Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Gramsci. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Gramsci. Sort by date Show all posts

Thursday, January 30, 2020

Gramsci (1891-1937) – that word ‘Hegemony’....

Jailed by Mussolini, Antonio Gramsci wrote 32 notebooks, written over 11 years in prison but they were not published in English until the 1970s. If you hear the word ‘hegemony’ it is likely to have come from someone who has read, or just as likely not read but unknowingly quoting Gramsci.
As a Marxist his focus was on cultural and ideological forces in society. Informal education along with defined roles for intellectuals and redefining schools, are all main themes for Gramsci as he took Marxism and updated its theories in the light of 20th century evidence. The physical conflict between the classes became a mental conflict, where ideas were weapons, perpetuated through institutions, especially educational institutions. He was to have a great influence on radical educational theorists such as Freire and Illich.

Hegemony

Traditional Marxism saw class control and conflict as one of domination and coercion. Gramsci saw that this was not subtle enough to explain the status quo and thought that values, morals and social institutions kept class structures in place. The common consciousness unwittingly adopts these beliefs and this preserves inequalities and domination. Two forces operate here; first coercive institutions such as the armed services, police, government and legislature, second non-coercive institutions such as schools, churches, trade unions, social clubs and the family. Interestingly, schools straddled both categories with their coercive curriculum, standards, qualifications and compulsion but also non-coercively through informal education, the hidden curriculum.

Schools

Power for the ruling classes, comes not from force but ideological manipulation and control. Schools and education play a major role in perpetuating this hegemony, reinforcing the social norms of dominance and obedience. The fact that different classes tend to have different schools is evidence that this dynamic is operative. Schools, he thought, should give all pupils a common grounding, free from social differences and we should be wary of vocational schools for the poor and academic schools for the rich. Everyone should have a good, grounded education, a comprehensive education. In many ways the UKs comprehensive system had its roots in Gramsci. Like Dewey, and many others, he saw learning as being active through activities. However, he was no Rousseau-like romantic. Children, he recognised, did not take naturally to learning.

Intellectuals

Intellectuals, for example academics, are often seen as being above and apart from the ruling classes but Gramsci doubted this and saw some as perpetuating the system. Indeed, some intellectuals are the product of this class consciousness and their role is precisely the continuation of the current system. His solution was to encourage intellectuals from other class backgrounds to participate in political activity. This opened the door for a more enlightened view of education and change, a counter to the brutality of the anti-intellectualism of many communists.
Schools need to produce well-rounded participants in society, but also intellectuals who would act as a brake on the power of the ruling classes and exercise their power through education. The educated individual could act critically to change society and play a significant role in society. Education was therefore a powerful source of ideas and action in a society with the capability of changing society for the better. This was a powerful force in 20th century socialist thinking, where intellectuals, and worker’s education, were regarded as being at the vanguard of working class consciousness and struggle.

Influence

Gramsci related Marxism directly to the institutions of education and saw them as playing a key role in the ideological revolution, although his theorizing is still deeply rooted in the Marxist historicism, so successfully demolished by Popper. The role of intellectuals, not merely academic, in changing society, was also recognised. Many would argue that this sort of academic Marxism had a deleterious effect on schooling, politicising education and schools. Others would still argue that an egalitarian educational system is far from realised and that Gramsci’s ideas still have huge currency in modern debates on education and schooling. As with so much of this debate, the danger lies in strong ideological positions being taken at the expense of innovative practice and realism.

Bibliography

Gramsci, A. (1971). Selections from the Prison Notebooks. London: Lawrence and Wishart.
Boggs, C. (1976) Gramsci’s Marxism. London: Pluto Press.
Entwistle, H. (1979). Antonio Gramsci: Conservative schooling for radical politics. London: Routledge.
Carmel Borg et al (2003) Gramsci & Education  Rowman & Littlefield.
Jones S. Gramsci, Routledge Critical Thinkers, Routledge.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Gramsci (1891-1937) – hegemony, intellectuals and informal learning


Jailed by Mussolini, Gramsci wrote 32 notebooks, written over 11 years in prison but wasn’t published in English until the 1970s. If you hear the word ‘hegemony’ it’s likely to have come from someone who has read, or just as likely not read but unknowingly quoting, Gramsci.
As a Marxist his focus was on cultural and ideological forces in society. Informal education along with defined roles for intellectuals and redefining schools, are all main themes for Gramsci as he took Marxism and updated its theories in the light of 20th century evidence. The physical conflict between the classes became a mental conflict, where ideas were the weapons, perpetuated through institutions, especially educational institutions. He was to have a great influence on radical educational theorists such as Freire and Illich.
Hegemony
Traditional Marxism saw class control and conflict as one of domination and coercion. Gramsci saw that this was not subtle enough to explain the status quo and thought that values, morals and social institutions kept class structures in place. The common consciousness unwittingly adopts these beliefs and preserves inequalities and domination. Two forces operate here; first coercive institutions such as the armed services, police, government and legislature, second non-coercive institutions such as schools, churches, trade unions, social clubs and the family. Interestingly schools straddled both categories with their coercive curriculum, standards, qualifications and compulsion but also non-coercively through informal education, the hidden curriculum.
Schools
Power for the ruling classes, comes not from force but ideological manipulation and control. Schools and education play a major role in perpetuating this hegemony, reinforcing the social norms of dominance and obedience. The fact that different classes tend to have different schools is evidence that this dynamic was operative. Schools, he thought, should give all pupils a common grounding, free from social differences and we should be wary of vocational schools for the poor and academic schools for the rich. Everyone should have a good, grounded education, a comprehensive education. In many ways the UKs comprehensive system had its roots in Gramsci. Like Dewey and many others he saw learning as being active through activities. However, he was no Rousseau-like romantic. Children, he recognised, did not take naturally to learning.
Intellectuals
Intellectuals, for example academics, are often seen as being above and apart from the ruling classes but Gramsci doubted this and saw some as perpetuating the system. Indeed, some intellectuals are the product of this class consciousness and their role is precisely the continuation of the current system. His solution was to encourage intellectuals from other class backgrounds to participate in political activity. This opened the door for a more enlightened view of education and change, counter to the brutality of anti-intellectualism of Stalin, Mao and Pol Pot.
Informal learning
Schools need to produce well-rounded participants in society, but also intellectuals who would act as a brake on the power of the ruling classes to exercise their power through education. The educated individual could act critically to change society and play a significant role in society. Education was therefore a powerful source of ideas and action in a society with the capability of changing society for the better. This was a powerful force in 20th century socialist thinking, where intellectuals, and worker’s education, were regarded as being at the vanguard of working class consciousness and struggle.
Technology and informal learning
Many still see informal, adult education as great force for good, perhaps stripped of its Marxist clothes. The rise of technology may be moving us in this direction with almost universal access to online knowledge through Google, Wikipedia, Amazon and a plethora of other sources. A different breed of intellectuals may arise, free from the control of institutional academia. We may even see much learning break free, in the way Gramsci imagined, from the control of formal, coercive curriculum, assessment, qualifications and institutions.
Conclusion
Gramsci related Marxism directly to the institutions of education and saw them as playing a key role in the ideological revolution. The role of intellectuals, not merely academic, in changing society, was also recognised. Many would argue that this sort of academic Marxism had a deleterious effect on schooling, politicising education and schools. Others would still argue that an egalitarian educational system is far from realisation and that Gramsci’s ideas still have huge currency in modern debates on education and schooling. As with so much of this debate, the danger lies in strong ideological positions being taken at the expense of innovative practice and realism.
Bibliography
Gramsci, A. (1971). Selections from the Prison Notebooks. London: Lawrence and Wishart.
Boggs, C. (1976) Gramsci’s Marxism. London: Pluto Press.
Entwistle, H. (1979). Antonio Gramsci: Conservative schooling for radical politics. London: Routledge.
Carmel Borg et al (2003) Gramsci & Education  Rowman & Littlefield.
Jones S. LouisGramsci, Routledge Critical Thinkers, Routledge.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

