The Growth of
My Educational Knowledge in Responding to the Originalities of Mind and
Critical Judgements of Others.
Jack
Whitehead, Department of Education, University of Bath
For a Monday
Evening Conversation on 10th Nov. 2003.
I'm sometimes startled and fascinated by
the originality of other people as I experience them expressing their meanings
in ways I haven't thought of. After some confusion, as I seek to understand
these unfamiliar meanings, I begin to understand myself and the world in which
I live, in new ways. As the
originality of mind of others influences my own, I integrate new insights into
my understandings. The public sharing of these new insights, in Monday evening
conversations in the Department of Education of the University of Bath, helps
me to clarify my insights, test their validity through the public exercise of
critical judgement and hence include them in the growth of my educational
knowledge.
Here are some of the ideas and experiences that have
recently surprised, fascinated and disturbed me:
1) Eden Charles' description of his visit to Africa
(including Sierra Leone) and Ubuntu way of being.
� "When I got to Sierra Leone they took me (to work with the victims of the war). I did some of the work with the team of people who worked with the victims, particularly women who had been raped and who had had babies by the armies who were fighting against them . So, I did some work with those teams and I met some of those people. It was very, very difficult. For me, one of the things that did is that despite the fact that I call myself African in a lot of ways, despite the fact that I have African friends there was something about being there and seeing the pain that people had been through and just seeing the complete humanity of those people in that pain and seeing the fact that it hurt them just as much as hurt anyone else. It wasn't another country somewhere else. It wasn't , 'Well they've always got wars in Africa so that they are used to it'. No, they aren't used to it. It's awesome. It's devastating . And for me reaching somebody where she's raising a child whose father raped her and killed her husband and this woman has got to deal with all those kinds of issues, it did something to me Jack that was deeper than all the political theory . It brought home to me at another level, the humanity thing. In a sense the unity of humanity in the way we hurt, in the aspirations for our children and dealing with the terrible contradiction of 'I love my husband, he's dead and I'm raising a child by the man that killed him.'" (Eden Charles, video-taped conversation, 31 Oct. 2003)
I've a 12.6 Megabyte Mpeg 4 video clip of 1min 4.3 seconds of this conversation that I can send people who have broadband. Eden has said that it is OK to share this and I'm going to do this on Monday 10th Nov. As Eden describes his experience, I felt the communication of a loving warmth of humanity. As Eden speaks I feel that this is intimately connected to the humanity of the women who have experienced such pain. In my understanding I connect this communication with Eden's way of being in Ubuntu and his African Cosmology. I hope to express myself on Monday in a way that shows the influence of my understanding of Ubuntu that is recognisable by others. I take such recognition to be a necessary step in the social validation of my own living educational theory. I'll distinguish my personal validation from this social validation and relate one to the other. I will draw on Tim Murithi's ideas on Practical Peacemaking Wisdom from Africa: Reflections on Ubuntu . Tim says that the cultural world-view known as ubuntu highlights the essential unity of humanity and emphasizes the importance of constantly referring to the principles of empathy, sharing and cooperation in our efforts to resolve our common problems. You can access Tim's paper at http://www.actionresearch.net//monday/Ubuntu.htm
2) Simon Riding's 'Living myself through others' (How can I account for my claims and understanding of a teacher-research group at Westwood St Thomas School?) You can scroll down to Simon's paper from http://education.wiltshire.gov.uk/docs/volume_4_number_3_autumn_2003.html
Simon's idea of 'living myself through others' startled me
because it seemed to challenge my commitment not to violate the boundaries of
the sense of identity and integrity of others. Acknowledging that I was living
myself through others seems to require a commitment to a relational way of
being that I believe I bring into my professional educational relationships in
which I assume a responsibility as an educator. With the help of my
understanding of Martin Buber's notion of mutuality and the special humility of
the educator I seek to avoid violating the boundaries of the identities of
those I'm tutoring or supervising. I recognise the value for my sense of living
a good and productive life in the affirmations I receive when I see the
life-affirming energy of others being expressed in a connection with who I
am/what I am doing, in our educational relationship. I feel Simon's idea is
helping me to move into an Ubuntu way of being through affirming to others that
my life affirming energy is sparked into being and sustained by their own.
3) Joan Whitehead's 'Making the possible, probable'
http://www.actionresearch.net/evol/joanw_files/joanw.htm
Joan's idea of 'making the possible, probable' is moving me
to focus on the social relations that I need to understand to spread the influence
of educational practices that exist in particular contexts, hence showing
their possibility, yet they are not widespread throughout the social formation.
