Chapter 5
Freedom
For my reaction to this
chapter I am going to explicitly discuss Mass Customized Learning and reflect
on an essay by Jordan Shapiro that was recently published in Forbes magazine (http://www.forbes.com/sites/jordanshapiro/2016/01/30/weve-had-100-years-of-progressive-education-and-the-worlds-getting-worse/#54bb93945cb7)
as well as John Dewey. In chapter 5, Dewey discusses two kinds of freedom:
physical freedom and intellectual freedom.
Dewey strives for a school system where students have significantly more
physical freedom from which he believes intellectual freedom emerges. For example, students silently sitting in
rows awaiting the word from the all knowing teacher hinders the process intellectual
freedom of students because the structure of compliance impedes intellectual
freedom . In other words, the learning process must have as its basis a level
of physical freedom.
Meanwhile, Shapiro argues
for a new “normalization” in school structures.
Specifically, he states, “What we need instead is a new kind of normalization—new
classroom rules, new district wide administrative systems, new school designs
and new educational customs that will break the cycle of winners and losers,
haves and have nots, believers and heathens.”
At the
heart of Shapiro’s criticism of the current education system is that it glorifies
(one may argue sanctifies) the fact that there are winners and losers in
society. Schools “normalize” students
into the belief that efficiency and productivity are equated with high morality
and those that accumulate more have more value. These are the “normalized” (almost
hidden) structures of schools. In
effect, the structures become more important to individuals and society than
the skills that are being taught to our children.
How does
an MCL structure differ from the current structure of schooling?
Does it allow for physical freedom of the
students? Yes.
Does it allow for the intellectual freedom of
students? Maybe.
Does it fundamentally change the “normalized”
structures of learning? I think we
really have to reflect on this question.
If it is
worthwhile to create a system where the common good is as important as climbing
your personal Mount Everest, then we must grapple with what MCL actually changes. The benefit of an MCL structure is that,
foundationally, it is not about tinkering on the edges of learning. Rather, it is about changing structures of
learning. The problem, as I see it, is
that all of us involved in the designing of the MCL experience are subconsciously
enmeshed in the current system. Our professional
default mode is away from freedom (both physically and intellectually) and
toward traditional, normalized structures.
I see this as we are creating our new learning ecosystem at IU8. We have spent the better part of a year
grappling with how to change the structure of learning. We have spent a lot of
time discussing the importance (or lack thereof) of curriculum. Should we concentrate on “21st
Century skills”, or are these skills just window dressing to what is really important
in schools? In my mind, I am not
interested in curriculum because I believe that any skill transfer to students
is only tangential to the actual power of creating a meaningful learning
experience. In these learning
experiences we can change the normalized structures of schooling and move away
from the hyper individualized culture of the current school system. Ultimately, I believe we can, and will,
create a system that changes the structure of school. However, it will take diligence on our part
not to slip back into our default mode of education.
Very well done, Tom. I would only suggest that you are NOT interested in mere curriculum but to the all encompassing learning experience of each learner. Curriculum, in my mind, is a pillar of the current system and is too limiting in determining our new system designed around the learner. Just my 2 cents...
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