by
Eugene Matusov, University of Delaware, USA
Ana Marjanovic-Shane, Chestnut Hill College, USA
August 19, 2011
Categories
|
Education 1.0
|
Education 2.0
|
---|---|---|
Purpose
|
Education for achieving the preset curricular endpoints/standards
|
Dialogic Education For Agency (DEFA) and voice in socially desired activities or practices
|
Economy
|
Industrial, knowledge-based postindustrial, standard-based
|
Post-knowledge, post-skill, post-standard, agency-based, artisan
|
Values
|
Accuracy, achievement of the given, standard, standardization, exclusive seriousness, instrumentality, objectivity, interchangeability, transferability across contexts, universality, detachment, agreement, mono-focus, detachment, homogeneity, answer, correctness, smoothness, certainty, finalization, following the well-defined goal, following known maps, achieving well-defined quality, treating students as objects of the teacher’s pedagogical actions
|
Bottomless depth of understanding, transcendence of the given, creativity, diversity, originality, final causes, imagination, playfulness, subjectivity, embodiment, embeddedness, situatedness, synchronous and diachronous poly-focus, uniqueness, disagreement, surprise, question, inquiry, uncertainty, unfinalizing, tension, defining and transforming goals, charting new territories, creating new quality, thinking out-of-box
|
Type of learning
|
Learning 1.0: thermostat-like learning (achieving preset and well-defined benchmarks)
|
Learning 2.0: subjective redefining goals and values
|
Tools (skills, knowledge, attitudes, habits)
|
Detached from people’s goals, uses, social relations, and values; a universal “toolkit” of essential skills and knowledge approach
|
Charged with and defined by people’s goals, uses, social relations, and values
|
Assessment
|
Credentials through standardized tests on correctness and accuracy for the preset and detached values
|
Contested responsibility to self and the relevant community
|
Curriculum
|
Student’s deficit: a gap between the preset curricular endpoint and the student’s performance; solving preset well-defined problems
|
Interest, inquiry, tension, question and concern-raising, problem-posing, goal-defining
|
Nature of learning
|
A special activity designed and assigned by the teacher to the student; (self)teaching causes learning
|
Aspect of any activity, in which a person is engaged involving certain but often contested transformation of participation in the activity
|
Guidance
|
a) Instructionism: well-defined, stable, and universal pathway (i.e., instructional strategies) by the teacher to the preset curricular endpoint for all students, teacher-proved
b) Constructivism: ill-defined, emergent, and individualized pathway by the teacher to the preset curricular endpoint for each student
c) Discovery: Creating conditions by the teacher in which a student will unavoidably discover the preset curricular endpoints
|
· Providing rich opportunities for people’s access to socially valuable activities;
· Legitimate peripheral participation;
· Legitimate redefining the practice and its goals;
· Legitimate access to and participation in a reflective and critical discourse about the practice;
· Freedom to join or leave the activity;
· Legitimate multiple and dynamic nature of people roles in the network of practices they participate;
· Equal rights of consciousnesses;
· Dialogic provocations;
· Validation of participants’ contributions by revealing their strengths;
· Collaborative testing of ideas;
· Legitimate unilateral “divorce” among all the participants
|
Pedagogical discourse
|
Monologic, authoritative
|
Dialogic, internally persuasive
|
Relationship and decision making
|
Hierarchical by power and knowledge, authoritarian, impersonal, detached, manipulative, student’s unconditional cooperation with the teacher
|
Democratic, personal, attached, respectful, conditional cooperation through constant negotiation, recognition of all participants’ strength and diverse experiences and ways of knowing
|
Pedagogical desire
|
Making students want what the teacher wants them to do through rewards, punishments, exploitation, bargaining, and manipulation
|
Exploration and negotiation of all participants’ desires and tensions among them
|
Educational ideal
|
Universally capable and knowledgeable and mutually replaceable workers with transferable, universal, de-contextualized skills
|
Uniquely socially appreciated individuals with strong personal voices in some socially desired practices
|
Pedagogical concerns
|
Students being off-task, off-script, non-cooperative, out of control, academically too behind or too ahead
Teacher not being knowledgeable enough how to answer to a student’s question, finishing a lesson too early or too late, finding what to teach and how, preparing lessons in time, being blamed for his/her students’ academic failures, having non-cooperative or too intrusive parents
|
· Overlook and neglect of other participants’ potentials and transcendences; · Missed teaching-learning opportunities; · Providing a rich learning ecology; · Being trapped in embodied oppressive relations and discourses that participants do not transcend; · Seeking alibi in being (i.e., avoiding responsibility); · Blocking other people’s opportunities for participation and growth; · Forced participation; · Silencing other people’s dissented voices; · Creating a safe learning environment where participants are not punished for their mistakes or hurt by mistakes of others; · Lack of playfulness or seriousness |
Activity system
|
Closed system: self-contained, detached, predictable, separated, technologized, sterilized, standardized, and unilaterally controlled space, time, curriculum, instruction, motivation, classroom management, assessment
|
