robertogreco + highereducation 135
The threat to our universities | Books | The Guardian
february 2012 by robertogreco
"In talking to audiences outside universities (some of whom may be graduates), I am struck by the level of curiosity about, and enthusiasm for, ideas and the quest for greater understanding, whether in history and literature, or physics and biology, or any number of other fields…
Such audiences do not want to be told that we judge the success of a university education by how much more graduates can earn than non-graduates, any more than they want to hear how much scholarship and science may indirectly contribute to GDP. They are, rather, susceptible to the romance of ideas and the power of beauty; they want to learn about far-off times and faraway worlds; they expect to hear language used more inventively, more exactly, more evocatively than it normally is in their workaday world; they want to know that, somewhere, human understanding is being pressed to its limits, unconstrained by immediate practical outcomes."
values
knowledge
understanding
aspiration
aspirations
aspirationalselves
uk
colleges
universities
outcomes
practicality
wonder
ideas
beauty
philosophy
idealism
2012
purpose
liberalarts
curiosity
learning
highereducation
education
stefancollini
from delicious
Such audiences do not want to be told that we judge the success of a university education by how much more graduates can earn than non-graduates, any more than they want to hear how much scholarship and science may indirectly contribute to GDP. They are, rather, susceptible to the romance of ideas and the power of beauty; they want to learn about far-off times and faraway worlds; they expect to hear language used more inventively, more exactly, more evocatively than it normally is in their workaday world; they want to know that, somewhere, human understanding is being pressed to its limits, unconstrained by immediate practical outcomes."
february 2012 by robertogreco
J: Save the Libraries. Cut University Funding Instead.
february 2012 by robertogreco
"Libraries do much better job of directly serving poor. Unis…indirectly, if at all…
Libraries efficiently provide valuable services to their communities w/ very little money. Unis…are constantly wasting huge sums of money…loading up 17-to-21-yos w/ crippling…loans.
Libraries are famously impartial & nonjudgmental, & have no agenda other than to provide equitable access to information to anyone who desires it. Most uni departments are rife w/ ideology…hostile to conflicting views.
Libraries are open & free to everyone. What they do only improves people’s prospects. The primary purpose of unis, granting credentials, is by definition exclusionary…improve the prospects of few at expense of others, by fostering environment where people are expected to have degrees before they can do anything of value…
One of these systems claims to serve the poor, be open to differing viewpoints, & drive greater knowledge & learning for all humankind. The other actually does all of these things."
priorities
highereducation
highered
colleges
informationaccess
information
education
money
class
poverty
universities
libraries
2012
policy
politics
liberalism
budget
california
from delicious
Libraries efficiently provide valuable services to their communities w/ very little money. Unis…are constantly wasting huge sums of money…loading up 17-to-21-yos w/ crippling…loans.
Libraries are famously impartial & nonjudgmental, & have no agenda other than to provide equitable access to information to anyone who desires it. Most uni departments are rife w/ ideology…hostile to conflicting views.
Libraries are open & free to everyone. What they do only improves people’s prospects. The primary purpose of unis, granting credentials, is by definition exclusionary…improve the prospects of few at expense of others, by fostering environment where people are expected to have degrees before they can do anything of value…
One of these systems claims to serve the poor, be open to differing viewpoints, & drive greater knowledge & learning for all humankind. The other actually does all of these things."
february 2012 by robertogreco
Why Good Classes Fail [Digital Ethnography blog]
february 2012 by robertogreco
"So rather than focusing on emulating particular techniques and methods, we should be doing everything we can to embrace, inspire, and use our own empathy in order to better understand and relate to our students. It is only from this space that we can effectively generate and use the appropriate techniques and methods for any particular task. In this way, there is no “recipe,” “secret sauce,” or “silver bullet” for teaching effectively that can be used by anybody, anytime, anywhere. Instead, I’m proposing a “generative” method, one in which we “generate” the appropriate method that takes into consideration the broadest range of factors that we can manage to accommodate."
howweteach
howwelearn
method
carlrogers
2012
listening
interestedness
disinterest
disconnection
disengagement
engagement
gardnercampbell
pedagogy
students
connection
reproductiion
scalability
personality
approach
silverbullets
de-scripting
unschooling
highereducation
education
learning
teaching
empathy
michealwesch
february 2012 by robertogreco
The Speculist » Blog Archive » In the Future Everything Will Be A Coffee Shop
february 2012 by robertogreco
"Eventually you could have local campuses becoming places where MITx students seek tutoring, network, & socialize—reclaiming some of the college experience they’d otherwise have lost.
Phil thought this sounded like college as a giant coffee shop. I agree. Every education would be ad hoc. It would be student-directed toward the job market she’s aiming for.
This trend toward…coffeeshopification…is changing more than just colleges:
Book Stores Will Shrink to Coffee Shops…
The Coffee Shop Will Displace Most Retail Shops…
Offices Become Coffee Shops…Again…
What Doesn’t Become a Coffee Shop?…
…houses of worship…
What will remain other than coffee shops? Upscale retail will remain…[for] experience…Restaurants remain. Grocery stores remain.
Brick and mortar retail stores will be converted to public spaces. Multi-use space will be in increasing demand as connectivity tools allow easy coordination of impromptu events…"
restaurants
multipurpose
multi-usespace
impromptuevents
events
coffeeshopification
thirdspaces
thirdplaces
howwelearn
howwework
work
enlightenment
stevenjohnson
amazonprime
amazon
shopping
espressobookmachine
coffeehouses
coffeeshops
coffee
on-demandprinting
highereducation
higheredbubble
highered
information
reading
ebooks
stephengordon
future
retail
deschooling
unschooling
sociallearning
self-directedlearning
mitx
mit
learning
srg
glvo
2011
_universities
colleges
education
opencoffeeclubdresden
3dprinting
ondemand
ondemandprinting
bookfuturism
books
Phil thought this sounded like college as a giant coffee shop. I agree. Every education would be ad hoc. It would be student-directed toward the job market she’s aiming for.
This trend toward…coffeeshopification…is changing more than just colleges:
Book Stores Will Shrink to Coffee Shops…
The Coffee Shop Will Displace Most Retail Shops…
Offices Become Coffee Shops…Again…
What Doesn’t Become a Coffee Shop?…
…houses of worship…
What will remain other than coffee shops? Upscale retail will remain…[for] experience…Restaurants remain. Grocery stores remain.
Brick and mortar retail stores will be converted to public spaces. Multi-use space will be in increasing demand as connectivity tools allow easy coordination of impromptu events…"
february 2012 by robertogreco
Six Things That Are Dead, According to Harold Bloom | Book Think | Big Think
february 2012 by robertogreco
"Celebrated literary critic Harold Bloom turns 82 this year…is still publishing & teaching. In his honor, I’ve compiled a list of 6 things he’s outlived.
1) The Western canon.
[long quote]
2) American education.
“American education—even in elite unis—has become a scandal, in my opinion. It has committed suicide.” —TheBrowser.com interview, 2011
3) Art.
[On slam poetry] “It is the death of art.” —Paris Review interview, 2000
4) The mind.
[On Yale graduates flocking to business careers] “Alas, this is the death of the mind.” —Yale Daily News interview, 2011
5) Rock & roll.
“There hasn’t been any good American rock since, alas, The Band disbanded.” —Paris Review interview, 1991
6) The death of the author.
“It was fashionable, quite recently, to talk about ‘the death of the author,’ but this too has become rubbish. The dead genius is more alive than we are.” —Genius: A Mosaic of 100 Exemplary Creative Minds, 2002"
[via: http://thatcamp.org/02/10/the-unconference-is-alive/ ]
deathof
americaneducation
education
highereducation
highered
universities
westerncanon
art
2012
haroldbloom
humor
1) The Western canon.
[long quote]
2) American education.
“American education—even in elite unis—has become a scandal, in my opinion. It has committed suicide.” —TheBrowser.com interview, 2011
3) Art.
[On slam poetry] “It is the death of art.” —Paris Review interview, 2000
4) The mind.
[On Yale graduates flocking to business careers] “Alas, this is the death of the mind.” —Yale Daily News interview, 2011
5) Rock & roll.
“There hasn’t been any good American rock since, alas, The Band disbanded.” —Paris Review interview, 1991
6) The death of the author.
“It was fashionable, quite recently, to talk about ‘the death of the author,’ but this too has become rubbish. The dead genius is more alive than we are.” —Genius: A Mosaic of 100 Exemplary Creative Minds, 2002"
[via: http://thatcamp.org/02/10/the-unconference-is-alive/ ]
february 2012 by robertogreco
How our class works
february 2012 by robertogreco
"Last semester some students joined me for an interview with Lynda Weinman of Lynda.com to discuss how our class works. You can see the full webinar here: http://nmc.adobeconnect.com/p21022812/ "
highereducation
highered
learning
pedagogy
teaching
towatch
interviews
webinar
2011
michaelwesch
lynda.com
lyndaweinman
from delicious
february 2012 by robertogreco
Noam Chomsky - The Purpose of Education - YouTube
february 2012 by robertogreco
"Noam Chomsky discusses the purpose of education, impact of technology, whether education should be perceived as a cost or an investment and the value of standardised assessment."
understanding
creativity
schools
schooling
schooliness
tcsnmy
obedience
conformism
power
cooperation
cooperativesystems
imagination
authority
assessment
gradschool
2012
highereducation
highered
inquiry-basedlearning
inquiry
testtaking
universities
colleges
enlightenment
conformity
debt
vocationaltraining
control
deschooling
unschooling
learning
democracy
indoctrination
standardization
teaching
purpose
technology
noamchomsky
education
from delicious
february 2012 by robertogreco
The New Atlantis » Science and the Decline of the Liberal Arts
february 2012 by robertogreco
"Finally, a restored liberal education would not be a liberation from “the ancestral” or from nature, but rather an education in the limits that culture and nature impose upon us — an education in living in ways that do not tempt us to Promethean forms of individual or generational self-aggrandizement. Particularly in an age in which we are becoming all too familiar with the consequences of living solely in and for the present, when too many among us are failing to live within our means — whether financially or environmentally — we would be well served to restore the proper understanding of liberty: not as liberation from constraint, but rather, as a capacity to govern ourselves. Such self-governance, as commended by ancient and religious traditions alike, makes possible a truer form of liberty — liberty from enslavement to our appetites, and from those appetites’ destructive power."
[via: http://ayjay.tumblr.com/post/16901050596/a-restored-liberal-education-would-not-be-a ]
2009
philosophy
economics
liberty
liberalarts
liberaleducation
liberation
liberalism
multiversity
self-aggrandizement
colleges
universities
highereducation
highered
engineering
history
humanities
science
education
academia
patrickdeneen
from delicious
[via: http://ayjay.tumblr.com/post/16901050596/a-restored-liberal-education-would-not-be-a ]
february 2012 by robertogreco
PhDs as K12 teachers | The Paper Graders
january 2012 by robertogreco
"There is nothing more effective in education than a passionate, well-trained classroom teacher. We do not need more administrators, especially administrators who have maybe never had K12 classroom teaching experience. But getting more of the most talented teachers IN classrooms would be powerful. Why not call for PhDs to enter K12 practice and work on the teaching of science from the inside? Why not call out the academy and ask it to start encouraging PhDs to choose this path? Certainly not all who complete a PhD program are cut out for K12 teaching, but I would venture that many of them could be awesome at it. And many of them don’t even consider it because the academy doesn’t encourage them to."
jaystott
sarahzerwin
brucealberts
highereducation
highered
us
policy
schools
k12
education
teaching
academia
january 2012 by robertogreco
TEDxLondon - Dougald Hine - YouTube
january 2012 by robertogreco
"Dougald is a writer, speaker and creator of organisations, projects and events. His work is driven by a desire to understand how we change things, and how things change, with or without us. This has taken him cross country through a range of fields, from social theory to the tech industry, literary criticism, the future of institutions and the skills of improvisation. He seeks to make connections between people, between ideas and between worlds. His projects include the web startup School of Everything, the urban innovation agency Space Makers, and most recently The University Project, which is seeking new ways to fulfil the promise of higher education."
teaching
autodidacts
self-directedlearning
purpose
highereducation
highered
networkedlearning
socialnetworks
socialnetworking
sharing
lcproject
adaptivereusue
spacemakers
commoditization
schoolofeverything
learning
deschooling
unschooling
2011
via:steelemaley
universities
colleges
education
theuniversityproject
dougaldhine
january 2012 by robertogreco
Posts tagged "you dont have to go to college" - AUSTIN KLEON : TUMBLR
january 2012 by robertogreco
Great collection. Found via Frank Chimero in his comment here: http://www.strangenative.com/toward-a-new-education/
colleges
universities
edg
srg
learning
deschooling
unschooling
tcsnmy
glvo
college
highered
highereducation
education
austinkleon
via:frankchimero
from delicious
january 2012 by robertogreco
Pepper spray nation - Opinion - Al Jazeera English
november 2011 by robertogreco
"If one looks again at the Board of Regents, one sees that it's packed with oligopoly capitalists, well insulated from the rough-and-tumble of the idealised competitive marketplace that conservatives rhapsodise over. Both the actual capitalists and the idealised marketplace are far removed from everyday reality - as far removed as any theocracy on Earth.
