Trusting in the University

The Contribution of Temporality and Trust to a Praxis of Higher Learning

Specificaties
Paperback, 216 blz. | Engels
Springer Netherlands | 0e druk, 2010
ISBN13: 9789048166428
Rubricering
Springer Netherlands 0e druk, 2010 9789048166428
€ 120,99
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Samenvatting

The world in which we learn is changing rapidly. That rapidity is driven by a range of influences, conveniently, but inadequately, clustered under the rubric of globalisation. . The context in which globalisation and education is often linked is that of progression, progression realisable through technology, the free movement of finances and the optimum utilisation of human capital. To fuel this progression, formal educational institutions have grown, adapted and changed to provide highly skilled ‘outputs’ to satisfy demand. Along the way, I will argue, the questioning, learning, reflecting and worthiness of formal education has been sacrificed for instrumentality, compliance and self-interest. This is seen throughout the educational system but this book concentrates on higher education and, more importantly, higher educational institutions that are known as universities. I will try to argue for a distinctive place for universities that does not resist progression but defines it differently from that allowable by the market. I propose a university system where students and faculty are together allowed to ‘let learn’ who they might become, rather than realise their being as the artefact of economic imperatives. I accept from the very beginning that this might be incompatible with universities being in the world of commerce and industry, in fact, I demand that they are not! However, my text is not a polemic against the capitalist entrapment of education per se but for the development of centres that question whilst engaging with the realities of our existence.

Specificaties

ISBN13:9789048166428
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:paperback
Aantal pagina's:216
Uitgever:Springer Netherlands
Druk:0

Inhoudsopgave

Dedication
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Liberalism, Mass Education and a Loss of Academic Trust
The Market Metaphor — A Good Basis for Trust?
What Form of Trust Might be Appropriate for Universities to Build a 'Praxis' of Higher Education Designed to Encourage Authenticity?
Education in a Culture of Suspicion?
If Not the Market Model, then Perhaps a Heideggerian Perspective?
A University’s Authenticity is in its Community
Trusting in Thinking about Knowing
Trusting in Teaching to Let Learn
A Trusting 'Praxis' for Higher Education Institutions
Reflections
References
Index
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        Trusting in the University