not an internalized representation of the real world but a collection of conceptual structures that are sensible only within the knowing subject's range of experience (foundational to cognitive constructivism)
    • Cognitive constructivism: the system of explanations for how learners, as individuals, impose structure on their worlds (a. meaning is rooted in and indexed by personal experiences; b. young learners possess complex but inaccurate conceptions of how the world works; c. these conceptions influence how they respond to formal instruction
  • Two theories related to cognitive constructivism - social constructivism & sociocultural learning: knowledge is personally constructed and socially mediated (e.g., individuals construct knowledge in the presence of others who both constrain and enrich the environment through the use of tools such as language, conventions (such as pre-established concepts), and accepted practices for creating and judging knowledge (Vygotsy, 1979)
Learners and teachers
  • Learners: continually involved in reorganizing their world, actively imposing order and meaning on their experiences and "creating" the world in which they live
  • Teacher: a learning facilitator and a codeveloper of understanding with the student rather than a dispenser of knowledge
  • Instruction styles: probing discussion, interviews, concept mapping, presentations, demonstrations, semi-structured activities
  • Strategies
    • Scaffolding, in which teachers reduce the difficulty of learning tasks by helping students with more complex aspects of problems and gradually give more responsibility to learners as time passes
    • Modeling, in which teachers either think loud or act out how they would approach a problem
    • Providing hints to learners by asking probing questions or redirecting attention
Content and context
  • Norms about content
    • The way in which learners approach the subject matter is as important as the topics themselves
    • The long, critical engagements with the subject matter favored in the constructivist culture suggest that less is more (understanding is fostered by prolonged engagements with a few key topics and encyclopedic coverage of content is avoided)
    • The organization of content lends itself to the integrated curriculum (e.g., studying the historical perspectives of art, the mathematics of geography, literature in science)
  • Concerning the context of instruction, the focus is the learner rather than the subject matter
    • Situating examples, analogies within meaningful contexts
    • Not to provide exhaustive detail, "authoritative" explanations
    • Working in groups
    • Collecting evidence and generating interpretations consistent with such evidence (foster a "thinking about thinking" environment)
    • Long-term engagement with projects and problems (block scheduling, interdisciplinary curriculum, teacher teaming)
  • Common characteristics in the design
    • Teachers find out "where students are" intellectually before instruction and then monitor how students gradually make sense of the subject matter
    • Teachers provide students with early investigative experiences relevant to the subject matter rather than start with explanations
    • Students are given frequent opportunities to engage in problem or inquiry-based activities
    • Such problems are meaningful to the student and not oversimplified or decontextualized
    • Students work collaboratively and are encouraged to engage in dialogue
    • Students have various avenues to express what they know to their peers and to the teacher
    • Teachers encourage students' reflective and autonomous thinking in conjunction with the conditions listed above
Planning and evaluation
  • Teachers shape the curricular process, determine standards for the students' work, and create the structure of classroom activity
  • Students have some latitude in choosing problems or designing projects that relate to curricular themes; negotiating with the teacher what the criteria are for selecting problems to study, and what kinds of evidence must be provided to demonstrate their learning
  • Planning criteria
    • Is the chosen problem meaningful, important to the discipline and complex enough?
    • Does it deal with the theme of the unit under study?
    • Does it require original thinking and interpretation or is it simply fact-finding?
    • Can this problem help you think about related problems?
    • Will engaging with this problem result in the acquisition of contexualized facts, concepts, and principles that are fundamental to the theme under study?
  • Evaluation (rigorous and multidimensional)
    • Based on the processes as well as the products of intellectual activity
    • Not absolutely preclude objective testing as one source of evidence of understanding (the exclusive use of objective testing provides only a limited pic of the scope of learner's knowledge)
    • Based primarily on student performances or artifacts generated as a result of substantial effort, judged against the agreed-upon criteria that the students jointly developed with the teacher
    • Students maintain portfolios that contain both typical and exemplary works
Dilemmas of practice
  • The most difficult challenge in maintaining a culture of constructivism: the need for many teachers to reconceptualize their view of instruction
  • The oversimplification of constructivism as opposed to traditional instruction
    • Reduced the instruction to "anything goes"
    • Effective forms should integrate both teacher-centered and student-centered models that have systematic and purposeful structure, and value rigorous evaluations of learning progress
  • Heavy burden on teachers' side
    • teachers are responsible for the framework of instruction
    • requires teachers to have an almost unrealistic degree of subject matter knowledge and pedagogical skill including negotiating subject matter and evaluation criteria with students, maintaining a pro-social atmosphere in student groups, and coordinating the timetables of the various student projects; understand what a "problem" is, and cooperative learning theory
  • Lack of control over students
  • What exactly do we want students to construct?
  • Ideas in the academic disciplines will differ in the extent to which they can be taught through constructivist instruction (e.g., math 3x2=6 both sense-making experiences and rote learning)
Critique
  • Although constructivism can be viewed as a philosophy that provides guidelines for learning such as promoting student autonomy, collaboration, and sense making, it remains difficult to represent constructivism as a single, coherent set of pedagogical methods (it is little more than thematic, project-based learning)
  • The goals of education, articulated in national, state and local standards, do not always seem compatible with the rich and diverse understandings of individual students
  • Constructivism represents merely a set of guidelines for instruction and does not have import with regard to the larger issues of curriculum
    • no social vision is promoted
    • no concern for caring about others or for the environment, for combating oppression, or for making the world a better place
    • no incentives for learners to participate in the community or in the larger culture outside of school
    • pays little attention to how politics and privilege affect meaning-making by learners
    • The constructivist culture may be a means, but not an end (This culture aims to promote autonomous learners and create a society in which authority is never blindly followed and individuals' worldviews are not controlled by miseducative influences of peers and popular culture. Autonomy, however, does not automatically translate into community or a shared vision of a better society)