10 reasons why I am NOT a Social Constructivist

Educators nod sagely at the mention of ‘social constructivism’ confirming the current orthodoxy in learning theory. To be honest, I’m not even sure that social constructivism is an actual theory, in the sense that it is verified, studied, understood and used as a deep, theoretical platform for action. For most, I sense, it is a simple belief that learning is, well, ‘social’ and ‘constructed’. As collaborative learning is a la mode, the social bit is accepted without much reflection, despite its obvious flaws. Constructivism is trickier but appeals to those with a learner-centric disposition, who have a mental picture of ideas being built in the mind.
Let me say that I am not, and never have been, a social constructivist. My disbelief in social constructivism comes from an examination of the theoretical roots of the social portion of the theory, in Rousseau, Marx, and Marxists such as Gramsci and Althusser, as well as critiques of learning theorists Piaget, Vygotsky and Bruner. More specifically, I believe it is inefficient, socially inhibiting, harmful to some types of learners and blocks better theory and practice. Finally, I’ve seen it result in some catastrophically utopian failures, namely Sugata Mitra’s ‘hole-in-the-wall’ project and Negroponte’s Ethiopian farrago.
1. I don’t buy Rousseau (see Rousseau)
With Rousseau, we had the rebalancing of learning theory towards the learner, which was good but it may have led to an extreme reliance on naturalism and intrinsic motivation that is hard to apply in the real world. David Hume wrote, He is plainly mad, after having long been maddish”, and although Rousseau's legacy has been profound, it is problematic. Having encouraged the idea of romantic naturalism and the idea of the noble and good child, that merely needs to be nurtured in the right way through discovery learning, he perhaps paints an over-romantic picture of education as natural development. The Rousseau legacy is the idea that all of our educational ills come from the domineering effect of society and its institutional approach to educational development. If we are allowed to develop naturally, he claims, all will be well. This may be an over-optimistic view of human nature and development, and although not without truth, lacks psychological depth. Emile, as Althusser claimed, now reads like a fictional utopia.
2. I don’t buy Marxism (see Marx, Gramsci, Althusser)
Although Karl Marx wrote little on educational theory, his influence on learning theory and practice has been profound. In The Communist manifesto Marx states that education has a ‘social’ context, which is both direct and indirect, ‘And your education! Is not that also social, and determined by the social conditions under which you educate, by the intervention direct or indirect, of society’. It was this idea that underpinned the entire communist world’s view of learning in the 20th century, especially through Marxist theorists such as Gramsci and Althusser. In Soviet Russia and its satellite states education was remoulded around political aims and when the Cultural Revolution in China between 1949 and 1966 was unleashed, it had devastating consequences, the nadir coming with Pol Pot and the complete eradication of teachers and schools. Interestingly, when it came to re-education, Marxists states reverted to direct, didactic instruction. To this day Marxism, to a degree, persists in educational and learning theory, most notably in Gramsci, Althusser and the ‘social’ constructivism of Piaget, Vygotsky and Bruner.
3. I don’t buy Piaget (see Piaget)
Jean Piaget claimed that cognitive development proceeds in four genetically determined stages, and that they always follow the same order. This theory of child development, he called ‘genetic epistemology’, and it saw the minds of children as very different from those of adults. Importantly, this perception must be taken into account in teaching and learning. Big problem – he got it mostly wrong. His famous four ‘ages and stages’ developmental model has been fairly well demolished. How did he get it so wrong? Well, like Freud, he was no scientist. First, he used his own three children (or others from wealthy, professional families) and not objective or multiple observers to eliminate observational bias. Second, he often repeated a statement if the child’s answer did not conform to his experimental expectation. Third, the data and analysis lacked rigour, making most of his supposed studies next to useless. So, he led children towards the answers he wanted, didn’t isolate the tested variables, used his own children, and was extremely vague on his concepts. What's worrying is the fact that this Piagean view of child development, based on 'ages and stages' is still widely believed, despite being wrong. This leads to misguided teaching methods. Education and training is still soaked in this dated theory. However, on the whole, his sensitivity to age and cognitive development did lead to a more measured and appropriate use of educational techniques that matched the true cognitive capabilities of children.
4. Above all, I don’t buy Vygotsky
Lev Vygotsky, the Russian psychologist, was as influential as any living educational psychologist. In 'Thought and Language' and 'Mind in Society', along with several other texts, he presents a psychology rooted in Marxist social theory and dialectical materialism. Development is a result two phenomena and their interaction, the ‘natural’ and the ‘social’, a sort of early nature and nurture theory.
Ultimately the strength of Vygotsky’s learning theory stands or falls on his social constructivism, the idea that learning is fundamentally a socially mediated and constructed activity. This is a detailed recasting of Marxist theory of social consciousness applied to education. Psychology becomes sociology as all psychological phenomena are seen as social constructs. Mediation is the cardinal idea in his psychology of education, that knowledge is constructed through mediation, yet it is not entirely clear what mediation entails and what he means by the ‘tools’ that we use in mediation. In many contexts, it simply seems like a synonym for discussion between teacher and learner. However he does focus on being aware of the learner’s needs, so that they can ‘construct’ their own learning experience and changes the focus of teaching towards guidance and facilitation, as learners are not so much ‘educated’ by teachers as helped to construct their own learning.
In particular, it was his focus on the role of language, and the way it shapes our learning and thought, that defined his social psychology and learning theory. Behaviour is shaped by the context of a culture and schools reflect that culture. He goes further driving social influence right down to the level of interpersonal interactions. Then even further, as these interpersonal interactions mediate the development of children’s higher mental functions, such as thinking, reasoning, problem solving, memory, and language. Here he took larger dialectical themes and applied them to interpersonal communication and learning.
However, Vygotsky has a pre-Chomsky view of language, where language is acquired entirely from others in a social context. We now know that this is wrong, and that we are, to a degree, hard-wired for the acquisition of language. Much of his observations on how language is acquired and shapes thought is therefore out of date. The role, for example, of ‘inner speech’ in language and thought development is of little real relevance in modern psycholinguistics.
He prescribes a method of instruction that keeps the learner in the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD), an idea that was neither original to him nor even fully developed in his work. The ZPD is the difference between what the learner knows and what the learner is capable of knowing or doing with mediated assistance. To progress, one must interact with peers who are ahead of the game through social interaction, a dialectical process between learner and peer. Bruner though the concept was contradictory in that you don’t know what don’t yet know. And if it simply means not pushing learners too far through complexity or cognitive overload, then the observation, or concept, seems rather obvious. One could even conclude that Vygotsky’s conclusion about mediation through teaching is false. Teaching, or peer mediation, is not a necessary condition for learning. A great deal is made of social performance being ahead of individual performance in the ZPD but there is no real evidence that this is the case. Bruner, as stated, was to point out the weakness of this idea and replace it with the concept of ‘scaffolding’.
The oft-quoted, rarely read Vygotsky appeals to those who see instruction, and teaching, as a necessary condition for learning and sociologists who see social phenomena as the primary determinant factor in learning. As a pre-Chomsky linguist, his theories of language are dated and much of his thought is rooted in now discredited dialectical materialism. For Vygotsky, psychology becomes sociology as all psychological phenomena are seen as social constructs, so he is firmly in the Marxist tradition of learning theory. One could conclude by saying that Vygostsky has become ‘fashionable’ but not as relevant as his reputation would suggest.
The resurrection of Vygotsky has led to strong beliefs and practices around the role of the teachers and collaborative learning and the belief that social context lies at the heart of educational problems. Here, it is clear that Marxist ‘class consciousness’ is replaced by ‘social consciousness’. We no longer have Marxist ideology shaping education, but we do have the ideas dressed up in sociology and social psychology.
5. Massively inefficient
Critics of social constructivism are rarely heard but the most damning criticism, evidenced by Merill (1997) and many others since, criticise social negotiation as a form of learning, as it quite simply wastes huge amounts of time to achieve collaborative and consensual understanding of what is taken by many to be right in the first place. This leads to massive inefficiencies in learning. Many, if not most, subjects have a body of agreed knowledge and practice that needs to be taught without the inefficiencies of social negotiation. This is not incompatible with an epistemology that sees all knowledge as corrigible, just a recognition, that in education, you need to know things in order to critically appraise them or move towards higher orders of learning and understanding. In addition, social constructivism largely ignores objective measures, such as genetically determined facets of personality, it is often destructive for introverts, as they don’t relish the social pressure. Similarly, for extroverts, who perhaps relish the social contact too much, social learning can disrupt progress for not only for themselves but others.
6. Damages the less privileged
Constructivist theory, even if correct, accelerates learning in the privileged and decelerates learning in the less privileged. Those with good digital literacy, literacy, numeracy and other skills will have the social support, especially at home, to progress in more self-organised environments. Those with less sophisticated social contexts will not have that social support and be abandoned to their fate. This, I believe, is not uncommon in schools. The truth is that much learning, especially in young people, needs to be directed and supported. Deliberate practice, for example, is something well researched but rarely put into practice in our schools and Universities. In fact it is studiously ignored.
7. Ignores power of solitary learning
Much of what we learn in life we learn on our own. At school, I enjoyed homework more than lessons, as I could write essays and study on my own terms. At University I learned almost everything in the quiet of my own room and the library. In corporate life, I relished the opportunity to learn on trains and planes, havens of forced isolation, peace and quiet. To this day I blog a lot and enjoy periods of intense research, reading and writing. It is not that I’ve learned everything in these contexts, only that they go against the idea that all learning needs to be social.
8. Blocks evidence-based practice
Social constructivism, is what Popper would call a ‘universal theory’, in that no matter what criticisms you may throw at it, the response will be that even these criticisms and everything we say and do is a social construct. This is a serious philosophical position and can be defended but only at great cost, the rejection of many other well-established scientific and evidence-based theories. You literally throw the baby, bath water and the bath out, all at the same time. Out goes a great deal of useful linguistic, psychological and learning theory. Out goes any sense of what may be sound knowledge and quick straightforward results. Direct instruction, drill and practice, reinforcement, deliberate practice, memory theory and many other theories and practices are all diminished in stature, even reviled.
9. Utopian constructivism
Sugata Mitra and Nicholas Negroponte have taken social constuctivism to such extremes that they simply parachute shiny objects into foreign cultures and rely on self-organised social behaviour to result in learning. It doesn’t. The hole-in-the-wall experiments did not work and Negroponte’s claims on his Ethiopian experiment are quite simply untruthful. The problem here is the slide from social constructivist beliefs to hopelessly utopian solutions. As Mark Warschauer reports “no studies have reported any measurable increase in student performance outcomes in reading, writing, language, science or math through participation in an OLPC program”.
10. Groupthink
I often ask what people who mention social contsructivism, what it emans to them, and almost universally get vague answers. I then ask for names, and often Vygotsky is mentioned. I then ask what Vygotsky texts they have read. At this point there's often a blank stare - they can rarely mention a title. My point is that social constructivism is itself a social construct, often just a phrase, certainly often a piece of groupthink, rarely thought through. It gets perpetuated in teacher training and many other contentxs as a universal truth - which it is not. It is a theory that on first hearing, flatters teachers as the primary 'mediators' in learning. In other words, it is a function of confirmation bias.
Conclusion