Indeed, market fundamentalists are like any other fundamentalists: sacrificing the lives of their young in the self-deluded service of their gods. And that's the real bottom line behind the pepper spray video, and pepper spray nation for which it stands."
democracy
ows
occupywallstreet
repression
onepercent
firstamendment
freedom
freedomofspeech
corruption
police
policestate
brutality
violence
policebrutality
lawenforcement
california
UCD
ucdavis
highereducation
highered
education
higheredbubble
paulrosenberg
via:gpe
from delicious
Indeed, market fundamentalists are like any other fundamentalists: sacrificing the lives of their young in the self-deluded service of their gods. And that's the real bottom line behind the pepper spray video, and pepper spray nation for which it stands."
november 2011 by robertogreco
Our Universities: Why Are They Failing? by Anthony Grafton | The New York Review of Books
november 2011 by robertogreco
"Christopher Newfield is not the only sober, informed observer who believes that political elites are deliberately attacking middle-class education.
Perhaps it’s not a crisis. After all, as many observers have pointed out, this is the way we live now, and room remains for exceptions and for hope. Still, the dark hordes of forgotten students who leave the university as Napoleon’s army left Russia, uninspired by their courses, wounded in many cases by what they experience as their own failures, weighed down by their debts, need to be seen and heard. Perhaps some of those who write seriously about universities could stop worrying so much about who gets into Harvard, Yale, and Princeton and start worrying about the much larger numbers who don’t make it through Illinois and West Virginia, Vermont and Texas…"
education
colleges
universities
history
highereducation
highered
2011
anthonygrafton
naomischaeferriley
benjaminginsberg
jeromekarabel
christophernewfield
williambowen
matthewchingos
michaelmcpherspon
richardarum
josiparoksa
anthonykronman
nancyfolbre
higheredbubble
society
class
academia
teaching
learning
liberalarts
humanities
money
policy
institutions
from delicious
Perhaps it’s not a crisis. After all, as many observers have pointed out, this is the way we live now, and room remains for exceptions and for hope. Still, the dark hordes of forgotten students who leave the university as Napoleon’s army left Russia, uninspired by their courses, wounded in many cases by what they experience as their own failures, weighed down by their debts, need to be seen and heard. Perhaps some of those who write seriously about universities could stop worrying so much about who gets into Harvard, Yale, and Princeton and start worrying about the much larger numbers who don’t make it through Illinois and West Virginia, Vermont and Texas…"
november 2011 by robertogreco
The American Scholar: The Disadvantages of an Elite Education - William Deresiewicz
november 2011 by robertogreco
"Being an intellectual begins w/ thinking your way outside of your assumptions & the system that enforces them. But students who get into elite schools are precisely the ones who have best learned to work w/in the system, so it’s almost impossible for them to see outside it, to see that it’s even there."
"What happens when busyness & sociability leave no room for solitude? The ability to engage in introspection…is the essential precondition for living an intellectual life, & the essential precondition for introspection is solitude…one of them said, with a dawning sense of self-awareness, “So are you saying that we’re all just, like, really excellent sheep?” Well, I don’t know. But I do know that the life of the mind is lived one mind at a time: one solitary, skeptical, resistant mind at a time. The best place to cultivate it is not w/in an educational system whose real purpose is to reproduce the class system."
williamderesiewicz
2008
via:jeeves
highered
highereducation
learning
unschooling
deschooling
liberalarts
class
perpetuation
criticalthinking
skepticism
resistance
institutions
intellectualism
introspection
solitude
cv
self-awareness
conformism
elites
power
control
racetonowhere
purpose
vision
education
colleges
universities
from delicious
"What happens when busyness & sociability leave no room for solitude? The ability to engage in introspection…is the essential precondition for living an intellectual life, & the essential precondition for introspection is solitude…one of them said, with a dawning sense of self-awareness, “So are you saying that we’re all just, like, really excellent sheep?” Well, I don’t know. But I do know that the life of the mind is lived one mind at a time: one solitary, skeptical, resistant mind at a time. The best place to cultivate it is not w/in an educational system whose real purpose is to reproduce the class system."
november 2011 by robertogreco
Times Higher Education - The unseen academy
november 2011 by robertogreco
[Again, too much to quote, so just a clip.]
"Neoliberalism is totalising: it is justified only if everyone participates in its markets, and if all human inter-relatedness becomes mercantile transactions. Hence, we get the agenda for "widening participation", but for widening participation in a market, not in a university education. In that market, the university's "product" needs its own measurements and standards. Everything is now a commodity; and anything that is not obviously a commodity is either eradicated or officially ignored: it goes underground. And the Quality Assurance Agency will measure; but it will measure and validate only that which is official or transparent, only that which it can call a commodity.
The QAA, a key driver of the Transparent-Information mythology, makes one basic error: it confounds a concern for standards (meaning quality) with a demand for standardisation (assured by quantity-measurement); and this drives the sector steadily towards homogenisation."
neoliberalism
homogeneity
highered
uk
highereducation
2011
thomasdocherty
learning
criticalthinking
standardization
standards
measurement
academia
history
control
knowledge
commoditization
transparency
information
quantification
resistance
tcsnmy
lcproject
unschooling
deschooling
objectives
outcomes
curiosity
exploration
knowledgemaking
truthseeking
bureaucracy
kis
economics
mediocrity
collaboration
martinamis
1995
1984
georgeorwell
authoritarianism
intellectualism
governance
immeasurables
"Neoliberalism is totalising: it is justified only if everyone participates in its markets, and if all human inter-relatedness becomes mercantile transactions. Hence, we get the agenda for "widening participation", but for widening participation in a market, not in a university education. In that market, the university's "product" needs its own measurements and standards. Everything is now a commodity; and anything that is not obviously a commodity is either eradicated or officially ignored: it goes underground. And the Quality Assurance Agency will measure; but it will measure and validate only that which is official or transparent, only that which it can call a commodity.
The QAA, a key driver of the Transparent-Information mythology, makes one basic error: it confounds a concern for standards (meaning quality) with a demand for standardisation (assured by quantity-measurement); and this drives the sector steadily towards homogenisation."
november 2011 by robertogreco
Cooper Union May Charge Tuition to Undergraduates - NYTimes.com
november 2011 by robertogreco
"Facing serious financial trouble in a weak economy, Cooper Union, the New York City college founded in 1859 to provide free education for the working class, may begin charging undergraduate tuition for the first time in more than a century, its president said Monday…
In its first decades, Cooper Union collected tuition from students who had the means to pay. But since 1902, following major gifts from Andrew Carnegie and Cooper’s descendants, it has been free for all undergraduates. (Students enrolled in nondegree night programs do pay tuition and undergraduates pay for room and board.)
A result has been a student body that, for an elite college, is unusually diverse, ethnically and economically. Fewer than half of Cooper Union’s students are white, and almost two-thirds attended public high schools."
[See also: http://slavin.tumblr.com/post/12216224043/when-i-a-student-at-cooper-union-i-thought-i-was ]
cooperunion
education
highered
2011
tuition
highereducation
mismanagement
from delicious
In its first decades, Cooper Union collected tuition from students who had the means to pay. But since 1902, following major gifts from Andrew Carnegie and Cooper’s descendants, it has been free for all undergraduates. (Students enrolled in nondegree night programs do pay tuition and undergraduates pay for room and board.)
A result has been a student body that, for an elite college, is unusually diverse, ethnically and economically. Fewer than half of Cooper Union’s students are white, and almost two-thirds attended public high schools."
[See also: http://slavin.tumblr.com/post/12216224043/when-i-a-student-at-cooper-union-i-thought-i-was ]
november 2011 by robertogreco
Will Dropouts Save America? - NYTimes.com
november 2011 by robertogreco
"Classroom skills may put you at an advantage in the formal market, but in the informal market, street-smart skills and real-world networking are infinitely more important.
Yet our children grow up amid an echo chamber of voices telling them to get good grades, do well on their SATs, and spend an average of $45,000 on tuition — after accounting for scholarships — while taking on $23,000 in debt to get a private four-year college education."
entrepreneurship
dropouts
2011
business
education
unschooling
deschooling
startups
psychology
careers
highered
highereducation
michaelellsberg
networking
mentoring
learning
schooliness
schooling
failure
risktaking
jobs
work
grades
grading
standardizedtesting
from delicious
Yet our children grow up amid an echo chamber of voices telling them to get good grades, do well on their SATs, and spend an average of $45,000 on tuition — after accounting for scholarships — while taking on $23,000 in debt to get a private four-year college education."
november 2011 by robertogreco
The straws that broke this camel's back - philippa young
october 2011 by robertogreco
"I arrived at The University of Oxford last Monday morning. Arrived to read a Masters in Migration Studies. I have had a year-long public debate over whether university was a good idea or not. I have decided on the not. (At least not right now)
Primarily I'm listening to my gut, which has been screaming NO at me about once a month for the past year and a half, placated only with the heavy hand of reason that threw around cards like: "it's only 9 months" and "it's Oxford"
Then there are the voices that ask questions. Questions like, why? These are the people unfased by a name, and unfettered by debts because they had chosen not to buy into a system, or to work it to their financial advantage."
philippayoung
education
highereducation
highered
learning
unschooling
deschooling
dropouts
2011
purpose
meaning
knowledge
prestige
courage
dougaldhine
via:cervus
self-directedlearning
oxford
from delicious
Primarily I'm listening to my gut, which has been screaming NO at me about once a month for the past year and a half, placated only with the heavy hand of reason that threw around cards like: "it's only 9 months" and "it's Oxford"
Then there are the voices that ask questions. Questions like, why? These are the people unfased by a name, and unfettered by debts because they had chosen not to buy into a system, or to work it to their financial advantage."
october 2011 by robertogreco
Certifying 14-year-old poets « Re-educate Seattle
october 2011 by robertogreco
"But here’s a question: should a 14-year-old who is forced to take a required class in poetry be subjected to a process of certification?
Given their brain development and the fact that traditional schooling places kids in required activities, should a 14-year-old—or an 8-year-old, or 16-year-old—be subjected to a process of certification for anything?
There are profound differences between the developmental needs of kids in K-12 versus those in higher education. Young kids need to be in environments in which they can try new things, experiment, grow up, discover who they are.
They need teachers to draw out the genius within them. Higher education, for those who choose that path, is a place where that genius can get refined into certified expertise."
certification
stevemiranda
learning
grades
grading
caltech
unschooling
deschooling
education
pscs
pugetsoundcommunityschool
highered
highereducation
discovery
exploration
maturity
k12
lcproject
tcsnmy
from delicious
Given their brain development and the fact that traditional schooling places kids in required activities, should a 14-year-old—or an 8-year-old, or 16-year-old—be subjected to a process of certification for anything?
There are profound differences between the developmental needs of kids in K-12 versus those in higher education. Young kids need to be in environments in which they can try new things, experiment, grow up, discover who they are.
