This document discusses preserving the essence of education and discusses the purpose of education. It contrasts a narrow view of education focused on efficiency, calculability, predictability and control with a broader humanistic purpose of education to help people realize their full potential as human beings. It warns that buying into narrow purposes of education can lead to limited and unhealthy lives for both students and educators. It encourages maintaining balance, health and wholeness and recalling ourselves to the true purpose of education.
NEW MODEL OF EDUCATION FOR THE NEW GLOBAL SOCIAL ORDERDr. Raju M. Mathew
The existing systems of education have lost their relevance in the Emerging New Global Social order. The existing systems are based on the principle of ‘Knowledge for the Chosen Few’, keeping over 80% under ignorance and poverty. What is required is the New system of Education based on the Principle of ‘Knowledge for All’ so that everybody must get empowered so as to attain sustainable Peace and Prosperity. Its implications are Revolutionary and Long lasting.
NEW MODEL OF EDUCATION FOR THE NEW GLOBAL SOCIAL ORDERDr. Raju M. Mathew
The existing systems of education have lost their relevance in the Emerging New Global Social order. The existing systems are based on the principle of ‘Knowledge for the Chosen Few’, keeping over 80% under ignorance and poverty. What is required is the New system of Education based on the Principle of ‘Knowledge for All’ so that everybody must get empowered so as to attain sustainable Peace and Prosperity. Its implications are Revolutionary and Long lasting.
What a Difference a Global Education Paradigm for Social Studies Teacher Educ...jrharshman
This presentation is based on how two teacher education programs approach the teaching of social studies methods through a globally minded lens. Our analysis of the work of teacher educators and teacher candidates around perspective consciousness and open-mindedness
offers insight into a future-oriented approach that promotes change in education.
The presentation about aims of education in a democratic setup.
this slide include the aims in democratic situation. by viewing this slide know ones rights and duties
Learning and teaching curriculums, A Decision/Action Model for Soccer-Pt.9Larry Paul
Learning and teaching curriculums - A Decision/Action Model for Soccer – Pt. 9
“There is one basic golden rule. Coaching is not about technique; coaching is about the game and how it unfolds, and about developing the player’s proficiency and competitive maturity, and it is about enjoyment.” KNVB's Coaching Soccer - Bert van Lingen.
A curriculum should reflect and enable this rule.
This chapter takes a unique approach to ethics. Rather than cover traditional ethical theories from academic fields like philosophy or epistemology, it breaks ethics down to two frameworks of content and context. Weaving leadership theories throughout the chapter, it provides some basic activities for self-development towards congruence. Major challenges in conventional business practices such as behaviorism, scarcity, and competition often form the root of many judgments which are ethically challenged. While the chapter provides historical foundations of management practices that creates ample problems in the currently workplace environments, it also offers ethical practices within an organizational context with multiplicity as its foundation.
What a Difference a Global Education Paradigm for Social Studies Teacher Educ...jrharshman
This presentation is based on how two teacher education programs approach the teaching of social studies methods through a globally minded lens. Our analysis of the work of teacher educators and teacher candidates around perspective consciousness and open-mindedness
offers insight into a future-oriented approach that promotes change in education.
The presentation about aims of education in a democratic setup.
this slide include the aims in democratic situation. by viewing this slide know ones rights and duties
Learning and teaching curriculums, A Decision/Action Model for Soccer-Pt.9Larry Paul
Learning and teaching curriculums - A Decision/Action Model for Soccer – Pt. 9
“There is one basic golden rule. Coaching is not about technique; coaching is about the game and how it unfolds, and about developing the player’s proficiency and competitive maturity, and it is about enjoyment.” KNVB's Coaching Soccer - Bert van Lingen.
A curriculum should reflect and enable this rule.
This chapter takes a unique approach to ethics. Rather than cover traditional ethical theories from academic fields like philosophy or epistemology, it breaks ethics down to two frameworks of content and context. Weaving leadership theories throughout the chapter, it provides some basic activities for self-development towards congruence. Major challenges in conventional business practices such as behaviorism, scarcity, and competition often form the root of many judgments which are ethically challenged. While the chapter provides historical foundations of management practices that creates ample problems in the currently workplace environments, it also offers ethical practices within an organizational context with multiplicity as its foundation.