Critique

Comps outline for curriculum track

Recommended readings

* Kelly Chapter (in particular, The politics of knowledge)
* Parkay & Hass's social context article
* The last two chapters of New Literacies (Digital Epistemologies & New Ways of Knowing)
* The Oliva article (curriculum vs instruction)

Thomas Robert Malthus's Principle of Population: "The power of population is so superior to the power of the earth to produce subsistence for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race. The vices of mankind are active and able ministers of depopulation. They are the precursors in the great army of destruction; and often finish the dreadful work themselves. But should they fail in this war of extermination, sickly seasons, epidemics, pestilence, and plague, advance in terrific array, and sweep off their thousands and tens of thousands. Should success be still incomplete, gigantic inevitable famine stalks in the rear, and with one mighty blow levels the population with the food of the world. "

Other readings:

Computers as Mindtools (Johnassen)
The Medium is the Massage (McLuhan)
Digital Immigrants vs Digital Natives (Prensky)

The additional comments from Dr. NJB:

1. The Glatthorn article on curriculum alignment, Curriculum Alignment Revisited , is a good article because it provides a clear process for planning and or improving the curriculum for any course or discipline area. It draws very much on constructivist principles. However, at the end Glatthorn suggests several other alignment possibilities and some of those would be more likely to be employed by other theoretical perspectives

2. Because you have an affinity for Glatthorn, who bases most of his work on constructivism, I'd suggest that you thoroughly familiarize yourself with the constructivist approach. No problem, as it is nicely summarized in Joseph's "Constructing Understanding" chapter. Keep in mind, however, that Joseph and her co-authors have basically done a lit review in this book. While it's fine to reference them a little bit, it's better to be able to talk about the scholars they have cited and, of course, any other constructivist scholarship (as I believe Jonassen's work is- the Computer as Mind Tool author that you've mentioned).

3. Of course, as a scholar you need to be able to approach any curriculum project from more than one orientation or "theoretical perspective" (more oft-used terms than "curriculum culture') While you should know some basics of the various perspectives, you don't need to know everything about all of them (e.g., Joseph's six or Kliebard's four), but you should be able to use at least a couple more (in addition to constructivism) to analyze curriculum plans/processes. By the way, as you may have noticed in our Curriculum Theory class, the names of Kliebard's strands are more commonly used than are Joseph's. (e.g., Apple is referred to as a Social Reconstructionist)

4. Remember - you don't have to show that you know everything there is to know about curriculum - just that you are familiar with major scholars in the field and that you can synthesize and apply the knowledge you have gained from your studies. For your curriculum question, it's is fine to synthesize knowledge from your foundations and technology tracks with your curriculum knowledge, as long as you don't do that to the extent that you neglect curriculum scholarship. (In fact some theorists are to be found in more than one track, like Michael Apple)


Dr. Brooks

Sunday, July 13, 2008

New ways of knowing: Learning at the margins

Lankshear, C., & Knobel, M. (2003). New literacies: Changing knowledge and classroom learning. Buckingham, PA: Open University Press.