They need teachers to draw out the genius within them. Higher education, for those who choose that path, is a place where that genius can get refined into certified expertise."
october 2011 by robertogreco
Can Antioch College Return From the Dead Again? - NYTimes.com
september 2011 by robertogreco
"…the college’s first president, Horace Mann, the Massachusetts-born education reformer, instilled a spirit of moral resolve that has lingered ever since. At the 1859 commencement, just weeks before he died, Mann exhorted that year’s Antioch graduates: “I beseech you to treasure up in your hearts these my parting words. Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity…<br />
<br />
Yet Antioch College has been on shaky financial ground for its entire existence. Four times — in 1863, 1881, 1919 and 2008 — it has had to close. Next month, it will reopen again…<br />
<br />
…in the summer of 2008 they joined six or so Antioch professors in founding a sort of Antioch College in exile called the Nonstop Liberal Arts Institute.<br />
<br />
The core of what we need to deliver, I’d argue, is intimacy: quality teaching from quality teachers you get to form a deep relationship with."
antiochcollege
horacemann
2011
precarity
democraticschools
education
highereducation
liberalarts
nonstopliberalartsinstitute
nonstopliberalarts
highered
learning
relationships
humanism
humanity
purpose
activism
ohio
2008
from delicious
<br />
Yet Antioch College has been on shaky financial ground for its entire existence. Four times — in 1863, 1881, 1919 and 2008 — it has had to close. Next month, it will reopen again…<br />
<br />
…in the summer of 2008 they joined six or so Antioch professors in founding a sort of Antioch College in exile called the Nonstop Liberal Arts Institute.<br />
<br />
The core of what we need to deliver, I’d argue, is intimacy: quality teaching from quality teachers you get to form a deep relationship with."
september 2011 by robertogreco
Bassett Blog, 2011/09: Insights from the College Front [Bassett gets it right, but seems to take credit for ideas that predate him & are contrary to some of what he pushed during his first many years at NAIS.]
september 2011 by robertogreco
"The university leaders also confirmed…that 30–40% of the undergrads on anti-depressants, and 10% of girls suffered from eating disorders. While the university leaders were quick to point out that their universities were mirroring national data, it is particularly interesting to me that the students at these colleges had already “won the lottery” by matriculating at places that were nearly impossible to get into for mere mortals, and yet so many were still stressed beyond belief and needing medication (prescribed or, probably in much larger numbers, self-medicating — see the next bullet point).<br />
<br />
Footnote to “success-driven parents and college counselors”: beware what you wish for: What we actually do well is place students in the “best match” college, where they will be successful and can pursue interests that will keep them engaged and balanced."<br />
<br />
[Also covered: alcohol abuse, demonstrations of learning / digital portfolios, foreign language requirements…]
patbassett
2011
criticalthinking
creativity
communication
admissions
highereducation
highered
collegeadmissions
technology
collaboration
character
antidepressants
students
parenting
education
stress
schools
learning
policy
balance
society
competition
digitalportfolios
nais
alcohol
demonstrationsoflearning
resilience
risktaking
foreignlanguage
languages
fluency
testing
standardizedtesting
self-medication
eatingdisorders
socialnorming
from delicious
<br />
Footnote to “success-driven parents and college counselors”: beware what you wish for: What we actually do well is place students in the “best match” college, where they will be successful and can pursue interests that will keep them engaged and balanced."<br />
<br />
[Also covered: alcohol abuse, demonstrations of learning / digital portfolios, foreign language requirements…]
september 2011 by robertogreco
Orange Crate Art: Stefan Hagemann, guest writer: How to answer a professor
august 2011 by robertogreco
"Be interested in a lot of things: Some questions are designed to test your command of a set of facts, and some leave little room for interpretation. Once in awhile, a question might even permit a “yes” or “no” answer. But often you’ll be dealing with open-ended questions, ones about which there is much to say and from many angles. Recognize that most open-ended questions range across academic disciplines and areas of interest, and do your best to develop a good grasp of the world around you. Good question-answerers read widely, talk to their peers and professors, attend on-campus events such as plays and concerts, and (I’m guessing here) subscribe to PBS and NPR. Good question-answerers also listen. If you know a little bit about the world around you and make an effort to experience your immediate environment, you may be surprised by your ability to add outside knowledge to your answers. Broad experience equals (or at least increases the chance for) serendipity."
serendipity
interested
interestingness
interesting
stefanhagemann
howto
teaching
learning
education
experience
pbs
npr
knowledge
generalists
via:lukeneff
2010
noticing
connections
observation
listenting
inquiry
honesty
power
relationships
universities
colleges
highereducation
highered
from delicious
august 2011 by robertogreco
P2PU (beta) | Learning for everyone, by everyone, about almost anything
august 2011 by robertogreco
"LEARN ANYTHING WITH YOUR PEERS. IT'S ONLINE AND TOTALLY FREE.
At P2PU, people work together to learn a particular topic by completing tasks, assessing individual and group work, and providing constructive feedback."
"The Peer 2 Peer University is a grassroots open education project that organizes learning outside of institutional walls and gives learners recognition for their achievements. P2PU creates a model for lifelong learning alongside traditional formal higher education. Leveraging the internet and educational materials openly available online, P2PU enables high-quality low-cost education opportunities. P2PU - learning for everyone, by everyone about almost anything."
education
learning
p2p
p2pu
hourschool
teachstreet
schoolofeverything
universities
highereducation
highered
peertopeer
teaching
unschooling
learningnetworks
networkedlearning
networks
lcproject
online
constructivecriticism
At P2PU, people work together to learn a particular topic by completing tasks, assessing individual and group work, and providing constructive feedback."
"The Peer 2 Peer University is a grassroots open education project that organizes learning outside of institutional walls and gives learners recognition for their achievements. P2PU creates a model for lifelong learning alongside traditional formal higher education. Leveraging the internet and educational materials openly available online, P2PU enables high-quality low-cost education opportunities. P2PU - learning for everyone, by everyone about almost anything."
august 2011 by robertogreco
Amanda Krauss -- Pulling the Plug - Worst Professor Ever
august 2011 by robertogreco
"Only when the humanities can earn their own keep will they be respected in modern America…will only happen when you convince majority of people to be interested, of their own volition, rather than begging/guilting them into giving you money to translate your obscure French poem on vague grounds of “caring about culture.”…either figure something out, or shut up & accept that the humanities are an inherently elite activity that will rely on feudal patronage. Just like they always have. (If you think of Maslow’s hierarchy, it’s obvious why leisure class, which generally has money, sex, food, & security taken care of, has been in charge of learning.)
You have no idea how much it pains me to say this, but speaking from experience I now believe that private industry is doing a better job of communicating, persuading, innovating, of everything university has stopped doing. I do not take this as indicator of how well capitalism works…[but] of how badly universities have failed…"
education
change
academia
criticism
higheredbubble
highereducation
capitalism
2011
amandakrauss
humanities
relevance
money
gradschool
autodidacts
unschooling
deschooling
importance
via:ayjay
irrelevance
You have no idea how much it pains me to say this, but speaking from experience I now believe that private industry is doing a better job of communicating, persuading, innovating, of everything university has stopped doing. I do not take this as indicator of how well capitalism works…[but] of how badly universities have failed…"
august 2011 by robertogreco
Discussion: The Edupunks' Guide [See the rest of the thread, which is likely to continue expanding.]
august 2011 by robertogreco
"When I read the title of the book, I immediately thought this was yet another example of how (formerly radical) subcultures are put to work to valorize and bring the practices of everyday life under capital. <br />
<br />
It would be interesting to know whether and how the author of this book addresses this potential contradiction. Personally, I see punk and other oppositional subcultures as expressing and disclosing forms of life and self-learning that are powerful precisely because they are informal, uncodified and untranslatable into student credits. <br />
<br />
In this case, there is also the additional risk that the DIY attitude may be mobilized as a form of endorsement "from below" of the rising online education industry sponsored by Republican governors such as Tim Pawlenty and Rick Perry. Or even worst to justify government cuts to spending in lower and higher education. After all, if we no longer need schools to learn why should we use taxpayers money for education?…"
anyakamenetz
edupunk
reform
policy
politics
stephendownes
jimgroom
marcodeseriis
mikecaufield
2011
appropriation
punk
radicalism
radicals
valorization
monetization
capitalism
capital
contradiction
subcultures
self-directedlearning
self-learning
unschooling
deschooling
spending
education
informal
informallearning
highereducation
highered
from delicious
<br />
It would be interesting to know whether and how the author of this book addresses this potential contradiction. Personally, I see punk and other oppositional subcultures as expressing and disclosing forms of life and self-learning that are powerful precisely because they are informal, uncodified and untranslatable into student credits. <br />
<br />
In this case, there is also the additional risk that the DIY attitude may be mobilized as a form of endorsement "from below" of the rising online education industry sponsored by Republican governors such as Tim Pawlenty and Rick Perry. Or even worst to justify government cuts to spending in lower and higher education. After all, if we no longer need schools to learn why should we use taxpayers money for education?…"
august 2011 by robertogreco
News: 'Class Dismissed' - Inside Higher Ed [via: http://willrichardson.com/post/8211907232/fix-poverty-forget-about-education ]
july 2011 by robertogreco
"What I learned—& what I wanted to convey in the book—is the unsettling truth that if people truly care about lessening poverty and economic inequality, they should forget about education…<br />
<br />
Regarding inequality, I would point to the findings of Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett, who have shown that people who live in more equal countries live demonstrably better lives than those who live in less equal countries. In more equal countries, people—rich & poor alike—live longer, trust each other more, discriminate against women less, devote more resources to foreign aid, have fewer bouts of mental illness, use fewer drugs, murder each other less, have lower rates of infant mortality, suffer less from obesity, are more literate and numerate, complete more years of schooling, imprison fewer people, and enjoy greater social mobility…<br />
<br />
Although economists and scholars debate it, it is not clear that the US needs or will need many more college graduates than it already generates."
education
economics
inequality
equality
poverty
deschooling
unschooling
policy
us
2011
johnmarsh
lifelonglearning
intrinsicmotivation
highereducation
highered
money
income
incomegap
from delicious
<br />
Regarding inequality, I would point to the findings of Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett, who have shown that people who live in more equal countries live demonstrably better lives than those who live in less equal countries. In more equal countries, people—rich & poor alike—live longer, trust each other more, discriminate against women less, devote more resources to foreign aid, have fewer bouts of mental illness, use fewer drugs, murder each other less, have lower rates of infant mortality, suffer less from obesity, are more literate and numerate, complete more years of schooling, imprison fewer people, and enjoy greater social mobility…<br />
<br />
Although economists and scholars debate it, it is not clear that the US needs or will need many more college graduates than it already generates."
july 2011 by robertogreco
A College Education for All, Free and Online - Commentary - The Chronicle of Higher Education
july 2011 by robertogreco
"Most elite American colleges are content to spend their vast resources on gilding their palaces of exclusivity. They worry that extending their reach might dilute their brand…Righteousness is easy; generosity is hard. In any event, Harvard's public-relations wizards managed to spin the university's decision to subsidize tuition for families making three times the median household income as a triumph of egalitarianism. The institution could easily use a program designed to help desperately needy students living in political, environmental, & economic turmoil to burnish Harvard's brand.<br />
<br />
If Harvard doesn't seize the opportunity, some other university will. Reshef is the first to tell you that he didn't invent any of the tools that UoPeople employs…<br />
<br />
If colleges with the means to do so don't contribute to the cause, they will at best have betrayed their obligations & their ideals. At worst, they will find themselves curating beautiful museums of a higher-education time gone by."
universityofthepeople
highereducation
elearning
education
egalitarianism
harvard
elitism
class
ideals
highered
learning
online
uopeople
2011
shaireshef
opencourseware
openaccess
from delicious
<br />
If Harvard doesn't seize the opportunity, some other university will. Reshef is the first to tell you that he didn't invent any of the tools that UoPeople employs…<br />
<br />
If colleges with the means to do so don't contribute to the cause, they will at best have betrayed their obligations & their ideals. At worst, they will find themselves curating beautiful museums of a higher-education time gone by."
july 2011 by robertogreco
DIY GRAD SCHOOL: perceiving perceptions
july 2011 by robertogreco
"DIY Grad School Statement:
We are questioning the entire educational system and exploring the process of obtaining degrees and credentials while focusing on personal growth as artists and organizers of community consciousness. This is a social experiment of a small number of committed people who will create their own curriculum theory, that seeps out of a yearning to comprehend the world around them. We will use visual arts, performance, architecture, publication, music, film, etc. to articulate the journey as artists living in this new decade."
diygradschool
diy
education
alternative
altgdp
mfa
art
design
architecture
highereducation
highered
community
from delicious
We are questioning the entire educational system and exploring the process of obtaining degrees and credentials while focusing on personal growth as artists and organizers of community consciousness. This is a social experiment of a small number of committed people who will create their own curriculum theory, that seeps out of a yearning to comprehend the world around them. We will use visual arts, performance, architecture, publication, music, film, etc. to articulate the journey as artists living in this new decade."