I am thinking of those contexts in which individuals have shown that it possible
to generate their own living educational theories as they seek to live their
values as fully as they can. As I seek to spread the influence of these possibilities
and hence make them probable, I am integrating ideas on explicit pedagogic
relations from Basil Bernstein. I am thinking of integrating his ideas on
pedagogy, symbolic control and identity in my own practices as I seek to influence
the education of social formations and to research this process. According
to Bernstein:
Pedagogy is a sustained process whereby somebody(s) acquires new forms or develops existing forms of conduct, knowledge, practice and criteria from somebody(s) or something deemed to be an appropriate provider and evaluator - appropriate either from the point of view of the acquirer or by some other body(s) or both (p.78).
When I talk about pedagogy, I am referring to pedagogic
relations that shape pedagogic communications and their relevant contexts.
Three basic forms of pedagogic relation may be distinguished, explicit,
implicit and tacit. Explicit and implicit refer to a progressive in time
pedagogic relation where there is a purposeful intention to initiative, modify,
develop or change knowledge, conduct or practice by someone or something which
already possesses, or has access to, the necessary resources and the means of
evaluating the acquisition. The acquirer may or may not define the relation as
legitimate, or accept as otherwise, what is to be acquired. Explicit or
implicit refers to the visibility of the transmitter's intention as to what is
to be acquired from the point of view of the acquirer. In the case of explicit
pedagogy the intention is highly visible, whereas in the case of implicit
pedagogy the intention from the point of view of the acquirer is invisible. The
tacit is a pegadogic relation
where initiation, modification, development of change of knowledge, conduct or
practice occurs, where neither of the members may be aware of it. Here the
meanings are non-linguistic, condensed and context dependent; a pure restricted code relay. An
example would be modelling, perhaps the basic pedagogic mode; primary in the
sense of time and primary in the sense of durability. The primary modelling
where both transmitter and acquirer are unaware of a pedagogic relation must be
distinguished from secondary modelling which is a deliberate and purpose
relation only for the acquirer.
(p.200)
Bernstein, B. (2000) Pedagogy, Symbolic Control and Identity: Theory, Research, Critique. Lanham, Boulder, NewYork, Oxford; Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
4) Paulus Murray
introduced me to the ideas of 'Ubuntu' and 'Post colonial theorising'. Paulus' website is at http://www.royagcol.ac.uk/%7Epaul_murray/Sub_Pages/FurtherInformation.htm
. Paulus also introduced me to Michael
Bednar's (of the University of Texas in Austin) responses to the U.S. House of
Representative's Subcommittee on Select Education Hearing on
"International Programs in Higher Education and Questions about Bias"
Theorising.
http://edworkforce.house.gov/hearings/108th/sed/titlevi61903/wl61903.htm
Michael writes:
|"Testimony provided by Dr. Stanley Kurtz (available from
the link above) portrays areas studies centers as hotbeds of unpatriotic
anti-Americanism. Dr. Kurtz focuses, in particular, on post-colonial theory and
the work of Edward Said's Orientalism in which "Said equated professors
who support American foreign policy with the 19th century European
intellectuals who propped up racist colonial empires. The core premise of
post-colonial theory is that it is immoral for a scholar to put his knowledge
of foreign languages and cultures at the service of American power." (quoted from Kurtz's statement found at
http://edworkforce.house.gov/hearings/108th/sed/titlevi61903/kurtz.htm)"
As I see my own rejection of the old disciplines approach to
educational theory and the creation of living educational theories as
post-colonial actions I want to educate social formations that are still
upholding colonial values and interests so that they learn how to engage in
post-colonial practices and create and pedagogise their own living,
post-colonial educational theories. In Je Kan Adler-Collins' forum on living
action research I am engaging in a co-enquiry with Peter Mellett. I am hopeful
that this will contribute to the education of social formations.
5) Alan
Serper's 'Who am I? Who I am'
has moved me to clarify the difference between the life-affirming energy I
value most highly from the cosmos in the face of my certainty of my death and
the life-enhancing pleasure I feel in the presence of the loving spirit of
others. You can access Alan's
writings on 'Who am I? Who I am' at http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/wa.exe?A2=ind0310&L=living-action-research&T=0&F=&S=&P=9417 . Here is an extract:
"I am. I am me. I am here in the world. I am an undefined blur, constantly defining, creating, constructing and
reconstructing himself anew in
light of my journeys, my searches and quests in the world, both inner and outer. I cherish and value both this confusion of mine and my claim
to have it and be confused. I
believe it is my strength. I think
chaos and admittance to chaos and confusion are the best form of knowledge and
order.
I am by no
means a mystical. I prescribe to a
very cold, detached, positivistic,
'scientific' and academic way of doing so, as opposed to an abstractive,
metaphysical and mystical manner.