Chapter 8. New ways of knowing: Learning at the margins

This a case study of the Language Australia Yanga Headlands State High School project. Main concerns about research in pedagogical approach to using new technologies within classroom settings with disadvantaged learners
  • Teachers' cultural identities and experiences are often very different from those of their students (digital insiders/natives vs digital outsiders/immigrants)
  • Low levels of technical and cultural knowledge on the part of teachers often result in computer-mediated learning activities being ineffective, inefficiacious, or mystifying (e.g., how to get the machines to work)
  • Teachers often make well-intentioned uses of student 'savvy' with new technologies to get around snags at the technical operation level (enlist native competence in the service of immigrant practices)
The new project (Networks of practice)
  • Researchers: participant observers (documents, activities - qualitative); info resources
  • Participants: 4 "problem" boys
  • Time: 2 hrs/week over an 8-10 week period
Features of the learning process
  • A logic of transcendence
    • Different from contemporary preformativity-oriented ed. systems (which focuses on learning outcomes)
    • Learning consequences vs learning outcomes: students learn beyond the checklist of learning outcomes (e.g., becoming a good citizen, worker, community person and family member)
  • Purposefully decentered learning
    • Learning in network context vs subject-based fixed content approach
    • uncovering new ground vs covering predetermined ground
Learning consequences (Pedagogical contexts look backwards as well as forwards. They project learners into new areas of capability and understanding, while drawing on what they have previously experienced, learned and understood, p. 193)
  • Technical capability
  • Cultural knowledge
  • Self-perception of learners (from "fans" to "stars"; "failures was not a fixed, permanent, and natural position but rather sth. that could be challenged, disrupted, and rejected)
Rethinking the economics of attention
  • Well-established patterns of student behaviors and teacher practices in a closed school economy
  • "Brat level": seeking and gaining attention by illegitimate means constitutes resistance to the tight controls of the school attention economy
  • ICT - deregulated economy (calling for criteria and standard change)
  • Attention economy outside school vs within school
  • In this project, students started from deflective attention work to being receiving full attention of a teacher
  • Persuasion as a powerful social instrument - negotiating people's places in social groups
End notes
  • Status quo: under the powerful impetus of state guidelines, policies, and funding arrangements, literacy is defined in terms of state mandated standardized tests; proficiency statements and knowledge are defined in terms of the content of a national curriculum; school-business partnership concept
  • Top line: formal education can be so much more, and make far better, more direct, and more enabling connections between what students learn now and what will do and be later
  • Bottom line: teachers' acknowledgment of the kinds of things young people are doing and being outside school in order to make effective pedagogical connections to them in class, despite the complexities teachers face on a day-to-day basis

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Digital epistemologies

Lankshear, C., & Knobel, M. (2003). New literacies: Changing knowledge and classroom learning. Buckingham, PA: Open University Press.

