Geert Lovink on Mon, 2 Jul 2007 22:38:02 +0200 (CEST)
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<nettime-ann> Pedagogical Faultlines (workshop, Amsterdam, Sept. 21/22)
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- To: AnnBot <nettime-ann@nettime.org>
- Subject: <nettime-ann> Pedagogical Faultlines (workshop, Amsterdam, Sept. 21/22)
- From: Geert Lovink <geert@xs4all.nl>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jun 2007 10:31:23 +0200
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Pedagogical Faultlines
International Workshop on Alternatives in Education
On 21 and 22 September 2007, a workshop will be organized by Waag
Society, Sarai (India) and the Institute of Network Cultures in
Amsterdam.
URL: http://www.waag.org/project/faultlines (Dutch and English version
available).
You can find more background in this email below. The full program will
be available early July.
Four themes will be tackled at the conference:
Extra-institutional Pedagogy
New Sources of Knowledge
Social Knowledge and Professional Practice
Multi-site Practices
The conference is meant for advanced people from the educational field.
They will participate in the 2-day conference/workshop.
Regarding the 2-day event the different speakers from India, Brazil and
the Netherlands can fill in their session. We are thinking of a
different way of approaching the event than the usual concept: a speech
and at the end questions. It would be interesting to make it more
participative and interactive, since we are here to discuss different,
experimental, innovative, creative ways of conveying knowledge, thus we
should also try it here. An idea is to request the different speakers
new ways to convey their messages.
One idea is to start of with a general introduction concerning the
topic of the session; next the various speakers could prepare an
interactive session regarding their educational field.For example it
would be interesting how CRIT [Collective Research Initiatives Trust]
actually teaches students about architecture, but how can you teach
cities? How do you ask youth from the Bijlmer to tell something about
their lives, try to put yourself in their position and tell your own
life story?
It would be even more interesting if we could have interactive sessions
with participants and the concerning students, to see what they learn,
how they learn. Speakers could try to bring audiovisuals, or maybe even
a mobile version of their educational toolkit, so that participants can
experiment hands on with the various educational methods.
Because of the limited capacity it is recommended that you register in
time. Please write to: lipika@waag.org.
---
PEDAGOGICAL FAULTLINES
A workshop on issues in learning practices and knowledge creation in
the contemporary
Themes
1) Extra - institutional Pedagogy
Emerging from crisis within formal educational structures, pedagogical
practices have been forced to move into more ‘informal networks’,
intimating new possibilities of pedagogical forms, structures,
resources and practices. These are sites that open up the question
around the "professionalisation" of pedagogical purposes and also the
nature of the pedagogical intervention, where the role of the teacher
and the learner are routinely destabilized. Traditionally, the
development discourse around knowledge has been in terms of knowledge
transfer (from the more knowledgeable to the less knowledgeable) and
access (for the ‘knowledge deprived’ to ‘information resources’). This
rubric of the programme would suggest instead the need to move away
from the paradigm of ‘transfer and access’ towards paying more
attention to the processes of generating and sustaining different forms
of socially situated creativity and knowledge. The crucial question
that lingers within these practices could be framed as - are these
sites for ways of living in the world or are these just another adjunct
to learning to prepare for the world?
2) New Sources of Knowledge
Over the last decade we have witnessed an unprecedented expansion in
the sites and modalities of knowledge production and access. This
expansion has gestured towards new questions around the authority of
knowledge producers and validity of what would be considered as
knowledge. The question of establishing trust in open formats, of
intellectual integrity and property, of sharing and plagiarism are all
opened up once we enter the world of blogs and wikis, google downloads
and non-moderated discussion lists. Similarly hard questions face us
when we consider the worlds of ‘traditional knowledge’, once derided by
science but increasingly valorized by those in search of alternatives
to the contemporary, that may or may not share the modern practices of
standardization and validation of knowledge. The traffic of content
across languages and cultures through translation, available both in
print and through lists and blogs, provides a third context to think
about new domains of knowledge, this time in the vernacular worlds that
have adapted new media technologies to their own purpose. It is not
enough to bring down the canon. The big challenge would be to
conceptualize the dialogical nature of these knowledge formations,
keeping alive their internal modes of debate, inconsistencies,
conflicts, discussions, contradictions and difference.
3) Social Knowledge and Professional Practice
The making of professional practices draws simultaneously upon
theoretical and practical knowledge. However, the technical and the
social, theoretical and practical coexist not in synchrony but in
tension, with pedagogical practices comfortable with one or the other.
The choice of the technical seeks a neutral, scientific ground while
many accounts opting for social and practice based knowledge often
adopt a populist anti-intellectual agenda. The professional seeks to
discredit ‘lay knowledges’ while the experiential strives to establish
itself as the ground of authenticity, privileging the experience of
distinct social groups over any universal conception of
‘truth’. Further, these tensions play themselves out very differently
in various institutional geographies. The debates in this realm are
simultaneously about power, identity and the nature of modernity in
various parts of the globe and together they pose some of the most
significant challenges to the making of global democratic futures. This
thematic will thus address the tensions between social knowledge and
professional practice as these are taught and experienced in particular
disciplines and across different institutional sites with a view to
linking the question of pedagogy with issues of power and authority,
cultural sensibilities and the multiple ways in which we dwell in the
contemporary.
4) Multi-site Practices
It is a given that people, concepts and practices travel.
Conceptualizing multi-site practices in education oscillates between
the ease of global transfer of best practices and the utter
impossibility of translations across cultural boundaries. This raises
the problem of the travel of situated practices of pedagogy that
address similar concerns and common questions enabling provocations and
inspirations and thus substituting model building exercises for
culturally sensitive pedagogical practices that dialogue through their
difference. Multi-site pedagogical practices is not simply an
invitation to collecting and adding new sites, of arching the different
worlds that exists in any given present, but allowing these various
selves to collide with and infiltrate each other, without the
privileging of any one self over the other. This disturbing, intimate
friction creates new enabling contexts that allow us to imagine the
possibility of a critical and reflective practice of development. In
other words, what is at stake is the fashioning of new terms of
dialogue that allow for mutual learning and sharing across diverse
social and spatial locations, experimenting not only with the
production of content but also the forms and networks through which
these circulate.
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