Toward an Engaged and Engaging "Garden" Paideia for General Education and Beyond: Centripetal and Centrifugal Dimensions of Classrooms, Coursework, and Curricula

Q4 Social Sciences
Matthew P. Brigham
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Abstract

abstract:As higher education seeks to define and justify itself in a "post-pandemic" world, it is important to understand the role of centripetal and centrifugal forces. The centrifugal approach suggests engagement facing outward and away from the classroom, from curricula, and from campus in favor of service learning, internships, political involvement, and other similar activities. While valuable, such efforts risk neglecting classroom, curriculum, and campus. However, a (re)turn inward, with a purely centripetal focus, is neither satisfactory nor possible. This article argues that higher education (and society) is optimally served by uniting the best of General Education (as experienced through classroom pedagogy of its curriculum) and outward-facing engagement efforts. The author offers the pedagogical program (paideia) of Greek rhetorician Isocrates as a model of such an approach, given the significant duration of time (years) and sequence required to complete it, and since it was seen as both successful and enjoyable for/by its students. General Education in this model embraces not a banking pedagogy but the "not-yetness" of students and teachers alike, and in contrast to the metaphors of the ivory tower and the laboratory, the article offers an alternative, drawn from Jeffrey Walker's description of the Isocratean paideia: the sweet garden.
面向普通教育及其他领域的参与式和参与式“花园”式教学:教室、课程作业和课程设置的向心和离心维度
高等教育试图在“大流行后”的世界中定义和证明自己,理解向心力和离心力的作用是很重要的。离心式教学方法建议学生向外或远离课堂、课程和校园,选择服务学习、实习、政治参与和其他类似的活动。这些努力虽然有价值,但却有忽视课堂、课程和校园的风险。然而,纯粹向心的向内转向既不令人满意,也不可能。本文认为,高等教育(和社会)的最佳服务是将通识教育的精华(通过其课程的课堂教学法经验)和面向外部的参与努力结合起来。作者提供了希腊修辞学家伊索克拉底的教学计划(paideia)作为这种方法的一个模型,考虑到完成它所需的时间(年)和顺序的显著持续时间,因为它被学生视为既成功又愉快。这种模式下的通识教育不采用银行式教学法,而是学生和教师的“尚未”,与象牙塔和实验室的比喻相反,文章提供了另一种选择,取自杰弗里·沃克对等规派的描述:甜蜜的花园。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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The Journal of General Education
The Journal of General Education Social Sciences-Education
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