Why am I NOT a social constructivist – ALL OF THE ABOVE.

Wednesday, January 29, 2020

Marx (1818-1883) – Education as class war…

Although Karl Marx wrote little on educational theory, his influence on learning theory and practice has been profound. It was Marxism that underpinned the entire communist world’s view of learning in the 20th century, especially through Marxist theorists such as Gramsci and Althusser. In Soviet Russia and its satellite states, education was remoulded around political aims and when the Cultural Revolution in China between 1949 and 1966 was unleashed, it had devastating consequences. To this day Marxism, to a degree, persists in educational and learning theory, most notably in the social constructivism of Vygotsky, Luria and Leontyev.

Education the result of economic structures

As Marx believed that our very consciousness, as well as our theorising and institutions, were the result of basic economic structures, education is seen as the result of existing class structures. In practice, this means that the ruling class controls and determines educational theory, policy and institutional development.
For Marx, in The Communist Manifesto (jointly authored with Engels), education has a ‘social’ context, which is both direct and indirect, ‘And your education! Is not that also social, and determined by the social conditions under which you educate, by the intervention direct or indirect, of society’. The solution to the dominance of the ruling class was, first to abolish child labour, then introduce free, state-funded education. The ‘combination of education and industrial production’ is also promoted, what we’d call vocational training. Unfortunately, ‘dialectical materialism’ was the manifestation of struggles between these groups within society and led to the identification of educated people and groups as enemies of the state.

Gramsci and Althusser

It was left to later Marxists to expand Marx’s social theory of education into working models that relate to knowledge, intellectual development and education. Antonio Gramsci developed these ideas further through ideas such as ‘ideological hegemony’ where the ruling class determines what passes as knowledge or truth. Louis Althusser developed this further, exploring the way in which education, state, church, media and other institutions become the ideological state apparatus. Class structures determine knowledge and the means by which knowledge is transmitted, distributed and taught. Freire gave us a critical pedagogy for the oppressed, where education is always seen as political. These ideas were to literally shape education for a large part of the twentieth century, across entire continents and in some last vestiges, notably North Korea, the idea persists.