Open-ended system: contextualized, dialogized, ontologized, generative, emergent self-organizing, chaotic, unpredictable, adderessive, responsive, responsible, negotiable, eventful, creative, democratic
|
Education and culture
|
Reproduction and consumption of ready-made culture
|
Active and creative production of culture-in-making
|
Educational research
|
Normative, objective, objectivizing and finalizing, replicable, universalizing, controlled, instrumental, above the participants from a bird-eye perspective, based on a deficit model, “everything that matters is measurable”
|
Transformative for the participants and researchers, meaning making, addressive to the participants, subjectivizing and unfinalizing, “Everything that can be counted does not necessarily count; everything that counts cannot necessarily be counted” (Einstein), responsible
|
Mutual critique (critique of the perspective from the other perspective)
|
Alienation; apathy; suppression of agency, creativity, and dissent voices; shallow learning; pedagogical violence; oppression; lack of critical thinking; disrespect of human dignity; conventionalism of knowledge; dogmatism; demanding of unconditional obedience; waste of human creative potential; creating mental and relational dys- and malfunctions and disabilities (including learning disabilities); social hierarchy and divides; promoting social oppressions and hegemonies; arresting human development; creating pseudo-knowing; promoting elitism; creating hierarchies of human practices, ways of knowing, and experiences; not useful for future agency-based economy; using summative assessments (e.g., grading) and thus making learning unsafe and students distrustful of their teachers; creating human robots and motivational zombies; treating people as replaceable is dehumanizing and humiliating; creating social and political tensions in the society pregnant to violent eruptions; lack of responsibility for a systematic oppression of agency; arrogance of knowing what is the best for other people; not supporting people’s interests, strengths, concerns, and inquiries; debilitating effect of treating people as deficient on a systematic basis; creating competitions for educational success among students; purifying and essentializing world issues into universal academic curriculum; exclusion of students’ ontology from their learning; suppressing societal problems, hot issues, contested truths, controversies, and debates in school curricula; |
Unclear pedagogical objectives, unpredictability of learning outcomes; educational outcome inequality (i.e., different alumni know different things), no standards, immeasurability of the learning outcomes, unaccountability, waste of resources; chaos; lack of control; disrespect of authority; deficit of cultural capital (e.g., some alumni may not know the essential cultural things like algebra or Shakespeare); fragmentation and balkanization of the society; “blind guides blind” (how can students define their own curriculum), localism (no universality or transferability); truth is universal; ineffectiveness; prohibitively expensive for the society (only good for small elite); unrealistic (modern institutions and economy do not and will not support education for agency); the value of human agency is very limited in our society and economy (e.g., there very limited places of creative jobs or creativity in jobs); economy and state requires standard-based participation, students from disadvantaged communities need the basics and essential toolkit of knowledge and skills – the cultural capital of the dominant culture – first and most of all for their social mobility (“use master tools to destroy master house”); basic skills and knowledge have to be learned before creativity and deep understanding; only highly talented people (elite) are creative and have agency; it can’t be replicated on a mass scale; if students have a choice not to learn they will abuse it; connection students to the real life will lead to unsafe, unprotected, and exploitative world for children (and other people); lack of patriotism; atheism
|
…
|
… |
…
|
What is agency?
- Person’s transcendence of any preset, existing limits, expectations, and norms of a sociocultural practice (Bakhtin, 1990, 1993; Buchanan, 1979);
- Recognition of the value (either positive and/or negative – i.e., validation) of this transcendence by relevant others and the self (Buchanan, 1979);
- Recognition of the cause of itself (causa sui) (Buchanan, 1979; Spinoza, White, & Stirling, 1910);
- Personal and social responsibility for this transcendence and its recognition (i.e., requiring justification-response by others and the self) (Bakhtin, 1993; Buchanan, 1979)[1];
- Creation of a new definition of quality (i.e., what is good and bad) of the practice through this transcendence and its recognition – the criteria for quality do not fully preexist the deed of the agency (Argyris & Schön, 1978; Bateson, 1987; Matusov & Hampel, 2008);
- This transcendence and its recognition occur on a big, highly visible, scale that often requires special actions (i.e., the actions that are often referred as "self-actualization", see Maslow, 1943) as well as on a small, rather unnoticeable scale which penetrates even people’s everyday routines and basic needs (Matusov, 2011, in press);
- The existing, ready-made culture provides material for the person’s transcendence of the practice and recognition of this transcendence by self and others (Buchanan, 1979);
- Agency exists and reveals itself through a person’s acts of culture transformation[2] and culture production (Berlyand, 2009; Bibler, 2009; Lobok, 2001);
- Disagreement, mis- and non- understanding, non-participation, non-cooperation, and collision of participants’ desires are birthmarks of agency (Matusov, 1996, 2001, 2011);
- Agency is unpredictable, ontological, and eventful (Bakhtin, 1990, 1993; Buchanan, 1979; Lobok, 2001; Matusov, 2009; Sidorkin, 1999).