Chapter 7. 'Digital epistemologies": Rethinking knowledge for classroom learning

Epistemology - the nature of knowledge
  • Definition: the study of the origins, presuppositions, nature, extent, and veracity (truth, reliability, validity) of knowledge (e.g., What kinds of things can we know? What kinds of things are most important to know? How can we come to know things? What kinds of knowledge are possible?)
  • Knowledge that a curriculum contain
    • propositional ~: knowing that something is the case
    • procedural ~: knowing how to do something
    • explanatory ~: knowing why something is the case
  • the digitization of aspects and experiences are challenging the conventional epistemology
Standard epistemology: "justified true belief"
  • General concept/model: for A (a person, knower) to know that P (a proposition), A must believe that P, P must be true, A must be justified in believing that P.
  • The primary object of learning: the content of subjects (what we need to know about the world in order to function effectively in it is discovered through (natural and social) scientific enquiry
  • Knowledge has both its literatures (content) and its languages (disciplined procedures)
  • Authentic practice: apprenticeship, guided participation, participatory appropriation (promote the development of knowers as well as to transmit knowledge
  • Problem: knowing how (procedural) has been subordinated to the pursuit of content (propositional)
The challenge of "digitization": an overview
  • Changes in "the world (objects, phenomena) to be known", resulting from the impact of digitization
    • Difference in "stuffness": atoms (the world of analogues) vs bits (the digital world)
    • Ontological changes: The reality and logic impacts: aesthetics, evaluation, quality, trueness; expanding beyond the limits (verbal - text/print - television - computer); "being digital" (Negroponte, 1995)
  • Changes in conceptions of knowledge and processes of "coming to know", contingent upon deeper incursions of digitization into everyday practices
    • Knowledge change in the postmodern/postindustrial condition (Lyotard, 1984) - two key functions of knowledge (research and transmission of acquired learning) change under the diminishing of the modernity belief and the effects of new technologies
      • Availability of knowledge as an international commodity becomes the basis for national and commercial advantage within the emerging global economy
      • Computerized uses of knowledge become the basis for enhanced state security and international monitoring
      • Anything in the constituted body of knowledge that is not translatable into quantities of information will be abandoned
      • Knowledge is exteriorized with respect to the knower, and the status of the learner and the teacher is transformed into a commodity relationship of "supplier" and "user"
    • Attention has moved from aims, values, and ideals to a new focus on "means and techniques for obtaining (optimally) efficient outcomes" (Marshall, 1998): Performativity - "Is it saleable?" "Is it efficient?" instead of "Is it true?"; Create "truths" rather than to discern them (e.g., research that finds what their clients want to hear...The TV documentary "People's Republic of Capitalism")
    • Access to perfect information being equal, imagination carries the day: enactive projects bring visions into reality - cybercultures; e-commerce
  • Changes in the constitution of "knowers", which reflect the impact of digitization
    • Example 1 - "fast capitalist" workplaces and Discourses, and areas of enquiry like cognitive science and social cognition: e.g., "distributed cognition", "collaborative practice", "networked intelligence", and "communities of practice"; knowledge assembly, customization (my example: wikipedia); knowledge (P) located within the individual (A) vs knowledge (P) as an attribute of an individual (A).
    • Example 2 - people being electronically wired together as networks by means of wearable computers
  • Changes in the relative significance of, and balance among, different forms and modes of knowing, which are associated with the impact of digitization
    • Conventional epistemology has privileged propositional knowledge - abstraction and decontextualization of classrooms - prohibited a more equitable balance between propositional and procedural knowledge (knowing how)
    • four facets of rethinking epistemology in terms of the evolving digital age
      • The importance of understanding knowledge in relation to building, inhabiting, and negotiating virtual worlds (e.g., SecondLife)
      • Multi-modal truth (from print to multimedia; meaning arrives in spatial as well as in verbal expressions in Cyberspace)
      • Attention economy (endless originality; focus on imagination)
  • Challenges facing conventional epistemology
    • The rhetorical and normative modes challenge the scientific-propositional mode (e.g., digital media displacing older forms of typed and printed word)
    • Justified true belief is disrupted by practices mediated by digital ICTs (e.g., distributed cognition - fast capitalism, networked technologies; knowledge is distributed rather than concentrated; individual knowledge vs collective knowledge)
    • More performance epistemology (of knowing as an ability to perform, e.g., telematics, informatics) than propositional knowledge (of what already exists): Knowing how to proceed in the absence of existing models and exemplars; gaining attention vs scientific knowledge; chaos vs stability; bricolage, collage, montage...
    • None of the 3 logical conditions of justified true belief (JTB) is necessary for information (Lankshear et al., 2000): Senders - receivers; knowledge produced to be sold or to be valorized in the postmodern condition (Lyotard) doesn't necessarily require that the conditions of JTB be met.
Implications for classroom curriculum and pedagogy
  • Social practices beyond the school within digitally saturated milieu privileging modes of knowing that are
    • more performance- and procedure-oriented than propositional (thus the subject-based curriculum founded on texts and academic teachers as authority is in trouble)
    • more collaborative than individualistic (thus individuals shouldn't be assessed as the personal bearers of knowledge)
    • more concerned with making an impact on attention, imagination, curiosity, innovation than with fostering truth, engendering rational belief, or demonstrating their justifiability
  • Multi- and cross-disciplinary expertise is developed in performance, not through absorbing content
  • Consistent with the idea of
    • school as a knowledge producer and provider for communities
    • diver forms of activity-oriented learning
    • trying to approximate to the quality of learning and approaches to learning that is characteristic of e.g, online video games and the communities associated with them
References