july 2011 by robertogreco
DIY GRAD SCHOOL
july 2011 by robertogreco
DIY Grad School is a self-curated MFA graduate program that seeks to question our current higher educational system through the use of technology, multi-media interaction, peer groups of learning, community art and music events, and the praxis where theory and practice meet.<br />
<br />
This is an on-going performance piece that seeps out of a yearning to comprehend the world, using 2D drawing and painting, performance, theory, writing, music, film, etc. to articulate the journey as artists living in this new decade.
diy
highereducation
gradschool
highered
learning
art
mfa
performanceart
education
unschooling
deschooling
diygradschool
leisurearts
from delicious
<br />
This is an on-going performance piece that seeps out of a yearning to comprehend the world, using 2D drawing and painting, performance, theory, writing, music, film, etc. to articulate the journey as artists living in this new decade.
july 2011 by robertogreco
Errol Morris: Profiles: "Predilection", by Mark Singer [From the New Yorker, February 6, 1989]
july 2011 by robertogreco
"I did enter Princeton actually thinking I was going to get a doctorate. I was wrong…big fights with my adviser…was supposed to be concentrating on the history of physics…But the classes were always full of 14-year-old Chinese prodigies, w/ hands in air - 'Call on me! Call on me!' I couldn't do it.…It turns out I was a problem, but at least I wasn't a drudge, and that school was filled with drudges…<br />
<br />
…Berkeley was just a world of pedants.…truly shocking. I spent 2 or 3 years in the philosophy program. I have very bad feelings about it." His own flaw, he believes, was that he was "an odd combination of the academic & the prurient." While he was supposed to be concentrating on philosophy of science, his attention became diverted by an extracurricular interest in the insanity plea…"
errolmorris
unschooling
deschooling
highereducation
highered
learning
schooling
ivyleague
berkeley
princeton
teaching
messiness
self-directedlearning
education
1989
dropouts
from delicious
<br />
…Berkeley was just a world of pedants.…truly shocking. I spent 2 or 3 years in the philosophy program. I have very bad feelings about it." His own flaw, he believes, was that he was "an odd combination of the academic & the prurient." While he was supposed to be concentrating on philosophy of science, his attention became diverted by an extracurricular interest in the insanity plea…"
july 2011 by robertogreco
Views: Stop Chasing High-Tech Cheaters - Inside Higher Ed
july 2011 by robertogreco
"It has long been academe's dirty little secret that bad instructors and bad assignments create cheating. If knowledge of a meaningless list of facts is being assessed, if spelling is being measured, if memorization of equations is the goal of a course, students can and will cheat. Perhaps they should cheat…<br />
<br />
"If they'd spend as much time studying" as they do cheating, a University of Nevada at Las Vegas dean says in the Times article, "they'd all be A students." The question for the dean is, what would they have an "A" in? Rewriting Wikipedia to please a professor? Spelling? Regurgitating information that any competent search engine user could find in thirty seconds? Perhaps the skills the "cheaters" are learning are the far more valuable ones. These skills will carry them forward in ways memorization of spelling, quadratic formulas, scientific terms and historical dates simply will not."
irasocol
cheating
education
highereducation
highered
plagiarism
technology
teaching
information
learning
unschooling
deschooling
pedagogy
2006
from delicious
<br />
"If they'd spend as much time studying" as they do cheating, a University of Nevada at Las Vegas dean says in the Times article, "they'd all be A students." The question for the dean is, what would they have an "A" in? Rewriting Wikipedia to please a professor? Spelling? Regurgitating information that any competent search engine user could find in thirty seconds? Perhaps the skills the "cheaters" are learning are the far more valuable ones. These skills will carry them forward in ways memorization of spelling, quadratic formulas, scientific terms and historical dates simply will not."
july 2011 by robertogreco
NYU Prof Vows Never to Probe Cheating Again—and Faces a Backlash - Wired Campus - The Chronicle of Higher Education
july 2011 by robertogreco
"The professor’s blog post described how crusading against cheating poisoned the class environment & therefore dragged down his teaching evaluations. They fell to a below-average range of 5.3 out of 7.0, when he used to score in the realm of 6.0 to 6.5. Mr. Ipeirotis “paid a significant financial penalty for ‘doing the right thing,’” he wrote. “The Dean’s office & my chair ‘expressed their appreciation’ for me chasing such cases (in December), but six months later, when I received my annual evaluation, my yearly salary increase was the lowest ever, & significantly lower than inflation, as my ‘teaching evaluations took a hit this year.’”<br />
<br />
Worse, Mr. Ipeirotis’ campaign aroused mistrust. Students were anxious, discussions contentious. He found teaching to be exhausting rather than refreshing. Dealing w/ the 22 cheating cases sucked up more than 45 hours “in completely unproductive discussions,” forcing him to focus attention on the least-deserving students, Mr. Ipeirotis said."
cheating
plagiarism
2011
education
teaching
academia
ethics
panagiotisipeirotis
highereducation
highered
motivation
grades
grading
learning
trust
projectbasedlearning
writing
from delicious
<br />
Worse, Mr. Ipeirotis’ campaign aroused mistrust. Students were anxious, discussions contentious. He found teaching to be exhausting rather than refreshing. Dealing w/ the 22 cheating cases sucked up more than 45 hours “in completely unproductive discussions,” forcing him to focus attention on the least-deserving students, Mr. Ipeirotis said."
july 2011 by robertogreco
Higher education: California's college system in decline, study finds - latimes.com
july 2011 by robertogreco
"• California ranks last among states in funding per college student from state appropriations and tuition and fees.<br />
<br />
• Tuition and fee increases exceed the national average rate of increase.<br />
<br />
• The college-going rate of high school graduates rose from 53% to 58% between 2003 and 2007 but dropped back to 53% in 2009.<br />
<br />
• California ranks 41st in the number of bachelor's degrees awarded for every 100 high school graduates six years after graduation.<br />
<br />
Called "Consequences of Neglect," the study concludes that the state has failed to develop policies or a vision that will allow it to compete nationally and internationally in producing an educated population.<br />
<br />
Most alarming, it finds a trend of each working-age generation becoming less educated than the preceding, with potentially devastating consequences."
california
education
highereducation
highered
2011
from delicious
<br />
• Tuition and fee increases exceed the national average rate of increase.<br />
<br />
• The college-going rate of high school graduates rose from 53% to 58% between 2003 and 2007 but dropped back to 53% in 2009.<br />
<br />
• California ranks 41st in the number of bachelor's degrees awarded for every 100 high school graduates six years after graduation.<br />
<br />
Called "Consequences of Neglect," the study concludes that the state has failed to develop policies or a vision that will allow it to compete nationally and internationally in producing an educated population.<br />
<br />
Most alarming, it finds a trend of each working-age generation becoming less educated than the preceding, with potentially devastating consequences."
july 2011 by robertogreco
Educación en deuda | Blog - Paula
july 2011 by robertogreco
"Crecimos escuchando que si estudiábamos más, tendríamos asegurado un mejor futuro: más ingresos, más prestigias, más satisfacción. Y nunca antes en la historia tantos chilenos habían alcanzado los niveles educacionales de hoy. Pero los jóvenes que constituyen la primera generación de sus familias en la Educación Superior se enfrentan, con frecuencia, a una realidad amargamente decepcionante: su título no les asegura un alto nivel de ingresos y la deuda que han contraído para pagar sus estudios contrapesa cualquier margen de movilidad social como lo haría una roca amarrada a los pies de un hombre tratando infructuosamente de nadar. Este es un reportaje para entender el descontento."
chile
education
class
2011
debt
loans
socialmobility
classmobility
highereducation
highered
society
privateschools
from delicious
july 2011 by robertogreco
Austin Center for Design | An educational institution in Austin, Texas, teaching Interaction Design and Social Entrepreneurship
july 2011 by robertogreco
"Austin Center for Design exists to transform society through design and design education. This transformation occurs through the development of design knowledge directed towards all forms of social and humanitarian problems.
AC4D offers a one year program - held on site (on nights and weekends) in Austin, Texas - emphasizing creative problem solving related to human behavior, through the use of advanced technology and novel approaches to business strategy.
The program is ideal for designers, artists, business professionals and technologists with 2-5 years experience doing professional work, or for more seasoned professionals looking to change the trajectory of their careers.
Our curriculum includes instruction in ethnography, prototyping, service design, theory, usability testing, and financial company structures."
education
design
teaching
schools
highereducation
alternative
highered
jonkolko
austin
texas
lcproject
incubator
designthinking
human
behavior
business
technology
humanitarian
humanitariandesign
socialentrepreneurship
entrepreneurship
prototyping
servicedesign
from delicious
AC4D offers a one year program - held on site (on nights and weekends) in Austin, Texas - emphasizing creative problem solving related to human behavior, through the use of advanced technology and novel approaches to business strategy.
The program is ideal for designers, artists, business professionals and technologists with 2-5 years experience doing professional work, or for more seasoned professionals looking to change the trajectory of their careers.
Our curriculum includes instruction in ethnography, prototyping, service design, theory, usability testing, and financial company structures."
july 2011 by robertogreco
Frontline Examines Bridgepoint Education - voiceofsandiego.org: Pounding The Pavement
july 2011 by robertogreco
"Since we wrote our story about Bridgepoint, we've also blogged about the company's continued explosive growth, an investigation of the company by New York's attorney general, and Bridgepoint's boost from weaker-than-expected new U.S. Department of Education federal aid guidelines."
bridgepointeducation
sandiego
money
government
forprofit
highereducation
highered
veterans
2011
profits
from delicious
july 2011 by robertogreco
Bridgepoint Booms Over Troubled Waters - voiceofsandiego.org: Pounding The Pavement
july 2011 by robertogreco
"Bridgepoint's business model depends on one thing: Getting people into college who wouldn't otherwise go.<br />
That involves paying hundreds of recruiters in San Diego office buildings to call around the country and find tens of thousands of people willing to enroll in a tiny college in rural Iowa. Ninety-nine percent of those students won't ever have to set foot in Iowa, since they'll be studying online.<br />
And the bulk of the revenue Bridgepoint receives for educating students — at least 85 percent last year — comes straight from the federal government in the form of student loans.<br />
Bridgepoint CEO Andrew Clark and other company officials declined interview requests through corporate spokespeople. But, as a publicly traded company, Bridgepoint's financial success story has been well-documented.<br />
<br />
More than anything else, two factors have played into Bridgepoint's extraordinary success. One was the company's genius business idea; the other was a stroke of good fortune…"
education
andrewclark
bridgepointeducation
sandiego
iowa
scams
forprofit
highereducation
money
greed
2011
colleges
universities
freemoney
government
military
veterans
from delicious
That involves paying hundreds of recruiters in San Diego office buildings to call around the country and find tens of thousands of people willing to enroll in a tiny college in rural Iowa. Ninety-nine percent of those students won't ever have to set foot in Iowa, since they'll be studying online.<br />
And the bulk of the revenue Bridgepoint receives for educating students — at least 85 percent last year — comes straight from the federal government in the form of student loans.<br />
Bridgepoint CEO Andrew Clark and other company officials declined interview requests through corporate spokespeople. But, as a publicly traded company, Bridgepoint's financial success story has been well-documented.<br />
<br />
More than anything else, two factors have played into Bridgepoint's extraordinary success. One was the company's genius business idea; the other was a stroke of good fortune…"
july 2011 by robertogreco
Teachers Without Students | First Things
july 2011 by robertogreco
"Here’s an arresting statistic that economist Richard Vedder thinks goes a long way to explaining the rapid rise in college tuitions: 80% of faculty at the University of Texas, Austin teach fewer than half the students. In view of the fact that faculty salaries make up the largest expense at the university, one simple change would reduce tuition. Get the 80% back into the classrooms.<br />
<br />
Vedder anticipates the objection that forcing the bulk of professors into the classroom will harm the research mission of the university. His most devastating response is again a simple statistic—20% of faculty account for 99.8% of external research grants and funding. That leaves 60% of faculty who have very low teaching loads whose research—or in many cases lack of research—is financed by the general operating budget of UT. His proposal: have them teach two classes each semester, adds up to 200 hours per year in the classroom. As they say in Texas, that ain’t too bad for a payin’ job."
education
teaching
politics
economics
universities
highereducation
highered
academia
higheredbubble
faculty
via:lukeneff
2011
utaustin
tuition
rankings
usnewsandworldreport
reputation
quality
teachingfaculty
yaledisease
from delicious
<br />
Vedder anticipates the objection that forcing the bulk of professors into the classroom will harm the research mission of the university. His most devastating response is again a simple statistic—20% of faculty account for 99.8% of external research grants and funding. That leaves 60% of faculty who have very low teaching loads whose research—or in many cases lack of research—is financed by the general operating budget of UT. His proposal: have them teach two classes each semester, adds up to 200 hours per year in the classroom. As they say in Texas, that ain’t too bad for a payin’ job."
