Bret Victor - Inventing on Principle on Vimeo
purpose living life insight doing self-discovery experience modelessness causes craftsman problemsolving meaning meaningmaking specialization skills identity rightandwrong ideals richardstallman piaget jeromebruner alankay dougengelbart xeroxparc terrycavanagh larrytesler activism injustice justice morality responsibility animation mediaconnection teletype computing history analogdesign electronics comparisons data space understanding search visualization time braid making ideas programming 2012 connection discovery coding invention creativity principles bretvictor from delicious
february 2012 by robertogreco
purpose living life insight doing self-discovery experience modelessness causes craftsman problemsolving meaning meaningmaking specialization skills identity rightandwrong ideals richardstallman piaget jeromebruner alankay dougengelbart xeroxparc terrycavanagh larrytesler activism injustice justice morality responsibility animation mediaconnection teletype computing history analogdesign electronics comparisons data space understanding search visualization time braid making ideas programming 2012 connection discovery coding invention creativity principles bretvictor from delicious
february 2012 by robertogreco
Published: The Old Revolution
february 2012 by robertogreco
"…perhaps most importantly, [this revolution] is driven by what one might call a “rethinking the basics” movement, in which educators everywhere cannot help but see a disconnect between their traditional modes of teaching and the world in which we all now live.
As Dewey noted, the goal is not to counter traditional education and its strict organization with its perceived opposite (disorganization)—but instead to create what Web designers today might call an “architecture for participation.” The learning environments we need may be more fluid, adaptable, collaborative, and participatory, but they are not unstructured and unorganized. As Maurice Friedman noted while explaining Martin Buber’s educational philosophy, “The opposite of compulsion is not freedom but communion…” (1955). [Martin Buber: The Life of Dialogue, by Maurice S. Friedman, 1955]"
culturewars
learning
history
teachingasaconservingactivity
backtobasics
traditionalism
pedagogy
teaching
teachingasasubversiveactivity
charlesweingartner
jonathankozol
jeromebruner
paulofreire
neilpostman
gamechanging
jaymathews
johndewey
progressive
education
change
michaelwesch
2011
As Dewey noted, the goal is not to counter traditional education and its strict organization with its perceived opposite (disorganization)—but instead to create what Web designers today might call an “architecture for participation.” The learning environments we need may be more fluid, adaptable, collaborative, and participatory, but they are not unstructured and unorganized. As Maurice Friedman noted while explaining Martin Buber’s educational philosophy, “The opposite of compulsion is not freedom but communion…” (1955). [Martin Buber: The Life of Dialogue, by Maurice S. Friedman, 1955]"
february 2012 by robertogreco
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