Lankshear, C., Peters, M., & Knobel, M. (2000). Information, knowledge and learning: Some issues facing epistemology and education in a digital age. Journal of Philosophy of Education, 34 (1), 17-40.

Lyotard, J.-F. (1984). The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge, translated by Geoff Bennington and Brian Massumi. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.

Marshall, J. (1998). Performativity: Lyotard, Foucault and Austin. Paper presented to the American Educational Research Association's Annual Meeting, San Diego, 11-17 April.

Negroponte, N. (1995). Being digital. New York, NY: Vintage Books.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Social forces: Present and future

Parkay, F. W., & Hass, G. (2005). Curriculum planning: A contemporary approach (7th Ed.). Boston: Allyn and Bacon. (Chapter 2. Social forces: Present and future, pp. 45-58)
Keywords: social forces, developmental tasks, future planning

Ten contemporary social forces that influence the curriculum
  • increasing ethnic and cultural diversity ("melting pot" - "salad bowl")
  • the environment (pollution, overpopulation, depletion of the ozone layer, ecosystem in peril)
  • changing values and morality (fluctuating moral standards, drug abuse, teen alcoholism, divorce rate)
  • the family (spread out over a wide geographical area, not tied to the community; single-parent family, divorce rate, poverty, domestic violence)
  • the microelectronics revolution (Information Age, computers are not merely tools - expanding capabilities and interactivity, virtual school, digital immigrants vs natives)
  • the changing world of work (decentralization of work tasks, self-directed learning over a lifetime)
  • equal rights (women and minority groups more vocal, SES, haves vs have-nots, digital divide, Theoretical Connection - Apple's Remembering Capital)
  • crime and violence
  • lack of purpose and meaning (the fast change of the world led people to feeling disconnected from the society, family, and themselves)
  • global interdependence (interconnectedness, interdependence, mutual respect, cooperation
Three developmental tasks that effective curricula help learners accomplish (Social forces and the individual)
  • Vocation
    People's identities are determined by their occupations (SES)
  • Citizenship
    A democratic society requires citizens who are prepared to deal with the current issues of government
  • self-fulfillment
    Each person faces the challenge of achieving self-fulfillment and self-development
Three levels of social forces that influence the curriculum
  • National/international (equal rights, crime and violence, lack of purpose and meaning, changing world of work, global interdependence, ethnic and cultural diversity, changing values and morality, microelectronics revolution, environment, family)
  • Local community (community values, students' backgrounds, family structure, class structure)
  • School culture (traditions, assumptions, teacher's role with staff, learner's social status, school-community harmony or discord, teacher's role in school, beliefs, beliefs)
Concepts from the social sciences (sociology, anthropology, social psychology) that help curriculum planners understand the social forces that influence the curriculum
  • Humanity (cultural universals)
    organizing element in curriculum planning; particularly needed as the nations become more interdependent and together address problems of pollution, energy and food shortages, and terrorism (go beyond national borders)
  • Culture (identity)
    the way of life common to a group of people; it represents their way of looking at the world; consists of values, attitudes, and beliefs that influence their behavior.
  • Enculturation/socialization (enculturating and socializing children)
    immerse in a culture or cultures and learn the partterns of behvior supported by the culture into which he or she was born (learning this first culture)
  • Subculture (understanding the differences and similarities and be positive about the individual culture)
    a division of a cultural group consisting of persons who have certain characteristics in common while they share some of the major characteristics of the large culture
  • Cultural pluralism (cultural inclusiveness)
    a variety of ethnic and generational lifestyles, each grounded in a complexity of values, linguistics variations, skin hues, and perhaps even cognitive world views. Each person of different identification is entitled to the respect, dignity, freedom, and citizen rights promised by law and tradition; each group's contribution to the richness of the entire society is validated
Futures planning
  • Definition: the process of conceptualizing the future as a set of possibilties and then taking steps to create the future we want
  • Management of changes is the effort to convert certain possibles into probables, in pursuit of agreed-on preferables
    • Probable - a science of futurism
    • Possible - an art of futurism
    • Preferable -a politics of futurism
Critierion questions related to social forces in curriculum
  • individual differences among learners (family/home/community background, subculture)
    • What social or cultural factors contribute to individual differences among learners?
    • How can the curriculum provide for these differences
  • the teaching of values (hidden curriculum)
    • What values are we teaching?
    • What values do we wish to teach?
  • the development of self-understanding (cultural pluralism)
    • How can the school program assist learners in achieving their goals of self-understanding and self-realization?
  • the development of problem-solving skills (clarify problems and develop problem-solving strategies)
    • Has the curriculum been planned and organized to assist learners in identifying and clarifying personal and social problems?
    • Does the curriculum help learners acquire the problem-solving skills they will need now and in the future?
    • Does the curriculum include the development of skills in futures planning?