july 2011 by robertogreco
Think Tank: The 'Veritas' About Harvard - Commentary - The Chronicle of Higher Education
june 2011 by robertogreco
"Harvard spent the money [dramatically increased endowment] on many things. But not a dollar went to increasing the number of undergraduates it chose to bless with a Harvard education…<br />
<br />
…the true currency of elite higher education is admissions, not financial aid…<br />
<br />
That's because the real priority of elite higher education, as the receding tide of money has exposed, is the greater glory of elite higher education and the administrators and faculty members who work there. That's where all the money went, and that's where, now that some of the money turns out to have never existed in the first place, it needs to come from…<br />
<br />
An institution truly dedicated to teaching students has natural limits on how much money it needs. At some point, the land and space and professors suffice.<br />
<br />
An institution dedicated to accumulating more money and prestige? There are no limits to those needs. They can never be satisfied."
education
teaching
economics
academia
harvard
ivyleague
management
endowment
2011
highereducation
highered
elitism
class
society
havesandhavenots
money
finance
greed
wealth
access
from delicious
<br />
…the true currency of elite higher education is admissions, not financial aid…<br />
<br />
That's because the real priority of elite higher education, as the receding tide of money has exposed, is the greater glory of elite higher education and the administrators and faculty members who work there. That's where all the money went, and that's where, now that some of the money turns out to have never existed in the first place, it needs to come from…<br />
<br />
An institution truly dedicated to teaching students has natural limits on how much money it needs. At some point, the land and space and professors suffice.<br />
<br />
An institution dedicated to accumulating more money and prestige? There are no limits to those needs. They can never be satisfied."
june 2011 by robertogreco
The correct use of a semicolon is a big red flag for me’ « Snarkmarket [Comments: http://twitter.com/rogre/status/84717881635512320 AND http://twitter.com/rogre/status/84718450773213184 ]
june 2011 by robertogreco
“I’m just doing this for the grade.”<br />
<br />
"The problem is now that the grade doesn’t even get you the job."<br />
<br />
"You understand where this is going: it’s not even about plagiarism and term papers… it’s about the framework and future of college itself.<br />
<br />
But, P.S., thinking about plagiarizing a term paper—even now, so many years removed from college—makes me physically ill. Seriously: a sick little stir in my stomach. But it has more to do with self-conception than core values. The idea of putting my name above somebody else’s words is just… like… inconceivable. The whole point of having a brain (and maybe, having a life) is that my name goes above my words and my words aren’t like anyone else’s words. This was true even back in college, when I thought I was going to be a scientist or an economist, not a journalist or a writer. So for a person like me (and I suspect there are many of you among the Snarkmatrix) plagiarism is way more than just cheating. It’s self-abnegation."
plagiarism
cheating
education
highereducation
highered
grades
grading
purpose
competition
colleges
universities
teaching
robinsloan
snarkmarket
economics
voice
anonymity
copying
ownership
self-abnegation
values
schooliness
learning
whatswrongwiththispicture
from delicious
<br />
"The problem is now that the grade doesn’t even get you the job."<br />
<br />
"You understand where this is going: it’s not even about plagiarism and term papers… it’s about the framework and future of college itself.<br />
<br />
But, P.S., thinking about plagiarizing a term paper—even now, so many years removed from college—makes me physically ill. Seriously: a sick little stir in my stomach. But it has more to do with self-conception than core values. The idea of putting my name above somebody else’s words is just… like… inconceivable. The whole point of having a brain (and maybe, having a life) is that my name goes above my words and my words aren’t like anyone else’s words. This was true even back in college, when I thought I was going to be a scientist or an economist, not a journalist or a writer. So for a person like me (and I suspect there are many of you among the Snarkmatrix) plagiarism is way more than just cheating. It’s self-abnegation."
june 2011 by robertogreco
The Future Of College: Forget Lectures And Let The Students Lead | Co.Design
june 2011 by robertogreco
"The technological power of the "cloud" as an aggregator of global knowledge & social network capital combines w/ natural tendency to learn through sharing & playing to create a multidimensional, interconnected network that solves complex problems. Simply put: Purpose & play drive learning.<br />
<br />
These students help us discern what is valuable about higher-ed learning & what needs to be shed to save it from complete ossification. The insular nature of academia could lead to its demise, but these students also see tremendous value in its ability to incubate. Unis become testing grounds where students can find mentors, receive funding, & iterate initiatives with real-world consequences. The design community can debate where innovation comes from, but we can no longer look to authoritarian, top-down dictation to drive societal change. If the blossoming of this pattern doesn’t point to a new trend in education, then it at least represents what these higher-ed institutions must become."
unschooling
deschooling
hierarchy
trungle
highereducation
highered
colleges
universities
organizations
education
learning
mentoring
mentorship
apprenticeships
problemsolving
criticalthinking
realworld
entrepreneurship
lcproject
johndewey
life
sugatamitra
peterthiel
via:lukeneff
play
purpose
academia
networkedlearning
networks
cloud
socialnetworks
authority
authoritarianism
from delicious
<br />
These students help us discern what is valuable about higher-ed learning & what needs to be shed to save it from complete ossification. The insular nature of academia could lead to its demise, but these students also see tremendous value in its ability to incubate. Unis become testing grounds where students can find mentors, receive funding, & iterate initiatives with real-world consequences. The design community can debate where innovation comes from, but we can no longer look to authoritarian, top-down dictation to drive societal change. If the blossoming of this pattern doesn’t point to a new trend in education, then it at least represents what these higher-ed institutions must become."
june 2011 by robertogreco
Liberate Knowledge
june 2011 by robertogreco
"Liberating knowledge. Knowledge is currently used as both a commodity and a weapon. It is bought and sold in universities, by corporations, and more – while kept in the hands of a private few to advance their own interests, rather than for the public good. Knowledge is also wielded by institutions, corporations, and governments to advance the prevailing order of dominant and subordinate classes; of a oppressed majority and ruling few. But knowledge, once freed and shared equitably, can forever change the way individuals and groups interact and impact their communities and planet."<br />
<br />
"Democratizing education. In order to democratize our economy, and thus our society, we must democratize our forms education, teaching, and learning."<br />
<br />
"This blog is dedicated to those efforts currently being made (as well as those that should exist) to democratize education and liberate knowledge in order to realize a better world. (In addition to any other worthwhile and semi-related rants)."
lcproject
learning
education
schools
teaching
pedagogy
freedom
unschooling
deschooling
power
society
liberation
activism
brianvanslyke
economics
control
history
hierarchy
knowledge
highereducation
highered
corporateinterests
corporateculture
from delicious
<br />
"Democratizing education. In order to democratize our economy, and thus our society, we must democratize our forms education, teaching, and learning."<br />
<br />
"This blog is dedicated to those efforts currently being made (as well as those that should exist) to democratize education and liberate knowledge in order to realize a better world. (In addition to any other worthwhile and semi-related rants)."
june 2011 by robertogreco
The crusade against college [via http://www.downes.ca/post/55638/ ]
june 2011 by robertogreco
"if we are to lose faith in college degrees, how can we best represent what an individual is capable of? Could LinkedIn-style social portfolios, w/ testimonials ranked according to built-in trust metrics, fill the gap? Or will we be left having to take peoples’ word for their own achievements?<br />
<br />
I’m inclined to think we’ll figure out a strong, decentralized, less-elitist way of going about this. But there’s a bigger question in all of this, too. If you take salaries away & look only at the overall education of a person, & the overall knowledge of our global society at large, don’t universities have some inherent value?<br />
<br />
I would argue that they do. I also think that looking at direct salaries as the sole measure of ROI in an institution is a short-term, short-sighted way to look at the world. Sure, some degrees yield less well-paying jobs than others. However, the contribution to our overall well-being, & to our economy, shouldn’t be overlooked. The world is a complex system…"
benwerdmuller
highereducation
highered
economics
unschooling
deschooling
elitism
sarahlacy
peterthiel
publiceducation
schools
education
learning
credentials
salaries
society
louismenand
compensation
2011
via:steelemaley
lcproject
democracy
colleges
universities
from delicious
<br />
I’m inclined to think we’ll figure out a strong, decentralized, less-elitist way of going about this. But there’s a bigger question in all of this, too. If you take salaries away & look only at the overall education of a person, & the overall knowledge of our global society at large, don’t universities have some inherent value?<br />
<br />
I would argue that they do. I also think that looking at direct salaries as the sole measure of ROI in an institution is a short-term, short-sighted way to look at the world. Sure, some degrees yield less well-paying jobs than others. However, the contribution to our overall well-being, & to our economy, shouldn’t be overlooked. The world is a complex system…"
june 2011 by robertogreco
Harvard dropouts from the class of 1969 | Harvard Magazine Jul-Aug 2010
june 2011 by robertogreco
"I knew I didn't want to do city planning, to play in that bureaucratic world," he continues. "I also knew that if I stayed another semester they would hand me a diploma, and that diploma is going to open a whole lot of doors that I don't want to go through. And I know that I am not real strong, and if I have that key, at some point I'm going to be seduced and want to go through one of those doors. So by not having the diploma, I will remove the temptation. That actually worked out very well, because I was tempted, more than once."
"…another possibility beckons. 3 of her 5 grandchildren attend a progressive Waldorf school in Birmingham, where Boyden came out of retirement briefly to substitute teach. “It was amazing to be in a school that does things right after fighting an uphill battle for years in the public schools, against people who wanted to test, test, test.” Teaching in a Waldorf school is a big commitment…same teacher stays w/ students from 1st through 8th grades."
[via: http://kottke.org/11/06/harvard-dropouts-40-years-later ]
education
work
life
2011
harvard
dropouts
unschooling
deschooling
identity
temptation
cv
highereducation
colleges
universities
bureaucracy
ratrace
bobos
teaching
schools
schooling
waldorf
testing
standardizedtesting
looping
lcproject
1969
learning
from delicious
"…another possibility beckons. 3 of her 5 grandchildren attend a progressive Waldorf school in Birmingham, where Boyden came out of retirement briefly to substitute teach. “It was amazing to be in a school that does things right after fighting an uphill battle for years in the public schools, against people who wanted to test, test, test.” Teaching in a Waldorf school is a big commitment…same teacher stays w/ students from 1st through 8th grades."
[via: http://kottke.org/11/06/harvard-dropouts-40-years-later ]
june 2011 by robertogreco
Debating the Value of College in America : The New Yorker
june 2011 by robertogreco
"…students majoring in liberal-arts fields—sci, social sci, & arts & huma—do better on CLA, show greater improvement, than students majoring in non-lib-arts fields such as business, education & social work, communications, engineering & comp sci, & health…more likely to take courses w/ substantial amounts of reading & writing…attend selective colleges…students who score lowest & improve least are business majors."