Technology and education

With remarkable foresight Marx also predicted the massive impact technology would have on the division of labour. His vision of a classless society would make such divisions disappear, with education as the driver. The breakdown of traditional academic and vocational should also break down, “free them from the one-sided character which the present-day division of labour impresses upon every individual”. Individuals will have several careers and through ‘education… pass from one branch of production to another in response to the needs of society or their own inclinations’. This, of course, proved hard to implement, even in hard-lined Communist countries.

Fragment on Technology

As technology takes over the role of ‘production, the new form of production is ‘information’. The economy then becomes a matter of control, not over labour, but knowledge. The nature of that control is social and he invokes the idea of a ‘general intellect’. Negri regards this as a radical shift in Marx’s thought into ‘info-capitalism’ or ‘cognitive capitalism’. Other commentators have picked up on this theme, such as Dyer-Witherford in Cyber-Marx and Bastani in Fully Automated Luxury Communism, where he takes Marx and bends it towards a contemporary vision of technological utopia. It is a thought experiment, where technology solves critical problems such as climate change, energy shortage and, above all, poverty. Capitalism does what it always does, automate, minimise and eliminate labour. Productivity goes through the roof and we can then sustain a population of 9 billion comfortably on the proceeds of this productivity. Capitalism, far from being a destructive force, produces abundance, a flourishing world of equality and happiness. 

Influence

Marxism has produced a useful critique of education as the vehicle for the implementation of power, whether by the state, capitalism or religion. But its darker side has been its prohibitions, dogma and sometime murderous consequences.
Marxism was put forward as a scientific theory, although it proved to be far from having the evidential and predictive power that science requires. This led to its core assumptions, notably dialectical materialism, being used, not only to shape psychological end learning theory but also, at times, the elimination of certain groups deemed to be class enemies, often the educated and educators. Its more benign influence has been in seeing education as always having a political dimension.

Bibliography

Karl Marx, (1988) The Communist Manifesto, ed. by Frederic L. Bender, Norton
Karl Marx, (1983) The Portable Karl Marx, ed. by Eugene Kamenka, Viking
Karl Marx, (1988) The Communist Manifesto, ed. by Frederic L. Bender, Norton
Karl Marx, (1992) Early Writings, tr. by Rodney Livingstone, Penguin
Karl Marx, (1992) Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, tr. by Ben Fowkes Penguin.
Terry Eagleton, (1999) Marx Routledge
Francis Wheen, (1999) Karl Marx Fourth Estate

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Marx (1818-1883) – education for all but the educated became the enemy


Although Karl Marx wrote little on educational theory, his influence on learning theory and practice has been profound. It was Marxism that underpinned the entire communist world’s view of learning in the 20th century, especially through Marxist theorists such as Gramsci and Althusser. In Soviet Russia and its satellite states education was remoulded around political aims and when the Cultural Revolution in China between 1949 and 1966 was unleashed, it had devastating consequences. To this day Marxism, to a degree, persists in educational and learning theory, most notably in the social constructivism of Vygotsky, Luria and Leontyev.
Education the result of economic structures
As Marx believed that our very consciousness, as well as our theorising and institutions, were the result of basic economic structures, education is seen as the result of existing class structures. In practice, this means that the ruling class controls and determines educational theory, policy and institutional development. In The Communist manifesto (jointly authored with Engels)
For Marx, education has a ‘social’ context, which is both direct and indirect, ‘And your education! Is not that also social, and determined by the social conditions under which you educate, by the intervention direct or indirect, of society’. The solution to the dominance of the ruling class was, first to abolish of child labour, then introduce free, state-funded education. The ‘combination of education and industrial production’ is also promoted, what we’d call vocational training. Unfortunately, ‘dialectical materialism’ was the manifestation of struggles between these groups within society and led to the identification of educated people and groups as enemies of the state.
Gramsci and Althusser
It was left to later Marxists to expand Marx’s social theory of education into working models that relate to knowledge, intellectual development and education. Antonio Gramsci developed these ideas further through ideas such as "ideological hegemony". The ruling class determines what passes as knowledge or truth. Louis Althusser developed this further exploring the way in which education, state, church, media and other institutions become the ideological state apparatus. Class structures determine knowledge and the means by which knowledge is transmitted, distributed and taught. These ideas were to literally shape education for a large part of the twentieth century across entire continents and in some outliers, notably North Korea and Cuba, the idea persists.
Social constructivism
Marx is still having a profound influence on educational theory today through social constructivist theory. The resurrection of Vygotsky has led to strong beliefs and practices around the role of the teachers and collaborative learning and the belief that social context lies at the heart of educational problems. Here, it is clear that Marxist ‘class consciousness’ is replaced by ‘social consciousness’. We no longer have Marxist ideology shaping education, but we do have the ideas dressed up in sociology and social psychology.
Technology and education
With remarkable foresight Marx also predicted the massive impact technology would have on the division of labour. His vision of a classless society would lead to such divisions disappear, with education as the driver. The breakdown of traditional academic and vocational should break down, ‘free them from the one-sided character which the present-day division of labour impresses upon every individual’. Individuals will have several careers and through ‘education… pass from one branch of production to another in response to the needs of society or their own inclinations’. This proved hard, if not impossible to implement, even in hard-lined Communist countries.
Disastrous legacy
The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways; the point, however, is to change it’ said Marx. And change it they did, mostly for the worse. The 20th century saw the dogmatism of Lysenko in Soviet Russia, political indoctrination in schools and dialectical materialism interpreted by Mao during the Cultural Revolution, into an intellectual pogrom. The results in Cambodia, speak for themselves, with the virtual elimination of education and the educated. With that and the collapse of the Soviet Union came the end of the utopian dream.
Conclusion
We are still living with a hangover of Marxist theory in education, especially through social constructivist theories. Marxism is far from dead and the Marxist idea that everything becomes commoditised, including knowledge and education, is useful in combating the excesses of education and training aimed merely at increasing productivity. On the positive side, the Victorian democratisation of education, that arose from the industrial revolution, was transformed by Marxist and socialist ideas into a movement that pushed for free, state-funded education as a right for every citizen. This struggle is still raging as attempts are made to widen access to education and higher education across all socio-economic groups. In addition, the relationship between the state and education remains problematic is worth examination, and Marxist theorists have much to say that is useful in relation to the idea that education reflects and props up class differences, by filtering people, not on ability, but social background. Inequalities still exist and political interference through ideological, rather than evidence-based policies, are still the norm. Few, for example, would see even current education systems as truly meritocratic.
Bibliography
Karl Marx, (1988) The Communist Manifesto, ed. by Frederic L. Bender, Norton
Karl Marx, (1983) The Portable Karl Marx, ed. by Eugene Kamenka, Viking
Karl Marx, (1988) The Communist Manifesto, ed. by Frederic L. Bender, Norton
Karl Marx, (1992) Early Writings, tr. by Rodney Livingstone, Penguin
Karl Marx, (1992) Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, tr. by Ben Fowkes Penguin.
Terry Eagleton, (1999) Marx Routledge
Francis Wheen, (1999) Karl Marx Fourth Estate

Tuesday, February 04, 2020

Chomsky - Education as indoctrination

Noam Chomsky is a towering intellectual. Some argue that he is to linguistics, what Darwin is to biology. He is also famous for his relentless work in politics, an outspoken critic of US foreign policy. As a cognitive scientist he also has deep and considered views on many areas of human endeavour, including education and learning.