Curriculum alignment revisited

Glatthorn, A. A. (Fall, 1999). Curriculum alignment revisited. Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 15 (1), 26-34.

Misconception/narrowness
Under the accountability pressure, most teachers simply understand curriculum alignment as to "check the content of the state tests by using nonconfidential materials, examine the curriculum guide to remind themselves about what else should be taught, develop plans to accommodate the guide and the test, and teach as best as they can" (p. 26).

Used foolishly, curriculum alignment
  • diminishes the art of teaching
  • sterilizes the curriculum
  • makes the classroom a boring place
Used wisely, curriculum alignment offers teachers a practical method to ensure that students are well prepared for the mandated test

Creative coping
  • Analysis of the written curriculum
    • Mastery curriculum (essential for all; based on state standards and benchmarks; grade-specific; tested; should require only 60-80% of class time to teach)
    • Organic curriculum (essential for all; continuing development; not grade-specific; not tested)
    • Enrichment curriculum (not essential; "nice to know")
  • Development of mastery units (tested-written-taught)
    • review the mastery benchmarks
    • develop written curriculum within the limits of prescribed state standards and tests
    • implement the unit flexibly, modifying it to respond to students' needs and abilities
    • teach a brief enrichment unit if time is available

Expansion of the concept of Alignment
  • Eight types of curriculum
    • hidden: the unintended curriculum - what students learn from the school's culture and climate and related policies and practices. (powerful influence on students)
    • excluded (null): what has been left out.
    • recommended: the curriculum advocated by experts. (little impact on the written curriculum and teachers)
    • written: the document produced by the state education agency, the school system, the school, and/or the classroom teacher that specifies what is to be taught (moderate influence on the taught curriculum)
    • supported: the curriculum that appears in textbooks, software, and multimedia materials. (strong influence on the taught curriculum - e.g., elementary teachers who teach 4-5 subjects rely heavily on the textbook - major source of content knowledge)
    • tested: embodied in state tests, school system tests, and teacher-made tests. (strongest influence on teachers and students - "will this be on the test?")
    • taught: the curriculum that teachers actually deliver. (significant gap between the taught and the learned - student don't always learn what they are taught)
    • learned: the "bottom-line" curriculum - what students learn. It's the most important curriculum of all.
  • Aligning the most important types of curriculums (best to be added to the written/taught/tested triad)
    • hidden/taught (uncover the hidden - find the discrepancy - modify)
    • written/recommended (compare the state standards and benchmarks with those recommended by the professional organizations to improve standards)
    • excluded/written (recapture the excluded content to add to the written)
    • supported/written (compare textbooks on state-approved list with the state-mandated course)
    • tested/learned (use the result of both the state's mandated tests and the teacher's tests to diagnose teaching/learning problems)
  • Aligning the taught/learned curriculums
    • the taught/learned gap: student don't always learn what they are taugh
    • causes
      • environmental factors (e.g., classroom climate; external noise)
      • teacher factors (poor organization, unclear explanations, unclear speech, misinformation, insufficient monitoring and assessment, insufficient and/or inappropriate choice of content knowledge)
      • student factors (inattentiveness, lack of prior knowledge, disability, emotional problems, absorption with a personal agenda, influence of peers, disconnectedness with lesson content, fatigue or illness, cultural differences, preference for avoiding failure rather than being embarrassed by participating)
    • solutions: peer collaboration in diagnosing and remediating the problem.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Knowledge & the curriculum