International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Invention (IJHSSI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Humanities and Social Science. IJHSSI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Humanities and Social Science, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online.
1. Preserving
the Essence of Education;
Preserving Ourselves
as Educators
Martin Tadlock and Beth Weatherby
Provosts: Bemidji State and Southwest Minnesota State
October 2014
2. “The one continuing purpose of education, since
ancient times, has been to bring people to as full
a realization as possible of what it is to be a
human being.
Other statements of educational purpose have
also been widely accepted: to develop the
intellect, to serve social needs, to contribute to
the economy, to create an effective work force,
to prepare students for a job or career, to
promote a particular social or political system.
3. These purposes offered are undesirably limited
in scope, and in some instances they conflict
with the broad purpose I have indicated; they
imply a distorted human existence.
The broader humanistic purpose includes all of
them, and goes beyond them, for it seeks to
encompass all the dimensions of human
experience.”
Arthur W. Foshay, “The Curriculum Matrix: Transcendence and
Mathematics,” Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1991
4.
5. In 1938 John Dewey said: Education is not
preparation for life; education is life itself.
What avail is it to win prescribed amounts of
information about geography and history, to win
ability to read and write, if in the process the
individual loses his or her soul; loses
appreciation of things worthwhile, of the values
to which these things are relative; loses desire
to apply what has been learned and, above all,
loses the ability to extract meaning from future
experiences as they occur.
6. In 1995 Michael Apple said:
“If the primary public responsibility and
justification for tax-supported education is
raising a generation of fellow citizens, then the
classroom--of necessity--must be a place
where students learn the habits of mind, work,
and heart that lie at the core of such a
democracy.”
9. Sociologist George Ritzer in his book The
McDonaldization of Society (1993) highlighted four
primary components of McDonaldization:
Efficiency – the optimal method for accomplishing a
task. In the example of McDonald's customers, it is
the fastest way to get from being hungry to being full.
Efficiency in McDonaldization means that every
aspect of the organization is geared toward the
minimization of time.
10. Calculability – objective should be quantifiable
(e.g., sales) rather than subjective (e.g., taste).
McDonaldization developed the notion that
quantity equals quality, and that a large amount
of product delivered to the customer in a short
amount of time is the same as a high quality
product. This allows people to quantify how
much they're getting versus how much they’re
paying. Organizations want consumers to
believe that they are getting a large amount of
product for not a lot of money.
11. Predictability – standardized and uniform
services. "Predictability" means that no matter
where a person goes, they will receive the
same service and receive the same product
every time when interacting with the
McDonaldized organization.
12. Control – standardized and uniform
employees, replacement of human by non-human
technologies.
13. A colleague of mine recently wrote this in a
Chronicle of Higher Education opinion piece:
“When did students and their parents start
seeing college as a gauntlet rather than as an
exciting pathway to opportunity? When did
policy makers stop seeing higher education as a
valuable public investment? When did a degree
become a commodity to be sold and traded in
the marketplace with little regard to what it
means to be an educated person?
14. Maybe when we bought into:
• knowledge delivery as education
• standardization
• massification of knowledge delivery
• ‘training’ as education
• education as career preparation
15. The question:
• How do we preserve a focus on developing
people to be thoughtful, contributing
community members in the face of
technocratic pressures to ‘train’?
17. These notions of education seem:
• Fractured
• Unbalanced
• Oppressive
• Narrow
18. This session is meant to serve as a REMINDER.
From RECALLING EDUCATION by Hugh Curtler,
SMSU Emeritus Professor of Philosophy:
“…we need to keep in mind that the purpose of liberal
education is to allow young people to achieve positive
freedom; that is, to take possession of their own minds.
This purpose centers on a need that is common to all
people at all times, because to the extent to which it is
possible for them to be so, all people everywhere need to
be free. This is the original meaning of the liberal arts: they
liberate the autonomous human agent within each of us.”
19. Proposition
Buying into
fractured,
unbalanced,
oppressive,
narrow
purposes of
education
Limited,
unhealthy,
constricted
lives for
students AND
educators
(US)!
=
20. Question
• How do we maintain balance, health,
well-being, wholeness?
• We strive to position our institutions to
SURVIVE and THRIVE.
• What about US? What about YOU?
• How do we recall ourselves to education?