"Professor X…“I have come to think that 2 most crucial ingredients in mysterious mix that makes a good writer…1…having read enough…to have internalized rhythms of written word…2…refining ability to mimic those rhythms.”…read a lot of sentences…start to think in sentences…then you can write sentences…Someone who has reached age 18/20 & has never been reader is not going to become writer in 15 weeks. Otoh…not a bad thing for such a person to see what caring about “things that probably aren’t that exciting to most people” looks like. A lot of teaching is modelling."
education
culture
teaching
us
business
liberalarts
professorx
louismenand
colleges
universities
selectivity
learning
writing
books
thewhy
criticalthinking
democracy
meritocracy
cla
money
economics
vocational
pedagogy
highereducation
highered
2011
from delicious
"Professor X…“I have come to think that 2 most crucial ingredients in mysterious mix that makes a good writer…1…having read enough…to have internalized rhythms of written word…2…refining ability to mimic those rhythms.”…read a lot of sentences…start to think in sentences…then you can write sentences…Someone who has reached age 18/20 & has never been reader is not going to become writer in 15 weeks. Otoh…not a bad thing for such a person to see what caring about “things that probably aren’t that exciting to most people” looks like. A lot of teaching is modelling."
june 2011 by robertogreco
Weekly Standard: Kickin' Back with Tax Payer Money : NPR
may 2011 by robertogreco
"…grandest prize of all is…tenured live in different world than ordinary mortals…fears of unemployment are banished, futures can be confidently planned, & retirement is secure.<br />
All of this at a university w/out union representation!<br />
To be fair, first years of newly hired assistant professor can be harrowing. Writing lecture notes to cover a semester takes effort. But soon I had abundant material which could be reused indefinitely & took maybe 20min of review before class. Adding new material required hardly more effort than time to read what I would have read anyway."<br />
"The only really arduous part of teaching was grading…But for most of my classes I had teaching assistants to do this, graduate students who usually knew little more about the topic than the undergraduates…<br />
<br />
To be sure, some of my colleagues were prodigious researchers, devoted teachers, & outstanding…citizens. But…the privileged position of a tenured professor guarantees that there will be slackers."
highereducation
highered
tenure
education
money
economics
incentives
slackers
sociology
socialsciences
academia
2011
from delicious
All of this at a university w/out union representation!<br />
To be fair, first years of newly hired assistant professor can be harrowing. Writing lecture notes to cover a semester takes effort. But soon I had abundant material which could be reused indefinitely & took maybe 20min of review before class. Adding new material required hardly more effort than time to read what I would have read anyway."<br />
"The only really arduous part of teaching was grading…But for most of my classes I had teaching assistants to do this, graduate students who usually knew little more about the topic than the undergraduates…<br />
<br />
To be sure, some of my colleagues were prodigious researchers, devoted teachers, & outstanding…citizens. But…the privileged position of a tenured professor guarantees that there will be slackers."
may 2011 by robertogreco
YouTube - College Conspiracy
may 2011 by robertogreco
"College education is the largest scam in U.S. history! http://inflation.us"<br />
<br />
[via: https://twitter.com/qui_oui/status/74803663612293120 who says: "Depressingly accurate libertarian documentary about the U.S. #HigherEd "bubble" & economics"]
highereducation
highered
higheredbubble
economics
unschooling
deschooling
corporatism
2011
money
education
learning
k12
elementary
brainwashing
criticalthinking
admissions
from delicious
<br />
[via: https://twitter.com/qui_oui/status/74803663612293120 who says: "Depressingly accurate libertarian documentary about the U.S. #HigherEd "bubble" & economics"]
may 2011 by robertogreco
Hyperbole (and Progressive Bloggers) Fail Me: The End of Public Higher Education « zunguzungu
may 2011 by robertogreco
"I don’t expect Kevin Drum to have the answers, and we can debate what it will look like when this bubble finally bursts. Some people think it will be a good thing; I think it will be a clusterfuck for the middle and lower classes. But we all need to open our eyes to the fundamental transformation of American society that it represents. The generation before Drum’s made it possible to get an excellent education even if you couldn’t afford to pay the $9,000 that Stanford charged in 1981. Kevin Drum’s generation enjoyed the benefits of that system and then they dismantled it. My generation is muddling through by going deep into debt. The next generation will not."
education
berkeley
highereducation
elitism
money
debt
privatization
publicschools
publicuniversities
public
csu
uc
kevindrum
california
via:javierarbona
tuition
fees
higheredbubble
2011
from delicious
may 2011 by robertogreco
Faulty Towers: The Crisis in Higher Education | The Nation
may 2011 by robertogreco
"…leadership will have to come from somewhere else, as well. Just as in society as a whole, the academic upper middle class needs to rethink its alliances. Its dignity will not survive forever if it doesn’t fight for that of everyone below it in the academic hierarchy. For all its pretensions to public importance…the professoriate is awfully quiet, essentially nonexistent as a collective voice. If academia is going to once again become a decent place to work, if our best young minds are going to be attracted back to the profession, if higher education is going to be reclaimed as part of the American promise, if teaching and research are going to make the country strong again, then professors need to get off their backsides and organize: department by department, institution to institution, state by state and across the nation as a whole. Tenured professors enjoy the strongest speech protections in society. It’s time they started using them.
education
culture
teaching
politics
economics
highereducation
highered
hierarchy
society
voice
speakingout
2011
williamderesiewicz
colleges
universities
labor
gradschool
money
efficiency
markets
fairness
inequality
inequity
disparity
academia
liberalarts
from delicious
may 2011 by robertogreco
Meritocrats by Tony Judt | The New York Review of Books
may 2011 by robertogreco
"Universities are elitist: they are about selecting the most able cohort of a generation and educating them to their ability—breaking open the elite and making it consistently anew. Equality of opportunity and equality of outcome are not the same thing. A society divided by wealth and inheritance cannot redress this injustice by camouflaging it in educational institutions—by denying distinctions of ability or by restricting selective opportunity—while favoring a steadily widening income gap in the name of the free market. This is mere cant and hypocrisy."<br />
<br />
[via: http://www.gyford.com/phil/writing/2011/05/03/easter-reading.php ]
education
culture
uk
politics
cambridge
equality
opportunity
highereducation
highered
injustice
hypocrisy
wealth
inheritance
society
2010
ability
meritocracy
freemarkets
incomegap
economics
capitalism
elitism
tonyjudt
from delicious
<br />
[via: http://www.gyford.com/phil/writing/2011/05/03/easter-reading.php ]
may 2011 by robertogreco
John Maeda Mulls RISD's Backlash Against His Cyber-Style Leadership | Co.Design
may 2011 by robertogreco
"Maeda acknowledges that he now understands social media can only take you so far in redesigning leadership. All those great hopes for leading by blogging, tweeting, & emailing proved inadequate to gritty business of persuading an actual living, breathing constituency to follow his direction…<br />
<br />
Maeda has scaled back his blogging. He accepts that big Samsung screens he installed as a way to bring students together digitally, by allowing them to post new work, notices of events, & messages, never caught on. "Technologists believe that if they impose a solution, people will adopt it," he says. "But buy-in can't be bought."<br />
<br />
Instead, he says, he's going about leading in old-fashioned way: building relationships one at a time, having coffee w/ faculty, jogging w/ students late at night, offering free pizza as an inducement to get them to show up & talk. These interactions are time-consuming, high-bandwidth, interactive, fiscally expensive for a busy president, & unscalable."
johnmaeda
risd
backlash
2011
learning
leadership
relationships
administration
management
duh
scalability
time
socialmedia
twitter
blogging
meaning
education
highered
highereducation
from delicious
<br />
Maeda has scaled back his blogging. He accepts that big Samsung screens he installed as a way to bring students together digitally, by allowing them to post new work, notices of events, & messages, never caught on. "Technologists believe that if they impose a solution, people will adopt it," he says. "But buy-in can't be bought."<br />
<br />
Instead, he says, he's going about leading in old-fashioned way: building relationships one at a time, having coffee w/ faculty, jogging w/ students late at night, offering free pizza as an inducement to get them to show up & talk. These interactions are time-consuming, high-bandwidth, interactive, fiscally expensive for a busy president, & unscalable."
may 2011 by robertogreco
How Grad School Is Like Trying to Make the NBA - storify.com
april 2011 by robertogreco
"What do you tell a smart, committed undergraduate who wants to become a professor and pursue a PhD?"
education
highered
highereducation
timcarmody
sports
gradschool
teaching
nba
basketball
comparison
2010
from delicious
april 2011 by robertogreco
The BS Bubble | Hack Education [in response to: http://techcrunch.com/2011/04/10/peter-thiel-were-in-a-bubble-and-its-not-the-internet-its-higher-education/ ]
april 2011 by robertogreco
"So in conclusion (holy shit, phew!) I think Lacy’s Techcrunch story conflates several important points here. They’re interconnected, sure, because they’re all part of Thiel’s spiel. But if you just take her story at face value, you miss what should actually be a pretty nuanced analysis about what education means and what education is “worth.”<br />
<br />
If you frame the story of higher education in terms of Thiel’s argument — Ivy League schools are over-valued — and his actions — paying students from those very elite academic backgrounds to ditch the degree to become entrepreneurs under his tutelage — well, in return you get these oddly protectionist responses from the likes of Vivek Wadhwa (a vocal proponent of education who I really do admire) that end up looking like they’re propping up what is, I think many of us agree, a deeply flawed system."
education
highereducation
highered
unschooling
deschooling
money
nuance
2011
sarahlacy
peterthiel
bubbles
learning
economics
meaning
value
from delicious
<br />
If you frame the story of higher education in terms of Thiel’s argument — Ivy League schools are over-valued — and his actions — paying students from those very elite academic backgrounds to ditch the degree to become entrepreneurs under his tutelage — well, in return you get these oddly protectionist responses from the likes of Vivek Wadhwa (a vocal proponent of education who I really do admire) that end up looking like they’re propping up what is, I think many of us agree, a deeply flawed system."
april 2011 by robertogreco
Plikums Sarunas / 010 – Eike König on Vimeo
april 2011 by robertogreco
"An interview by plikums.lv with Eike König, the creator of a multi-disciplinary creative hub & playground named HORT." [http://www.hort.org.uk/ ]
hort
eikekönig
sharing
creativity
play
learning
lcproject
dropouts
schools
schooliness
studio
studios
studioclassroom
education
highereducation
designeducation
social
socializing
failure
risk
risktaking
messiness
anarchism
anarchy
design
graphics
graphicdesign
chaos
curiosity
tcsnmy
openstudio
ideas
conversation
process
hierarchy
administration
leadership
safety
schooldesign
from delicious
april 2011 by robertogreco
Tools for Teaching - Preparing to Teach the Large Lecture Course
april 2011 by robertogreco
"Be clear about what can reasonably be accomplished by lecturing. Research shows that lecturing is as effective as other instructional methods,such as discussion, in transmitting information but less effective in promoting independent thought or developing students' thinking skills (Bligh, 1971). In addition to presenting facts, try to share complex intellectual analyses, synthesize several ideas, clarify controversial issues, or compare and contrast different points of view"
teaching
tips
howto
learning
lecturing
lectures
via:adamgreenfield
presentations
criticalthinking
problemsolving
informationtransmission
independentthought
highereducation
highered
discussion
conversation
from delicious
april 2011 by robertogreco
Connect@NMC/Live with Lynda Series: Michael Wesch on Authentic Learning | NMC
april 2011 by robertogreco
"Lynda Weinman, co-founder of lynda.com, interviews Michael about his personal journey as a teacher, the challenges he faced as he changed his approach, and the successes and barriers to making the change. Watch as he and a few of his students showcase some of their current projects."
michaelwesch
mediaecology
mediatedcultures
via:steelemaley
student-centered
learning
education
pedagogy
teaching
2011
lyndaweinman
projectbasedlearning
authenticity
authenticlearning
highereducation
highered
from delicious
april 2011 by robertogreco
John Maeda at odds with RISD Faculty - natalia ilyin
april 2011 by robertogreco
"Maeda's made so many enemies and done so many wrong-headed things in such a short amount of time that I am reminded once again that IQ and intelligence are not the same thing. He's made many sweeping administrative errors, but it is this that bothers me: he thinks himself more intelligent than those who surround him and those who have gone before him. And since he believes himself more intelligent and advanced than the people that went before him, he assumes that what they believed is not true anymore, is outdated. This is a false syllogism.
John Maeda may think that because he has a smartphone and can process the video he is taking of you (while you are trying to converse with him) through html 5 and make it interact with objects in a cornfield in real time or some such thing, that somehow his vision of what art education is and should be is "more advanced" than that of the rest of the faculty at RISD, but in this thinking he is also mistaken. This logic is roughly equivalent to your saying that you can bake a better cupcake than I can because you use a silicone pan. The recipe and quality of ingredients, the baking time or general talent of the baker seem to have nothing to do with it.
We believed that Maeda could do for us that which we were too lazy to do for ourselves. We wanted him to somehow make what we teach seem new and shiny in the current era, without our really having to do anything about it. But we expected way too much from one man, and we did not understand that his great talent seems to be that of the person who first sees a shiny object in the marketplace and runs to get it. He is the earliest of adopters, the bell-weather of early adopters."
risd
designeducation
design
education
leadership
management
hierarchy
intelligence
interpersonal
johnmaeda
2011
noconfidence
faculty
administration
human
technology
change
highereducation
highered
arts
art
from delicious
John Maeda may think that because he has a smartphone and can process the video he is taking of you (while you are trying to converse with him) through html 5 and make it interact with objects in a cornfield in real time or some such thing, that somehow his vision of what art education is and should be is "more advanced" than that of the rest of the faculty at RISD, but in this thinking he is also mistaken. This logic is roughly equivalent to your saying that you can bake a better cupcake than I can because you use a silicone pan. The recipe and quality of ingredients, the baking time or general talent of the baker seem to have nothing to do with it.