Kelly, A. V. (2004). The curriculum theory and practice (5th Ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Chapter 2. Knowledge and the Curriculum

Major planning considerations - why analyze the status of human knowledge

  • What is to be learned
  • How that knowledge relates to other curriculum planning aspects (purposes, reasons)
    e.g., Tyler (1949): "What educational experiences can be provided that are likely to attain these purposes?"
  • How we conceptualizing the curriculum (the failure to recognize the problematic nature of human knowledge)
  • (Recognizing the problematic nature of human knowledge) in making decisions about the content of the curriculum we're dealing in ideologies rather than in eternal truths
The problematic nature of human knowledge

  • Absolutism
    • two main theories: rationalist views (intellect over human faculties; truth achieved by the mind) vs empiricist views (truth based on evidence, senses)
    • Rationalist epistemology - the fallibility of the senses vs the infallibility of the intellect (Plato, Descartes, Kant, Hegel): evidence of senses is misleading; the rational mind can achieve truth); knowledge as essentially independent of the observations of our senses (God-given, 'out-there', timeless, objective, unrelated to societies, cultures or human beings);
    • Its attraction for the politicians: the universal above the particular; the collective above the individual
    • Its attraction for some educational theorists: epistemological belief, e.g., Richard Peter's "transcendental" argument (1966) for the intrinsic value of certain kinds of human activity
  • Empiricism
    • John Locke, Founder of the empiricist movement: knowledge acquired through experience
    • John Dewey, promoting pragmatist movement: knowledge as hypothetical and subject to constant change, modification and evolution; assist children to develop their own knowledge instead of imposing what is knowledge for us upon them (knowledge is personal and subjective).
    • However, Dewey believed in scientific knowledge, where hypotheses are framed and modified according to publicly agreed criteria; Its continuing evolution requires the kind of intellectual freedom which only a truly democratic political context can provide
  • Existentialism
    • a concern to resist the submerging of the individual into some kind of whole; every human being must be defined as a unique individual and accept full responsibility for his/her own 'essence', what he/she is and becomes.
  • The 'knowledge explosion' of the twentieth century
    • A shift from verification to falsification (theories are regarded as having validity until they are shown to be false or inadequate)
    • Such a rejection of "modernism" may see the beginning of postmodernism
  • 'New directions in the sociology of education'
    • The absolutist view of knowledge was challenged from two sources
      • At the level of curriculum practice, the unsuitability and the consequential alienating inequalities
      • At the level of educational practice (1970s), reconceptualization
    • Questions of the nature of are sociological rather than philosophical and are concerned with the social relations through which knowledge develops rather than aspects or characteristics of the knowledge itself
    • Most of school subjects are in fact the creations of interest groups whose prime concern has been with maintaining and extending their own status
    • Socially constructed knowledge is ideology and what is imposed through a politically controlled education system is the ideology of the dominant, controlling group
  • The teaching of religion and the establishment of 'faith schools'
    • When education becomes religious knowledge/instruction, it loses its critical dimension and becomes the imposition of the religious values of those in control on the impressionable young people
    • Result: culturally divisive and elitist
    • The politics of knowledge
  • Postmodernism
    • a rejection of all 'totalizing theories', an 'incredulity towards metanarratives', 'an interrogation of Western discourse's desire for certainty and absolutes', a complex, chaotic, finite vision of the universe
    • It places everything in a cauldron of uncertainty and insists that that is where everything must stay (with continuing scepticism)
    • Implications: curriculum planning and organization are consequently wide-ranging, the foundation should be elsewhere than knowledge-content, and knowledge is ideology so that all approaches to the school curriculum are ideological
    • it makes an explicit link between knowledge and power, and sees power as being exercised through the distribution of knowledge and the manipulation of the discourses through which that knowledge, those 'totalizing theories' are expressed, 'the bureaucratic imposition of official values'.
    • we live in a world in which there is no 'knowledge', no 'ultimate truth', in which all perception is subjective, so that we are the products of the discourse, the ideologies, we are exposed to (Kelly, 1995, p. 71).
The politics of knowledge (Knowledge debate has shifted from being a philosophical concern to a social construct and on to the political concerns)