Theory of knowledge

To understand Chomsky’s thoughts on learning one must understand its roots in his ‘transformative-generative grammar’ which describes the deep syntactical processes common to all human language, as opposed to its surface structure. The minds is not a tabula rasa, it has a set of innate rules in language, hardwired in the mind. Knowledge builds on prior knowledge on an underlying cognitive matrix. Our human nature, with a set of common cognitive traits, is the driver for learning. Education, in his view, must continue to encourage this growth and development and not thwart its progress. The teacher must nurture the natural capacity to discover.

Education as indoctrination

Although not a Marxist, he is firmly in the tradition of Gramsci, Althusser and Habermas in that he thinks that the state shapes education, which in turn shapes minds to the needs of the state and market. It is nothing less than ‘indoctrination’ through control and coercion. Children are taught, not to think for themselves, but to ‘obey’. He likens schools, college and universities to factories, where students are, by and large, indoctrinated by a ‘liberal elite’ to conform to their orthodoxies. In particular, he thinks that history, a self-serving narrative, is written by these elites.

Assessment

He is a strong critic of education that proceeds by staged preparation for tests. Taking tests can be useful but they should be ‘ancillary’ not central to the educational process. As an advocate of genuine search, inquiry and discovery, to challenge and look for alternatives, he hopes that teachers can bring students to the point where they can autonomously operate and learn for themselves. Rather than shape young people it should encourage them to shape themselves.

Influence

Chomsky is also an enlightenment figure, who believes fundamentally in free, independent and autonomous thought. Education, for him, must have the purity of this spirit of inquiry. He rightly warns us about the hidden hand of the state or commerce and warns us of the dangers of indoctrination. While this is true to a degree, it is not clear that it is a fully explanatory theory of education and learning.
Chomsky may confuse conformity with real needs. We can all bow to this academic, Enlightenment view of education but this may not be relevant in poorer countries where the needs are for vocational learning, something that Chomsky finds all too easy to denigrate. Not everyone can or is suited towards being creative intellectuals. He may also be charged with being part of the very intellectual elite he denigrates, promoting an overly intellectual and academic approach to education that focuses on the production of an academic elite, rather than the many needs of society.

Legacy of Marxism in education

The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways; the point, however, is to change it” said Marx. And change it they did, unfortunately, often for the worse. The 20th century saw the dogmatism of Lysenko in Soviet Russia, political indoctrination in schools and dialectical materialism interpreted by Mao during the Cultural Revolution into an intellectual pogrom. The results in Cambodia, speak for themselves, with the virtual elimination of education and educators. With that and the collapse of the Soviet Union came the end of the interpretation of history as science and the utopian dream.
On the positive side, the Victorian democritisation of education, that arose from the industrial revolution, was transformed by Marxist and socialist ideas into a movement that pushed for free, state-funded education as a right for every citizen. This struggle is still raging as attempts are made to widen access to education, vocational and higher education across all socio-economic groups. Marxism is far from dead and the Marxist lite ideas that everything becomes commoditised, including knowledge and education, is useful in combating the excesses of education and training aimed merely at increasing commercial productivity. 
In addition, the idea that the relationship between the state and education remains problematic, is worth examination, and Marxist theorists have much to say that is useful in relation to the idea that education reflects and props up class differences, by sorting and filtering people, not on ability, but social background. Bryan Caplan, in his economic analysis of Higher Education in The Case Against Education makes the case for education being largely about signaling. He concludes that Higher Education is around 80% ‘signalling’, therefore much can be seen as of little value to society or even the students themselves. A degree for many has become a sticker on your forehead saying ‘hire me’. More people are getting ‘schooled’ for longer and longer and the percentage of your life being schooled is increasing. But to what end? Lots of people are now being prompted and pushed into being academic, when they’re not, prolonging their schooling, when the evidence suggest that it “neither raises their productivity nor enriches their lives”. His ‘signalling’ theory is persuasive, as it explains some odd phenomena, such as prevalence of cheating, the final year being worth more than all previous years, rising graduate underemployment and so on. Signalling raises salaries but not necessarily skills, through credential inflation, that’s why he thinks it is so wasteful. This leads him to the heretical claim that we should spend less on education, allowing that money to be spent elsewhere.
The rise of technology may be moving us in the direction of education without interference from state or commerce, with almost universal access to online knowledge through open educational resources, Google, Wikipedia and a plethora of other sources. A different breed of intellectual may arise, free from the control of institutional academia. We may even see much learning break free, in the way Gramsci imagined, from the control of formal, coercive curriculum, assessment, qualifications and institutions.

Friday, March 30, 2012

Althusser (1918-1990) – schools as ISAs and filters for class and labour


Despite the sad end to his life – he strangled his wife and spent his last years in an asylum, Althuser, born in Algiers, attempted to reconcile Marxism with structuralism. Like Gramsci, Althusser saw education as the means by which the class system perpetuates itself, stratifying people into workers, the petty bourgeoisie and capitalists. Schools are a means of control by the ruling class and capitalism, and a preparation for work (work being the defining characteristic of submission and class). The appearance of a meritocracy in schools, he thinks, masks the reality of ideological control. He says this through, what at times, is almost unreadable prose and jargon.
Ideological State Apparatuses - schools
Education is an Ideological State Apparatus (ISA) working through schools, family, culture, politics, the law and unions. These must be distinguished from a Repressive State Apparatus (RSA); such as the army, police, prisons and courts. He saw himself as providing an improved Marxist analysis of the role of education by identifying it as an Ideological State Apparatus that controls rather than enlightens. However, he avoids interpreting this as a conspiracy or planned phenomenon. It is simply a function of a scientific Marxist analysis of capitalism.
Schools – the primary ISA
Schools (although it is sometimes unclear whether he means schools or education in general) are the primary ISA that reproduce ruling ideology. It does this through grading and assessment, so that the individual strives to achieve what is set as standards of achievement, yet in reality are merely state sponsored selection devices for work and class roles.
Schools and labour
We have much to learn from his analysis of the role of education in sorting and ranking people for the labour market and the political role of assessment and the illusion of meritocracy in schools. Some would argue that education has been subjected to intense political and ideological control, a process which must be rolled back to a more meritocratic and balanced approach.
Religion
Education was not the only ISA for Althusser, religion was another and this has turned out to be just as powerful a force in terms of the reinforcement of power through education. In some states, such as Israel and Arab states, the state religion is a core curriculum subject, in many others it is less explicit but just as strong a presence. In many ways this is a more obvious form of ideological apparatus, pushing young minds towards a specific, dominant set of beliefs before they have the ability to choose.
Conclusion
We can learn from Althusser, that education is not a neutral activity. It is often loaded with politics, religion and other underlying belief systems. Rather than being a producing autonomous, open-minded adult, it can to a degree, produce mere followers and close young minds. There is some truth in this idea of education perpetuating the myth of ideological positions but some of Althusser’s theories are extremely abstract, and those who saw themselves as changing the world through education were to be bitterly disappointed. It was they who were seen to be clinging on to an ideology, which in itself has had its day. With Althusser, Marxist theory in education had run its course. History, a much admired Marxist tool, had proved them wrong.
Bibliography
Althusser, Louis,(1977) Lenin and Philosophy" and Other Essays. London: New Left Books
Althusser, Louis. Reading Capital (The Verso Classics Series)
Althusser, Louis. On Ideology (Verso Classics)
Althusser, Louis. For Marx (Verso Classics)
Ferrette L. Louis Althusser, Routledge Critical Thinkers, Routledge.

