ABSTRACT

Should education be understood mainly as a practice in its own right, or is it essentially a subordinate affair to be shaped and controlled by a society’s powers-that-be?

What difference does it make if students are chiefly viewed as recipients of a set of skills and knowledge, or as active participants in their own learning? 

Does education have a responsibility in cultivating humanity’s maturity, or are its purposes to be effectively matched to the functional requirements of a globalized age?  

The New Significance of Learning explores these and other high-stakes questions. It challenges hierarchical and custodial conceptions of education that have been inherited as the ‘natural order’ of things. It discloses a more original and imaginative understanding of educational practice, illustrating this understanding with frequent practical examples.  

Among the merits highlighted by this approach are:

  • a recognition that education is first and foremost an invitation to join a renewed experience of quest and disclosure;
  • a realisation that taking up and pursuing such an invitation is a basic right, as distinct from a privilege to be bestowed or withheld; 
  • an awareness of the decisive importance of specific kinds relationships in practices of teaching and learning;
  • an emphasis on the human qualities as well as the intellectual achievements nourished by dedicated communities of learning;
  • an acknowledgement of partiality – of incompleteness and bias – in even the best of humankind’s learning efforts;
  • the emergence of a distinctive ethical orientation for education as a practice in its own right.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

PART I The identity of education as a practice

chapter 2|14 pages

Overcoming a post-modern debility

chapter 3|13 pages

The integrity of educational practice

chapter 5|13 pages

Opening Delphi

part |2 pages

PART II Educational forms of understanding and action

chapter 9|13 pages

Giving voice to the text

chapter 11|14 pages

The new significance of learning

chapter 12|11 pages

Imagination’s heartwork