We believed that Maeda could do for us that which we were too lazy to do for ourselves. We wanted him to somehow make what we teach seem new and shiny in the current era, without our really having to do anything about it. But we expected way too much from one man, and we did not understand that his great talent seems to be that of the person who first sees a shiny object in the marketplace and runs to get it. He is the earliest of adopters, the bell-weather of early adopters."
april 2011 by robertogreco
Critical Technology: Networked and Open also means Collaborative
march 2011 by robertogreco
"This is what the Networked & Open PhD (NOPhD) is all about. It is about working w/ others in an open & collaborative way so everyone deepens their knowledge on a shared subject domain. The great part would be if everyone who is in the collaborative cohort aspired to develop a PhD level of knowing w/in the subject they share a passion. Due to the networked (& collaborative) aspect of NOPhD I believe a number of people in the cohort need to make it to PhD depth of knowing, otherwise it couldn't be considered networked. So I have faith & begin to encourage (& hopefully inspire) people around me (virtually & otherwise) who are interested in this pursuit of developing a deeper knowing of Folk Music & Dance. & those interested in pedagogy, technology & life-long learning; for I will be drawing on these skills & knowledge as I build upon this anchor subject.<br />
<br />
So what exactly does this look like?…why don't I describe my week & how certain events fit into the networked & collaborative"
learning
phd
openphd
nophd
education
alternative
highereducation
networked
networking
open
openlearning
collaboration
collaborative
from delicious
<br />
So what exactly does this look like?…why don't I describe my week & how certain events fit into the networked & collaborative"
march 2011 by robertogreco
Speculative Diction: Places of Learning
march 2011 by robertogreco
"While we can’t necessarily change the buildings we’re in, we can be sensitive to their use, to our adaptation to the context provided. And we can ask ourselves questions. What would the building look like if we began by asking how people learn? How do people meet each other and form learning relationships? If you could design your own workspace, your own learning space, what would it look like and why? This need not involve a major reconstruction project. If the university had taken these things into account before renovating our program space, the same amount could have been spent and things might have looked, and felt, very different."
howwelearn
education
highereducation
highered
meloniefullick
place
flow
serendipity
exchange
conversation
schooldesign
learningplaces
learningspaces
architecture
thirdteacher
context
learning
informallearning
informal
engagement
reggioemilia
tcsnmy
from delicious
march 2011 by robertogreco
CIEL-The Consortium for Innovative Environments in Learning
march 2011 by robertogreco
"The Consortium for Innovative Environments in Learning is a growing network of distinguished, progressive higher education institutions.<br />
<br />
Faculty members share ideas among faculty in the network, broadening their resources for teaching, curriculum development, assessment, and research.<br />
<br />
Students present their academic work in the online student journal and at annual symposia. Students also participate in exchanges at CIEL member campuses or in study abroad programs offered through the network.<br />
<br />
CIEL also engages in outreach to the higher education community to share best practices in place among the CIEL institutions.<br />
<br />
We share a common goal: to advance innovations in student learning."
teaching
collaboration
education
learning
online
highereducation
highered
progressive
ciel
evergreenstatecollege
prescottcollege
hampshirecollege
pitzercollege
fairhavencollege
alvernocollege
newcollegeofflorida
universityofredlands
altgdp
gradschool
learningenvironments
lcproject
tcsnmy
unschooling
deschooling
alternative
from delicious
<br />
Faculty members share ideas among faculty in the network, broadening their resources for teaching, curriculum development, assessment, and research.<br />
<br />
Students present their academic work in the online student journal and at annual symposia. Students also participate in exchanges at CIEL member campuses or in study abroad programs offered through the network.<br />
<br />
CIEL also engages in outreach to the higher education community to share best practices in place among the CIEL institutions.<br />
<br />
We share a common goal: to advance innovations in student learning."
march 2011 by robertogreco
more than 95 theses
march 2011 by robertogreco
"Whatever the reason for gender imbalance, college administrators across country have been going to great lengths to lasso boys—adding sports programs, building bigger gyms, expanding departments in engineering, math, & hard sciences, which are historically attractive to men. & presidents make sure their admissions directors are doing their best to ‘rectify’ the problem of gender imbalance by lowering the academic threshold for the (mostly white) boys who apply. Anyone who doubts the futility of human progress should ponder this. After several generations of vicious racism, followed by protest marches, civil rights lawsuits, accusations of bigotry, appeals to color-blindness, feminism, & eloquent invocations of the meritocratic ideal, the latest admissions trend in American higher education is affirmative action for white men. Just like the old days." —One more irresistible quote from Crazy U. As Mr. Burns says in The Simpsons Movie, “For once, the rich white man is in control.”
boys
admissions
crazyu
highereducation
highered
affirmitiveaction
whites
wasp
us
discrimination
meritocracy
gender
bigotry
history
racism
civilrights
2011
alanjacobs
from delicious
march 2011 by robertogreco
Goodbye academia, I get a life. – blog.devicerandom
march 2011 by robertogreco
"One of my first memories is myself, 5 years old, going to my mother and declare to her, as serious as only children can be: “I will be a scientist.”<br />
<br />
Yesterday night I was in my office in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Cambridge packing my stuff, resolved to not go back to research again -at least not in the shortcoming future.<br />
<br />
What has gone wrong?"<br />
<br />
<br />
"It has been long and painful to discover that it was just an illusion. When I found that academia was not working for me, I got immediately depressed -my whole worldview was crumbling. Then I remembered that I had a life. I liked my life. I had a billion things that I loved to do. I want to do them again. Quitting and reclaiming back your life is not failing. It is waking up and winning."
academia
science
education
research
life
profzischeme
ponzischemes
highereducation
highered
gradschool
from delicious
<br />
Yesterday night I was in my office in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Cambridge packing my stuff, resolved to not go back to research again -at least not in the shortcoming future.<br />
<br />
What has gone wrong?"<br />
<br />
<br />
"It has been long and painful to discover that it was just an illusion. When I found that academia was not working for me, I got immediately depressed -my whole worldview was crumbling. Then I remembered that I had a life. I liked my life. I had a billion things that I loved to do. I want to do them again. Quitting and reclaiming back your life is not failing. It is waking up and winning."
march 2011 by robertogreco
Bezoar: The sorrows of finance capital
march 2011 by robertogreco
""It's an outrage that the priority of this university is not in favor with the students," said Jessie Fernandez, an SFSU senior who attended the meeting. His major, **urban studies and planning**, is currently threatened by the plan." (emphasis mine)<br />
<br />
Urban Studies, of all things! So, Michael Maltzan, that's the crux of the neoliberal frenzy here in California. Where does architecture step in? Do we proceed with bloated buildings as the idea of what an open, accessible city is, or do we defend the spaces of our own discipline?"
javierarbona
sdsu
universities
finance
capital
architecture
michaelmaltzan
priorities
2011
education
highereducation
highered
open
accessibility
cities
california
budgetcuts
from delicious
<br />
Urban Studies, of all things! So, Michael Maltzan, that's the crux of the neoliberal frenzy here in California. Where does architecture step in? Do we proceed with bloated buildings as the idea of what an open, accessible city is, or do we defend the spaces of our own discipline?"
march 2011 by robertogreco
Lament for the iGeneration | torontolife.com
february 2011 by robertogreco
"When I started teaching at Ryerson three years ago, I was 28—barely older than my students. Like them, I’m attached to my cellphone, laptop and Facebook account. So why is teaching in the digital age such a nightmare?"
teaching
via:jeeves
mobile
phones
laptops
facebook
attention
tcsnmy
learning
highereducation
highered
disconnect
generations
technology
online
web
internet
ubiquitouswebconnections
society
schools
education
twitter
universities
colleges
from delicious
february 2011 by robertogreco
Gaia University
february 2011 by robertogreco
"Gaia University is a unique un-institution for higher learning. We offer access to accredited degrees and diplomas arising from your work in personal and planetary transformation. Through action learning you pursue a pathway of your own design - in the location of your choice - while supported by a global network of skilled advisors and mentors. Come join our vibrant international community and learn and unlearn with us through an integral blend of residential intensives, online exchange, digital documentation and hands-on project work."
sustainability
permaculture
education
activism
agriculture
unschooling
deschooling
gaiauniversity
via:steelemaley
the2837university
agitpropproject
lcproject
highered
highereducation
learning
mexico
chile
porland
oregon
international
puertorico
tennessee
germany
austria
california
from delicious
february 2011 by robertogreco
Dear EDUPUNK, | bavatuesdays
february 2011 by robertogreco
"…last straw has been your indecent exposure in the title of yet another book by Anya Kamanetz…<br />
<br />
I mean, when did you stop dating journalists and start dating advocates for a mechanized vision of DIY education? You and I had deep institutional roots, and I am still proud to serve the public mission, why have you turned from this vision? I don’t know, EDUPUNK, I’m confused. I know I don’t own you, I know I have to let you go, but damn it….I loved you once! And I have a feeling your new lovers have moved away from any pretense of “reporting the state of education” and into the realm of advocating for a new corporate ed model. What’s more, I’m afraid they might continue to pimp out your good name—so be careful out there–it is a money hungry world. It might seem all fun and good right now, but just wait until they stick you in a cubicle and have you cold calling kids for that much needed education insurance they’ll need when corporations control the educational field."
jimgroom
edupunk
education
highereducation
highered
forprofit
anyakamenetz
unschooling
deschooling
words
meaning
definitions
money
billgates
gatesfoundation
khanacademy
salkhan
culture
edupreneurs
from delicious
<br />
I mean, when did you stop dating journalists and start dating advocates for a mechanized vision of DIY education? You and I had deep institutional roots, and I am still proud to serve the public mission, why have you turned from this vision? I don’t know, EDUPUNK, I’m confused. I know I don’t own you, I know I have to let you go, but damn it….I loved you once! And I have a feeling your new lovers have moved away from any pretense of “reporting the state of education” and into the realm of advocating for a new corporate ed model. What’s more, I’m afraid they might continue to pimp out your good name—so be careful out there–it is a money hungry world. It might seem all fun and good right now, but just wait until they stick you in a cubicle and have you cold calling kids for that much needed education insurance they’ll need when corporations control the educational field."
february 2011 by robertogreco
Think Again: Education - By Ben Wildavsky | Foreign Policy [""Relax, America. Chinese math whizzes and Indian engineers aren't stealing your kids' future."]
february 2011 by robertogreco
"American students' performance is only cause for outright panic if you buy into the assumption that scholastic achievement is a zero-sum competition between nations, an intellectual arms race in which other countries' gain is necessarily the United States' loss."<br />
<br />
"If Americans' ahistorical sense of their global decline prompts educators to come up with innovative new ideas, that's all to the good. But don't expect any of them to bring the country back to its educational golden age -- there wasn't one."<br />
<br />
"In this coming era of globalized education, there is little place for the Sputnik alarms of the Cold War, the Shanghai panic of today, and the inevitable sequels lurking on the horizon. The international education race worth winning is the one to develop the intellectual capacity the United States and everyone else needs to meet the formidable challenges of the 21st century -- and who gets there first won't matter as much as we once feared."
us
policy
education
china
india
competiveness
spacerace
sputnik
arneduncan
rttt
nclb
shanghai
pisa
anationatrisk
learning
schools
propaganda
fear
standardizedtesting
highereducation
highered
colleges
universities
from delicious
<br />
"If Americans' ahistorical sense of their global decline prompts educators to come up with innovative new ideas, that's all to the good. But don't expect any of them to bring the country back to its educational golden age -- there wasn't one."<br />
<br />
"In this coming era of globalized education, there is little place for the Sputnik alarms of the Cold War, the Shanghai panic of today, and the inevitable sequels lurking on the horizon. The international education race worth winning is the one to develop the intellectual capacity the United States and everyone else needs to meet the formidable challenges of the 21st century -- and who gets there first won't matter as much as we once feared."
february 2011 by robertogreco
DIY U: Digital Apprenticeship and the Modern Guild | e-Literate
february 2011 by robertogreco
"Jim Groom suggested apprenticeship might be a good model for networked learning, particularly for those students who are not auto-didactic…a model that is well understood, can work for a variety of topics in less formal settings, can get learners productive on certain tasks quickly, & can get the benefits of scale by using modern communications technologies…So in this post, I’m going to consider the question of what it would take to embed apprenticeship into the fabric of our society as a broadly accepted career path across a wide range of career types…<br />
<br />
If it’s really going to take hold, then digital apprenticeship has to be very clearly class-leveling rather than class-perpetuating. But what would that look like? How can we craft a modern apprenticeship relationship that has a close bi-directional apprentice/master relationship and is economically leveling?"