Saturday, February 01, 2020

Althusser (1918-1990) – Ideological State Apparatuses..With Althusser, Marxist theory in education had run its course. History, a much admired Marxist tool, had proved them wrong.

Despite the sad end to his life – he strangled his wife and spent his last years in an asylum, Althusser, born in Algiers, attempted to reconcile Marxism with structuralism. Like Gramsci, Althusser saw education as the means by which the class system perpetuates itself, stratifying people into workers, the petty bourgeoisie and capitalists. Schools are a means of control by the ruling class and capitalism, and a preparation for work, work being the defining characteristic of submission and class. The appearance of a meritocracy in schools, he thinks, masks the reality of ideological control. He says this through, what at times, is almost unreadable prose and jargon.

Ideological State Apparatuses - schools

Education is an Ideological State Apparatus (ISA) working through schools, family, culture, politics, the law and unions. These must be distinguished from a Repressive State Apparatus (RSA); such as the army, police, prisons and courts. He saw himself as providing an improved Marxist analysis of the role of education by identifying it as an Ideological State Apparatus that controls rather than enlightens. However, he avoids interpreting this as a conspiracy or planned phenomenon. It is simply a function of a scientific Marxist analysis of capitalism.
Schools, although it is sometimes unclear whether he means schools or education in general, are the primary ISA that reproduce ruling ideology. It does this through grading and assessment, so that the individual strives to achieve what is set as standards of achievement, yet in reality are merely state sponsored selection devices for work and class roles.
We have much to learn from his analysis of the role of education in sorting and ranking people for the labour market and the political role of assessment and the illusion of meritocracy in schools. Some would argue that education has been subjected to intense political and ideological control, a sorting process which must be rolled back to a more meritocratic and balanced approach.

Religion

Education was not the only ISA for Althusser, religion was another and this has turned out to be just as powerful a force in terms of the reinforcement of power through education. In some states, the state religion is still a core curriculum subject, in many others it is less explicit but just as strong a presence. In many ways this is a more obvious form of ideological apparatus, pushing young minds towards a specific, dominant set of beliefs before they have the ability to choose.

Influence

We can learn from Althusser, that education is not a neutral activity. It is often loaded with politics, religion and other underlying belief systems. Rather than producing autonomous, open-minded adults, it can, to a degree, produce mere followers and close young minds. There is some truth in this idea of education perpetuating the myth of ideological positions but some of Althusser’s theories are extremely abstract, and those who saw themselves as changing the world through education were to be bitterly disappointed. It was they who were seen to be clinging on to an ideology, which in itself has had its day. With Althusser, Marxist theory in education had run its course. History, a much admired Marxist tool, had proved them wrong.

Bibliography

Althusser, Louis,(1977) Lenin and Philosophy" and Other Essays. London: New Left Books
Althusser, Louis. Reading Capital (The Verso Classics Series)
Althusser, Louis. On Ideology (Verso Classics)
Althusser, Louis. For Marx (Verso Classics)
Ferrette L. Louis Althusser, Routledge Critical Thinkers, Routledge.

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Blog marathon: 50 blogs on learning theorists over next 50 days

Why no heroes?
Over the next 50 days I plan to blog 50 separate pieces on learning theorists. Despite education and training’s central role in society, its intellectuals are not well known. Few can name more than a handful of candidates for the Hall of Fame. Unlike sport, politics, philosophy, literature, music, painting, film, business or science, learning practitioners have a sketchy idea of the contributions and theories of their intellectual leaders.
Most physicists know of Newton, Einstein and Hawking. Most artists know of Michelangelo, Rembrandt and Picasso. Most musicians know of Beethoven, Mozart and the Beatles. Businessmen know of Andrew Carnegie, Henry Ford and Bill Gates. Even criminals would know of Guy Fawkes, Jack the Ripper and the Boston Strangler. Yet most learning professionals have at best a sketchy idea of learning theory and the minds that have shaped this theory, and practice.
Progress?
In the history of learning, we find that learning is doomed, not so much to repeat itself, but to remain stuck in an ancient groove, that of simple lectures and classroom learning. This is still the dominant method of delivery, yet there is little or no evidence to show that it is effective. Almost everything in the theory and psychology of learning tells us that it is wrong to rely so heavily on this single method of delivery. The history of learning theory has had to be ignored to accommodate this lazy approach to practice. It seems to have been willingly ignored to protect, not learners, but the bad habits of those who teach.
More pedagogic change in last 10 years than last 1000 years
I have argued that there has been more pedagogic progress in the last 10 years than the last 1000 years but we could just as well say the last 2,500 years, going back to the Greeks. The history of learning theory and practice has not proceeded in an orderly fashion, like science. Like a river delta, there’s a rough sense of direction and progress, with lots of tributaries, some run dry, other run into other tributaries, some switch back and so on.
In an effort to explain our predecessors, warts and all, this series of portraits will take look at the people who shaped learning theory and practice over the centuries. They have all played a role in shaping (some mis-shaping) the learning landscape. Our theorists are major thinkers who have reflected on the large-scale issues around learning and education. The practitioners have more direct relevance, as their advice is wholly relevant to the design of e-learning programmes.
The format is simple. Over the next fifty days I will present fifty major shapers and movers in learning, theorists, practitioners and those directly relevant to e-learning.



LEADERS  IN LEARNING
GREEKS
Socrates
Plato
Aristotle

RELIGIOUS LEADERS
Jesus
Mohammed

ENLIGHTENMENT
Locke
Rousseau
Wollstonecraft

PRAGMATISTS
James
Dewey

MARXISTS
Marx
Gramsci
Althusser

BEHAVIOURISTS
Pavlov
Skinner
Bandura

CONSTRUCTIVISTS
Piaget
Bruner
Vygotsky

HUMANISTS
Maslow
Rogers
Illich
Gardener

SCHOOLS
Montessori
Friere
Steiner

INSTRUCTIONALISTS
Ebbinghaus
Harris
Mazur
Black & William
30

25 E-LEARNING
TECHNOLOGY ANALYSTS
McLuhan
Postman
Schank
Kelly
Shirky

GAMES
Prensky
Gee

USABILITY & EVALUATION
Norman
Nielsen
Krug

MEDIA & DESIGN
Mayer & Clark
Reeves & Nass

INFORMAL LEARNING
Csikszentmihalyi
Cross
Zuckerburg

INTERNET LEARNING
Page & Brin
Bezos
Hurley & Chen

INTERNET CONTENT
Sperling
Wales
Khan

OPEN SOURCE
Torvalds
Moodle guy

10 TRAINING?
Bloom
Biggs
Bateson
Belbin
Mager
Gagne
Kolb
Kirkpatrick

They are by no means the only people who have contributed to the field, but they’re a pretty representative group. I have taken a particular tack in these pen portraits, examining their relevance to the future of learning.
First up tomorrow SOCRATES.