  • Totalitarianism - open and concealed
    • An absolutist epistemology leads to totalitarian forms of government (no individual freedom)
    • Plato (first advocate of the absolutist epistemology): ideal state is not a democracy, it is a meritocracy; not a society of equals, it is hierarchically structured with a selective education system that focuses on the needs of the state rather than on individuals; ultimate goal - social control and political harmony
    • Consequences of an absolutist epistemology: social and educational inequalities, elitism, the subservience of the individual to the collective, loss of individual freedom (proponents: Plato, Kant, Hegel, Marx - 'the enemies of the open society'; Nazi, communist regimes)
    • It fails to recognize the problematic nature of human knowledge
  • Resistance to change
    • John Dewey: reject Hegelian absolutism and embrace a pragmatist view of knowledge; evolution of knowledge requires the kind of free and open social and political context which only democracy can provide; democracy is a form of government open to continuous change
    • American schooling operates to reinforce certain basic aspects of the American political, economic and moral structure
    • Paulo Freire (1972): the pedagogy of the oppressed; Ivan Illich (1971): the institutionalization of values
  • Ideological dominance (distribution of power and the principles of social control)
    • It is a matter of one dominant group within society imposing its ideology on society as a whole and thus achieving political control at the expense of the freedom of others
    • It is the group within society which holds power, the dominant ideology, which controls the distribution of knowledge within a society and determines what kinds of knowledge will be made available
  • The legitimation of discourse
    • The use of sanctions: e.g., financial sanctions
    • Threatening school closures, the firing of teachers, and the public humiliation of schools
    • Testing of pupils in order to produce educationally meaningless 'league-tables'
    • Discourse is seen as power and the legitimation of discourse as the exercise of that power (Postmodernism claims that the totalizing theories and thus the discourses in which they are expressed are not 'eternal truth' but ideologies, then our thinking is being controlled by ideological discourse which is both intellectually and politically highly suspect)
    • The language of education has been manipulated to ensure that the language we use carries the values we are intended to embrace. Therefore, we need to analyze critically the language in which official pronouncements are made and the ways in which the language we are encouraged to use
  • The manipulation of language
    • Blurring logical distinctions between assertions of different kinds
      • we are encouraged to regard what officialdom says out of political expediency as carrying more weight than the evidence of painstakingly research; the context of the teacher's work is political rather than educational, totalitarian rather than democratic
    • The deliberate failure to acknowledge the problematic nature of the concepts used in making these pronouncements
      • e.g., terms like standards, breath, balance, continuity, progression, are used in documents governing practice, with no discussion invited
    • Among the terms used we will find many which have clearly been selected because they have warm, happy, friendly connotations
      • analyzed concepts like entitlement, relevance, coherence, development hijacked from theories to be misused in order to mislead or deflect criticism
    • Use of metaphor (esp. commercial/industrial)
      • e.g. the imposition of the commercial and industrial metaphor on the education system - school as factories that delivers products and requires quality-control mechanisms, increased productivity, economic costing, clients, managers, targets...
      • The language of educational purpose has undergone a sea-shift of transformation into business terminology and the going discourse of the corporate culture
      • Values & attitudes: competition, productivity, instrumentalism, value for money; loss of caring, human development, intrinsic value, enrichment
    • This kind of censorship has become a form of self-censorship
      • the above metaphor and values have been completely absorbed by the teaching profession
      • Suffocated and brainwashed
      • If not critical reflection, education will be led by the nose by those whose agenda is the political or personal rather than educational
Responses to the problem of the politics of knowledge
  • Ivan Illich: the only solution is to close the schools, to 'deschool' society
  • Postmodernism suggests we accept the problematic nature of human knowledge and recognize the dangers of all totalizing theories but respond to this by embracing the need for openness and constant change
    • All knowledge is contextual, education is a process whose central concern is to assist the young to develop their knowledge within the public context
    • education must be open to, and accepting of, different world views and cultures without imposition of any one of these (public doesn't mean universal)
    • Awareness of the political manipulation is to be on the way to being armed against it; Empowerment of the individual