apprenticeships
education
highschool
colleges
universities
learning
digitalapprenticeships
jimgroom
highereducation
highered
edupunk
diyu
training
via:leighblackall
school-to-work
vocational
michaelfeldstein
from delicious
<br />
If it’s really going to take hold, then digital apprenticeship has to be very clearly class-leveling rather than class-perpetuating. But what would that look like? How can we craft a modern apprenticeship relationship that has a close bi-directional apprentice/master relationship and is economically leveling?"
february 2011 by robertogreco
Communiqués from Occupied California » After the Fall is Now
february 2011 by robertogreco
"Collecting the major statements from the recent wave of occupations, After the Fall is a love letter to the insurgent students and workers on California campuses. It is intended to spark excitement and discussion and we encourage students and others to use After the Fall to mobilize forces ahead of the March 4th offensive.<br />
• 44 tabloid pages of communiques, texts and photos from across the state<br />
• includes a two color map, timeline and pullout poster"
anarchism
california
education
protest
activism
2010
universities
highereducation
highered
from delicious
• 44 tabloid pages of communiques, texts and photos from across the state<br />
• includes a two color map, timeline and pullout poster"
february 2011 by robertogreco
College of the Atlantic - Wikipedia
february 2011 by robertogreco
"curriculum is based on human ecology, & all freshmen are required to take an introductory core course in human ecology during first term. Other requirements include 2 courses in each focus area (Environmental Studies, Arts & Design, Human Studies), 1 quantitative reasoning course, 1 history course, & 1 course that involves extensive writing. The intention is for students to explore & integrate ideas from different disciplines & to construct their own understanding of human ecology.<br />
<br />
W/ focus on interdisciplinary learning, CotA does not have distinct departments…faculty members consider themselves human ecologists in addition to formal specialization.…professors of art, art history, anthropology, creative writing, political science and peace studies, economics, green & sustainable business, ecology, biology, botany, environmental science, sustainable food systems, film, law, environmental studies, international policy, languages, philosophy, history, education, music & psychology."
education
socialecology
collegeoftheatlantic
alternative
colleges
universities
glvo
socialentrepreneurship
interdisciplinary
multidisciplinary
crossdisciplinary
projectbasedlearning
studentdirected
community
highereducation
highered
curriculum
tcsnmy
lcproject
maine
sustainability
ecology
social
from delicious
<br />
W/ focus on interdisciplinary learning, CotA does not have distinct departments…faculty members consider themselves human ecologists in addition to formal specialization.…professors of art, art history, anthropology, creative writing, political science and peace studies, economics, green & sustainable business, ecology, biology, botany, environmental science, sustainable food systems, film, law, environmental studies, international policy, languages, philosophy, history, education, music & psychology."
february 2011 by robertogreco
Free University of San Francisco [via: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/20/us/20bcfree.html via @willrich45]
february 2011 by robertogreco
"aims to make highest level of education available, completely free, to any individual who wants it, regardless of color, creed, age, gender, nationality, religion or immigration status—a university free of money, taught for free…only requirement for membership is a desire to teach &/or a desire to learn.<br />
We believe that the purpose of education is not to turn the student into a better consumer & profit-earner but to help him/her to discover wealth of human culture upon whose shoulders she/he stands. What we share at FUSF is a passionate determination to see restoration of humanity—warm, literate, democratic—to vibrant human life. & in order to achieve this aim we have taken hold of the very hub of our culture, which is education, in order to create a brand new kind of institution, one whose existence makes no sense in current social order, that stands in direct defiance of privatized profit-oriented social engineering centers that pass for unis today.<br />
…we are rebels of knowledge."
the2837university
agitpropproject
lcproject
education
highereducation
sanfrancisco
freeschools
freeuniversities
anarchism
anarchy
democracy
learning
universities
colleges
highered
free
democratic
accessibility
flat
postconsumerism
postmaterialism
from delicious
We believe that the purpose of education is not to turn the student into a better consumer & profit-earner but to help him/her to discover wealth of human culture upon whose shoulders she/he stands. What we share at FUSF is a passionate determination to see restoration of humanity—warm, literate, democratic—to vibrant human life. & in order to achieve this aim we have taken hold of the very hub of our culture, which is education, in order to create a brand new kind of institution, one whose existence makes no sense in current social order, that stands in direct defiance of privatized profit-oriented social engineering centers that pass for unis today.<br />
…we are rebels of knowledge."
february 2011 by robertogreco
Education Week: An Open Message to President Barack Obama
february 2011 by robertogreco
"in years of Cold War, public schools were blamed for contributing to alleged missile gap & prospect of losing space race. Federal initiatives resulted in curricular priorities…math & science, to be led by university scholar-specialists…students learned from these initiatives that they did not like math & science…university enrollments in those disciplines plummeted…Earlier, Harvard President James B. Conant had called for a moratorium on national testing…situation is far worse today…<br />
<br />
In mid-20th century, a committee of American Academy of Arts & Sciences pointed out…purely academic program advocated for high school by many university liberal arts professors…whole national life would be in danger of collapse. Unfortunately, we backed away from commitment to meaningful preparation of young people for life after HS.<br />
<br />
…your metrics…Race to the Top…relegating studies & activities that children love—civic education, arts, career education—to bottom rung of academic ladder."
education
rttt
barackobama
arneduncan
2011
learning
science
math
mathematics
schools
curriculum
arts
vocational
colleges
universities
collegeprep
history
coldwar
testing
standards
standardizedtesting
standardization
tcsnmy
meaning
publicschools
civiceducation
careers
danieltanner
jamesconant
johndewey
highereducation
children
politics
policy
inequality
engagement
teaching
from delicious
<br />
In mid-20th century, a committee of American Academy of Arts & Sciences pointed out…purely academic program advocated for high school by many university liberal arts professors…whole national life would be in danger of collapse. Unfortunately, we backed away from commitment to meaningful preparation of young people for life after HS.<br />
<br />
…your metrics…Race to the Top…relegating studies & activities that children love—civic education, arts, career education—to bottom rung of academic ladder."
february 2011 by robertogreco
UnCollege | self-directed higher education
february 2011 by robertogreco
"The mission of UnCollege is to support individuals on self-directed odysseys of learning and introspection by creating a community of like-minded peers and mentors.<br />
UnCollege is not an accredited, degree-granting institution. UnCollege rather provides students with a framework to pursue their own journey of learning and self-discovery. Upon completion of the UnCollege program, students will create experience transcripts to demonstrate their learning from real-world accomplishments.The long-term goal of UnCollege is to revolutionize higher education, providing an example of College 2.0. In the future, UnCollege will become a fully accredited, degree-granting institution.<br />
However, there will be no campus and no professors."
education
unschooling
deschooling
highereducation
highered
learning
autodidacts
self-directedlearning
schools
schooling
online
credentials
problemsolving
academia
the2837university
agitpropproject
from delicious
UnCollege is not an accredited, degree-granting institution. UnCollege rather provides students with a framework to pursue their own journey of learning and self-discovery. Upon completion of the UnCollege program, students will create experience transcripts to demonstrate their learning from real-world accomplishments.The long-term goal of UnCollege is to revolutionize higher education, providing an example of College 2.0. In the future, UnCollege will become a fully accredited, degree-granting institution.<br />
However, there will be no campus and no professors."
february 2011 by robertogreco
Disgruntled College Student Starts 'UnCollege' to Challenge System - Wired Campus - The Chronicle of Higher Education
february 2011 by robertogreco
"19-year-old entrepreneur, wants to bring the idea of home-schooling to the college level, with an unusual new Web service he calls UnCollege…<br />
<br />
…tapping into growing frustrations about the high costs of college and the value of a college degree…<br />
<br />
…UnCollege plans to serve as a social group for self-learners to trade tips on how to learn enough through nontraditional means to get the job they’re aiming for. Mr. Stephens has been home-schooled since fifth grade, and he says that has taught him how to find ways to learn outside of classrooms—by finding internships, seeking out mentors, and designing projects on his own. And he says he is frustrated with his experience so far at college, mainly because of what he calls “a gap between theoretical knowledge and practical application of that knowledge.” In other words, he spent his time in class thinking to himself, Why do I need to know this?<br />
<br />
“I don’t feel that I’ve learned things that I couldn’t have learned on my own,” he said."
education
homeschool
unschooling
deschooling
highereducation
highered
colleges
universities
learning
self-directedlearning
autodidacts
experience
lcproject
online
projectbasedlearning
the2837university
agitpropproject
from delicious
<br />
…tapping into growing frustrations about the high costs of college and the value of a college degree…<br />
<br />
…UnCollege plans to serve as a social group for self-learners to trade tips on how to learn enough through nontraditional means to get the job they’re aiming for. Mr. Stephens has been home-schooled since fifth grade, and he says that has taught him how to find ways to learn outside of classrooms—by finding internships, seeking out mentors, and designing projects on his own. And he says he is frustrated with his experience so far at college, mainly because of what he calls “a gap between theoretical knowledge and practical application of that knowledge.” In other words, he spent his time in class thinking to himself, Why do I need to know this?<br />
<br />
“I don’t feel that I’ve learned things that I couldn’t have learned on my own,” he said."
february 2011 by robertogreco
Free International University - Wikipedia
february 2011 by robertogreco
"The Free International University (FIU), was a support organization founded by…Joseph Beuys together with Klaus Staeck (1st), Georg Meistermann (2nd) & Willi Bongard (secretary). It was founded as a "organizational place of research, work, & communication" to ponder the future of society. As a free University it was intended to supplement the state educational system while at the same time campaigning for legal equality with that system.<br />
<br />
The FIU was founded on 27 April 1973 in Düsseldorf studio of Joseph Beuys & existed as a non-profit, recognized, & registered association up to its dissolution in 1988, more than 2 years after the death of the artist.<br />
<br />
The idea of the FIU was revisited & taken further by various people & groups, including the author Rainer Rappmann under the FIU-Verlag & the FIUs in Amsterdam, Gelsenkirchen, Hamburg, & Munich, which were begun by students of Beuys. They also include the organization Mehr Demokratie e.V. & the Omnibus for direct Democracy."
deschooling
josephbeuys
education
freeschools
highereducation
highered
alternative
altgdp
lcproject
unschooling
via:leighblackall
agitpropproject
the2837university
from delicious
<br />
The FIU was founded on 27 April 1973 in Düsseldorf studio of Joseph Beuys & existed as a non-profit, recognized, & registered association up to its dissolution in 1988, more than 2 years after the death of the artist.<br />
<br />
The idea of the FIU was revisited & taken further by various people & groups, including the author Rainer Rappmann under the FIU-Verlag & the FIUs in Amsterdam, Gelsenkirchen, Hamburg, & Munich, which were begun by students of Beuys. They also include the organization Mehr Demokratie e.V. & the Omnibus for direct Democracy."
february 2011 by robertogreco
The University in Transition - Dougald's posterous
february 2011 by robertogreco
"This weekend’s Transition Universities conference in Winchester was a crossing point between two things which I care about deeply:<br />
<br />
*how we make a good job of living through these uncertain times of social, economic and ecological disruption;<br />
<br />
*how we salvage what is good from the wreckage of higher education, and reground our learning in less damaged and damaging assumptions.<br />
<br />
This is where Dark Mountain crosses into my work with School of Everything and the many other informal learning experiments I’ve been part of over the past decade. Over the Christmas and New Year break, as I wrote up ‘What I Learned (2003-10)’, I began to realise that this project of finding a new home for higher (and deeper) learning is the core of what I want to do with the next part of my life."
education
learning
tranuniversity
dougaldhine
highereducation
highered
unschooling
deschooling
lcproject
agitpropproject
transition
transitionuniversities
darkmountain
schoolofeverything
the2837university
from delicious
<br />
*how we make a good job of living through these uncertain times of social, economic and ecological disruption;<br />
<br />
*how we salvage what is good from the wreckage of higher education, and reground our learning in less damaged and damaging assumptions.<br />
<br />
This is where Dark Mountain crosses into my work with School of Everything and the many other informal learning experiments I’ve been part of over the past decade. Over the Christmas and New Year break, as I wrote up ‘What I Learned (2003-10)’, I began to realise that this project of finding a new home for higher (and deeper) learning is the core of what I want to do with the next part of my life."
february 2011 by robertogreco
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