Thursday, September 23, 2021

280 learning theorists... 2500 years of learning theory... from Greeks to Geeks!

These were written as quick, readable introductions to the many theorists who have shaped the world of learning. For Greeks to Geeks! Note that this is a personal selection, not a definitive list.


PART 1, ORIGINS

SCRIBES
Nabu
Shuruppak
Thoth
Ptah-Hotep
Dua-Khety
Any

GREEKS
FULL PODCAST  Greeks to Geeks bit.ly/32D2LSf
Socrates bit.ly/2FQz0hH

Plato bit.ly/386Cd96

Aristotle bit.ly/2tdGUzi

Greek mathematicians; (Pythagoras, Euclid, Archimedes) bit.ly/38hEL46
Hypatia 

 

RELIGIOUS LEADERS

Confucious bit.ly/2R4NMI3

Buddha bit.ly/2Pen4vz

Jesus bit.ly/2NGPOMv

Mohammed bit.ly/2RrIEN6

 

RELIGIOUS EDUCATORS

St Augustine bit.ly/2Gm22q1

Al-Ghazzali bit.ly/3kN3yGI

Ibn Tufayl bit.ly/3m5UtYU

Ignatius bit.ly/2v7D76V


REFORMERS

Luther bit.ly/2GcJvMH

Calvin bit.ly/2Ro2MRJ

Erasmus bit.ly/3HmSc5e

Comedius bit.ly/3wmYPkm


ENLIGHTENMENT

FULL PODCAST bit.ly/3oy80ec

Locke bit.ly/2tDzFAR

Rousseau bit.ly/37rHEzq

Wollstonecraft bit.ly/2tTi4Vq

Pestalozzi 

Foroebel


POLITICAL ENLIGHTENMENT

Hobbes

Smith bit.ly/2RvBM2F

Edgeworths (2) bit.ly/2S1FM9Y


RELIGIOUS ENLIGHTENMENT

Wesley

Newman

Arnold 


GERMAN IDEALISTS

Kant bit.ly/3wIBsk9

Herbart bit.ly/30rdE8w

Hegel bit.ly/3qGvkYO

Humboldt bit.ly/2OQzyZS


UTILITARIANS

Bentham bit.ly/3okvNi2

Mill bit.ly/3CYxBRG

Seligman bit.ly/2DVc3fw


EVOLUTIONISTS

Darwin bit.ly/3F7lL9W

Baldwin bit.ly/3FchSAs

Donald

Geary bit.ly/330821Z

Pinker

 

MARXISTS

Marx bit.ly/315AxKF

Gramsci bit.ly/2REFkj6

Althusser bit.ly/2UihsUe

Habermas

Freire


PSYCHOANALYSTS

Freud bit.ly/37gsMTS

Freud (Anna) 

Klein 

Erikson bit.ly/3FeZ6rl

Rogers bit.ly/37dup4z

52


PART 2. SCIENCE OF LEARNING


BEHAVIOURISTS

FULL PODCAST bit.ly/3iUnINE

Pavlov bit.ly/2V2cbQV

Watson bit.ly/3hpJs33

Skinner bit.ly/39Rlw2f

Thorndike bit.ly/3bRXuWP

Tolman bit.ly/3CqImwE

Bandura bit.ly/32frFTg


COGNITIVE MEMORY

FULL PODCAST bit.ly/3oUxOBK

Ebbinghaus bit.ly/2VvoxkX

Miller bit.ly/37OaB85

Atkinson & Shiffrin bit.ly/37SEKTK

Baddeley bit.ly/37WfFHq

Tulving bit.ly/2VmFKNw

Sweller bit.ly/2I7Pt2t

Kandel bit.ly/3oiiYDo


SOCIAL CONSTRUCTIVISTS

Piaget bit.ly/2vRLT9J

Vygotsky bit.ly/2SlHymF

Bruner bit.ly/2OB4r4o

Donaldson bit.ly/39eMvo1

Wittrock bit.ly/3EQW2Sp

 

PRAGMATISTS & PRACTICE

FULL PODCAST bit.ly/3aAK5mk

James bit.ly/2T2GntN

Dewey bit.ly/37Z35ra

Ericsson bit.ly/2PBrvR3

Bjorks (2) bit.ly/2PA9UZZ

Karpicke & Roediger bit.ly/3uPhumZ


ASSESSORS

FULL PODCAST bit.ly/3IX2A3C

Galton bit.ly/3FQ1eWv

Binet & Simon bit.ly/3oiYavg

Burt bit.ly/3HbqxnL

Eysenck bit.ly/2wXYA35

Gardner bit.ly/2ILjO73

Myers-Briggs bit.ly/2IRcnve

Goleman bit.ly/3cUHML7


EVALUATION

Kirkpatrick bit.ly/2UdDyWf

Brinkerhof

Thalheimer

Anderson


INSTRUCTIONALISTS

FULL PODCAST bit.ly/3FEdYk8

Taylor bit.ly/2Qmi6g4

Bloom bit.ly/32QB3NL

Gagne bit.ly/38iITR0

Mager bit.ly/38gyGVl

Merrill bit.ly/2wtTyeo


INFORMAL LEARNING

FULL PODCAST https://bit.ly/3PDlcZC

Marsick bit.ly/3zTtvs6

Gery bit.ly/2Ws0qGP

Cross bit.ly/32Vxsh6

Csikszentmihalyi bit.ly/2IpTXBA


WORKFLOW LEARNING

FULL PODCAST https://bit.ly/3Pzjj01

Wallace bit.ly/3k9r4fY

Clark bit.ly/3oqI1pj

Rossett https://bit.ly/3wfWAPJ

Mosher & Goddfredson bit.ly/3mDn1ZT

Thaler & Sunstein bit.ly/3wvb7G2

Jennings bit.ly/3D5M9ir


LEADERSHIP
Burns 

Drucker 

Hersey & Blanchard 
Kotter

Mintzberg

Kellerman

Pfeffer


AFFECTIVE LEARNING

FULL PODCAST https://bit.ly/3c6cs0p

Krathwohl bit.ly/3mKKwlj

Panksepp bit.ly/3EOOjEb

Damasio & Immordino‐Yang bit.ly/3pYPnRK
Kahneman & Tversky bit.ly/3mNNVQ9

Shackleton-Jones bit.ly/3qcaaS0


SOCIAL/TEAM LEARNING

FULL PODCAST https://bit.ly/3K9pwOW

Belbin bit.ly/3bvfi9h

Salas  bit.ly/2xymumo

Wenger & Lave bit.ly/2QRy2HY

Stodd bit.ly/2QLNdCy

Harris bit.ly/2SjwVSr

Deci & Ryan 


LEARNING STYLES

Bandler bit.ly/3bsMQpf

Fleming bit.ly/2vv6Uau

Dunn & Dunn 

Kolb bit.ly/2uWWi3R

Honey & Mumford bit.ly/39pKEgB


ORGANISATIONAL LEARNING

Argyris

Senge

Nonaka and Takeuchi

Engelstrom

92


Part 3. EDUCATION

MORALISTS

FULL PODCAST  bit.ly/3qgdQC8

Maslow bit.ly/2TAzb8z

Kohlberg bit.ly/2wOWEK8

Clarks (2) bit.ly/3xupR75

Martin bit.ly/38F18jN

McLuhan bit.ly/2IGJamx

Postman bit.ly/33g9Kg0


SCHOOLS

Montessori bit.ly/38s6CiM

Steiner bit.ly/2uMqkaj

Neill bit.ly/2SSEv5A

Colbert bit.ly/2wgY4wO

Burt bit.ly/39FAHLU


EDUCATIONALISTS

White  bit.ly/2QnE0QM

Knowles bit.ly/2WouoZV

Eisner bit.ly/38YfjAJ

Robinson bit.ly/3bbxhRK

Willingham bit.ly/3aehVfp

Hirsche bit.ly/2WuICZe

 