- Dialogic (i.e., question-based) (Bakhtin, 1999)
- Ontological and experiential (i.e., here-and-now) (Sidorkin, 1999)
- Eventful (i.e., unpredictable dramatic meeting of two consciousnesses, beings-in-the-world) (Bakhtin, 1993)
- Embedded in the perpetual internally persuasive discourse in which truth is tested and forever testable (Bakhtin, 1991, 1999; Matusov & von Duyke, 2010; Morson, 2004)
Argyris, C., & Schön, D. A. (1978). Organizational learning: A theory of action perspective. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley Pub. Co.
Bakhtin, M. M. (1990). Art and answerability: Early philosophical essays (V. Liapunov, Trans. 1st ed.). Austin: University of Texas Press.
Bakhtin, M. M. (1991). Dialogic imagination: Four essays by M. M. Bakhtin (C. Emerson & M. Holquist, Trans.). Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.
Bakhtin, M. M. (1993). Toward a philosophy of the act (1st ed.). Austin: University of Texas Press.
Bakhtin, M. M. (1999). Problems of Dostoevsky's poetics (Vol. 8). Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Bateson, G. (1987). Steps to an ecology of mind: Collected essays in anthropology, psychiatry, evolution, and epistemology. Northvale, NJ: Aronson.
Berlyand, I. E. (2009). A few words about Bibler's dialogics: The School of the Dialogue of Cultures conception and curriculum. Journal of Russian & East European Psychology, 47(1), 20–33.
Bibler, V. S. (2009). The foundations of the School of the Dialogue of Cultures Program. Journal of Russian & East European Psychology, 47(1), 34–60.
Buchanan, J. M. (1979). Natural and artifactual man. In J. M. Buchanan (Ed.), What should economists do? (pp. 93-112). Indianapolis: Liberty Press.
Lobok, A. (2001). The probabilistic world: The chronicles of the philosophical-pedagogical reflections of an educational experiment. Yekaterinoburg, Russia: Association of Small Businesses.
Maslow, A. H. (1943). A theory of human motivation. Psychological Review, 50, 370-396.
Matusov, E. (1996). Intersubjectivity without agreement. Mind, Culture, and Activity, 3(1), 25-45.
Matusov, E. (2001). Intersubjectivity as a way of informing teaching design for a community of learners classroom. Teaching and Teacher Education, 17(4), 383-402.
Matusov, E. (2009). Journey into dialogic pedagogy. Hauppauge, NY: Nova Science Publishers.
Matusov, E. (2011). Irreconcilable differences in Vygotsky’s and Bakhtin’s approaches to the social and the individual: An educational perspective. Culture & Psychology, 17(1), 99-119.
Matusov, E. (2011, in press). Authorial teaching and learning. In E. J. White & M. Peters (Eds.), Bakhtinian pedagogy: Opportunities and challenges for research, policy and practice in education across the globe. New York: Peter Lang Publishers.
Matusov, E., & von Duyke, K. (2010). Bakhtin’s notion of the Internally Persuasive Discourse in education: Internal to what? (A case of discussion of issues of foul language in teacher education). In K. Junefelt & P. Nordin (Eds.), Proceedings from the Second International Interdisciplinary Conference on perspectives and limits of dialogism in Mikhail Bakhtin Stockholm University, Sweden June 3-5, 2009 (pp. 174-199). Stockholm: Stockholm University.
Matusov, E., & Hampel, R. (2008). Two perspectives on promotion. Academe, 94(1), 37-39.
Morson, G. S. (2004). The process of ideological becoming. In A. F. Ball & S. W. Freedman (Eds.), Bakhtinian perspectives on language, literacy, and learning (pp. 317-331). Cambridge, UK; New York: Cambridge University Press.
Sidorkin, A. M. (1999). Beyond discourse: Education, the self, and dialogue. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
Spinoza, B. d., White, W. H., & Stirling, A. H. (1910). Ethic (4th ed.). London, New York [etc.]: H. Frowde.
[2] As Hegel argued an individual “cannot define the goal of his action until he has acted…” (cited in Leontiev, 1981, p. 62).
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.