I am the product of continental philosophy (e.g., Jaspers, Heidegger,
Tillich, Bubber). My burning,
gushing 'romantic' 'lava' and passion are cooled and chilled by
very
rational, continental, 'academic' (17th ? 18th centuries),
interdisciplinary/'adisciplinary' philosophy/ideas, by reason. I believe the only manner to propose a post-positivistic alternative
to the reductionism and mechanism of the human subject and human existence in
the world is by using a positivistic, 'scientific', valid, reliable and
standardised framework, structure and terminology.
My role is to deautomatise you, to make you reflect and
dereflect, to go out of your normal, everyday monotonous, life and to think
very hard. If you wish, that is. It is completely up to you. The choice to do so is yours."
Alon's writings always provoke a creative tension in me.
They certainly de-autonomise me in the sense that as I read Alon's words my 'I'
as a centre of consciousness, choice and responsibility, comes to the
foreground of my awareness. What I am learning from Alon's writings is not to
forget to acknowledge, and to strengthen the importance of the self-reflecting
'I' in accounts of life-long learning that are moved by the spirit of Ubuntu.
6) Alan Rayner's inclusional way of being and my
responses to my experience of his pedagogical practices.
You can browse through Alan's writings at: http://www.bath.ac.uk/~bssadmr
In relation to Alan's seven questions below, I recognise
that I am integrating some of his insights about inclusionality, communication
through pipes, death and infinity into the growth of my own educational
knowledge:
(i)
What is the
difference between an object and a place?
(ii)
What is the
difference between a 'string' and a 'pipe'?
(iii) What is a 'wire'?
(iv) What is space, and how much
resistance does it have?
(v) What is the difference
between zero and infinity?
(vi) What is death? This
highlights the difference between notions of
'annihilation' of substantial presence
(extinction) and 'release' of energy space (transformation).
(vii) What is the difference between
'content' and 'context'?
As well as feeling a strong connection with Alan's
inclusional way of being (I connect this with Ubuntu) I make sense of much of
my present pedagogic practice in my web-based communications in terms of
interconnecting, branching networks of communication. I have already shown you
this influence in the Wiltshire Journal of Education and in Jean McNiff's and
Joan Whitehead's recent keynote addresses (see http://www.actionresearch.net/values.shtml) I owe the image of interconnecting and
branching networks of communication (through pipes) to Karen Tesson and Alan.
On the 10th December 2003 Jean McNiff and Moira
Laidlaw will be present at the opening of China's Experimental Centre for
Educational Action Research in Foreign Language Teaching at Guyuan Teachers
College. While both Moira and Jean speak and write most eloquently for
themselves I think we share a delight in our acknowledgement of the value we have found for ourselves
in each others' ways of being and productive lives. This includes the pleasure
of sharing this delight with others. So, I offer for your critical judgements,
as part of my processes of validation, my claim that I can be seen to have
integrated into my ways of being and living educational theory some of Alan's
understandings of inclusionality, pathways of communication and living
boundaries. By integration into my living educational theory I am meaning that
I am using these meanings to clarify the embodied values I use as living
explanatory principles in my accounts of my life-long learning.
In relation to Alan's questions concerning death and infinity
I am responding:
I am aware of saying to myself, "In who I am and what I
am doing there is an infinitude of knowledge that I can add to through the
exercise of my originality of mind and critical judgement. I live with the paradox that if my
embodied knowledge is infinite how can I add to it!"
I have many responses
to the question, 'What is death?'
So far in my life I have experienced a flow of life-affirming energy in the face of the certainty
of my own death. I feel this flow of energy with delight and pleasure and
live with the mystery of feeling that while the source of this energy is beyond
my comprehension I can include it as an embodied spiritual value in explanations
of my learning. Being with my Father as he died a week after Nelson Mandela's
release from prison, was accompanied by his communication a week earlier of
the value of sharing the power of being, together. At the age of 6 the images
of Auschwitz he gave to me in a book on Victory in Europe, evoked my certainty
and awe that human beings could do this to each other. At the age of 59 (only a few weeks ago)
walking round the Old Jewish
Synagogue in Prague, looking at the names of individuals killed in the concentration
camps, together with the exhibition of children's art from that time, brought
me back to the awesome pain evoked by Eden's description of his work in Sierra
Leone. The life-affirming responses, communicated by Eden through his relationships,
transcended for me, the pain of the violations through the hopeful humanity
expressed by the women in Sierra Leone. I felt this communicated through Eden's
own humanity.
In the spirit of Ubuntu and a flow of life-affirming energy,
I hope that I have communicated something of the importance for my own learning
and emerging living educational theory of integrating these new insights into
my embodied values. Given that I am sharing these insights in a forum of
educational action researchers I am inviting you to help me to strengthen the
quality of my contributions to educational knowledge through sharing your
creative and critical responses to this account of my learning in my emerging
living educational theory.
Love Jack, 7th November, 2003.