TEACHING

Engelmann bit.ly/2xdzRYZ

Rosenshine  bit.ly/2U9jXb6

Marzano bit.ly/2TWtiWe

Black & Wiliam bit.ly/2UtMMOp

Dweck bit.ly/33LfVIQ

Hargreaves

Darling-Hammond 


MEASURING SCHOOLS

Hattie bit.ly/2Ur0DF7

Schleicher bit.ly/2vZxQPV


CRITICS OF SCHOOLS

Illich bit.ly/2yacZKs

Gatto bit.ly/34zStPx

Holt bit.ly/3zzkHrp


HIGHER EDUCATION

Feynman bit.ly/3CWf1Kd

Mazur bit.ly/3d68wd6


CRITICS OF HIGHER EDUCATION

Chomsky bit.ly/2trDhpj

Caplan bit.ly/2RzanMM

Haidt bit.ly/3F0lBAY

Thiel bit.ly/2Kbr7G2


CRITICAL NARRATIVES

CONTINENTAL THEORISTS

Heidegger bit.ly/2Z4j749

Habermas bit.ly/3b2d2Xn

Foucault bit.ly/3nPfOrN

Lyotard bit.ly/3zuJHjG

Derrida bit.ly/3EuLzwm


CRITICAL PEDAGOGUES

Bloom 

Freire bit.ly/3b73udS

Giroux bit.ly/3ArFcr4

Butler bit.ly/3kvehFx

Paglia 

Haidt 


VOCATIONALISTS

Schank bit.ly/3b7irMA

Sandel bit.ly/3EUBd9o

Goodhart bit.ly/3AODUqF

52

PART 4. LEARNING AND TECHNOLOGY

TECHNOLOGY AND CULTURE
Ong
Hargreaves
Goody and Watt
McLuhan
Bourdieu

ONLINE TECHNOLOGISTS

Gutenburg

Berners-Lee bit.ly/2wE9Cep

Gates bit.ly/2WS3hXj

Jobs bit.ly/3bFx8Go

Bezos 


ONLINE DELIVERY

Pressey bit.ly/3pf3L7Y

Skinner 

Dougiamas bit.ly/2UXOJTq

Negroponte

Mitra bit.ly/2Rf37pc


ONLINE CONTENT

Page & Brin bit.ly/39B26hA

Chen & Hurley bit.ly/348ZOVV

Wales bit.ly/34at66s

Luis von Ahn bit.ly/3hst7uw


LEARNING THEORY & TECHNOLOGY
FULL PODCAST bit.ly/3mMYgeH

Papert bit.ly/3c1oH8J

Mayer bit.ly/34oKmF6

Clark bit.ly/3FbxgfR

Nass & Reeves bit.ly/39UTXoo


ONLINE UX DESIGN

Norman bit.ly/2RBJ8Bk

Nielsen bit.ly/3bggI7K

Krug bit.ly/3Fh1tdu


GAMIFICATION

Huizinga bit.ly/3wqrZh5

Prensky bit.ly/2RoMyHr

Ryan & Rigby shorturl.at/emsAB

MOOCs

Sperling bit.ly/3zlVbG6

Downes & Siemens bit.ly/2VjcvJT

Thrun bit.ly/3mcyakm

Ng & Koller bit.ly/3e5B8SA


ONLINE HIGHER EDUCATION

Wilson & Lee 

Sperling

LeBlanc 


EXTENDED MIND

Strickgold & Walker bit.ly/3HHB1LN

Gibson & Barker

Clark & Chalmers bit.ly/3CcuvbW

Engelbart 

Musk bit.ly/3cfE2o5


VR & METAVERSE
Baudrillard bit.ly/3CvSaEx
Nozick 
Makransky
Zuckerberg

OPEN LEARNING

Bush bit.ly/3CEkYuP

Engelbert bit.ly/32ed6mZ

60

Part 5. AI and learning
EARLY COMPUTING
Babbage
Lovelace
Hollerith
Flowers & Newman
Turing

AI LEARNING

Hebb bit.ly/3kq3z2A

McCulloch & Pitts bit.ly/3kn6Fo8

Rosenblatt bit.ly/31PZmih

Rumelhart & Hinton bit.ly/3bXU3zd

LeCun 

Hassabis bit.ly/3qrYgmT


AI DELIVERY

Luis von Ahn
Altman

Khan bit.ly/2wXohBw


AI DIALOGUE & LEARNING

Socrates

Bahktin

Pask

Papert


AI LANGUAGE & LEARNING

Wittgenstein

Vygotsky

Wolfram

24

280


GREEKS bit.ly/32D2LSf

ENLIGHTENMENT bit.ly/3oy80ec 

BEHAVIOURISTS bit.ly/3iUnINE 

COGNITIVISTS bit.ly/3oUxOBK 

PRACTICE bit.ly/3aAK5mk 

INSTRUCTIONALISTS bit.ly/3FEdYk8 

MORALISTS bit.ly/3qgdQC8

AFFECTIVE https://bit.ly/3c6cs0p

INFORMAL https://bit.ly/3PDlcZC

WORKFLOW https://bit.ly/3Pzjj01

SOCIAL https://bit.ly/3K9pwOW

ONLINE LEARNING bit.ly/3mMYgeH



ARTICLE Why your LMS is a Zombie, Why you need Curation and AI in Learning bit.ly/3mMD48y


PODCAST AI is the New UI apple.co/3qF8oas

PODCAST AI, Data and Optimism apple.co/3qF8oas

PODCAST Enhancing learning experiences using AI bit.ly/3FJGdNR
PODCAST History of Learning and the Learning of History apple.co/3sMjXQ2

VIDEO How AI Changes the Learning Game https://bit.ly/3402lWk 

VIDEO Artificial Intelligence for Learning bit.ly/3HlaOlm

VIDEO Don't lecture me! bit.ly/3HmLOtT

VIDEO TED Talk More pedagogic change in 10 years than last 1000 years bit.ly/3quRxqU

VIDEO Leadership https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67tLtm6mEes







Amazon ... 





Also if you are interested in using WildFire, a service that uses AI to create online learning in minutes not months... contact me via the WildFire website form... and we can arrange a demo by screen sharing.


WildFire also does AI for learning Consultancy, Prototyping and product development.