Category Archives: lit

Kindergarten as a Secondary Practice

Before I get into the meat of this post, I wanted to mention that the schedule for the Beyond Pedagogy group has been revised – our last meeting was canceled at the 11th hour and will be rescheduled at our next meeting on May 8th. The full schedule is found here.

Now then, having recently finished the current reading selection, Inventing Kindergarten, I felt compelled to add to the list of imaginary classes that should be instituted down the line: Kindergarten 101.

What is Kindergarten?
Though Friedrich Froebel’s original vision of kindergarten has become terribly diluted, the original vision was of “a radical and highly spiritual system of abstract-design activities intended to teach the recognition and appreciation of natural harmony” (page 12). Frankly, the spirituality aspect of Froebel’s kindergarten isn’t to be taken lightly, the entire curricula was designed around a sense of discovered unity throughout life.

Aside from spirituality, the goals of curriculum were about student play and abstraction. Through a serious of activities and “gifts,” students are urged to slowly move from explicit and real representations to abstract and varied methods of understanding, visualizing, and imagining. The process is entirely unlike the kinds of practices enforced in high schools today.

And while kindergarten kept kids busy every day (the class itself being rigorously structured), the entire process was to feel natural and fun: “Kindergarten was play, and a good kindergartener made certain her little sprouts never thought otherwise – the theoretical underpinnings of the education were kept from children just as they are in any classroom situation” (page 145). Not sure, I’d agree with the last clause – I’ve used Freire as a means to open discussion and dialogue in my class and candidly discuss motivations behind my practice. However, there are certain things that remain behind the curtain, as I’ll explain about the Black Cloud.

I realize this is a painfully limited description (go read the book!), I mainly want to outline the key goals of kindergarten: unity, natural harmony, abstraction, and play. As Brosterman explains, “The intended result of this all-encompassing instruction was the creation of a sensitive, inquisitive child with an uninhibited curiosity and genuine respect for nature, family, and society…” (page 39).

So What Went Wrong?
I mentioned that kindergarten ain’t as it used to be. The main reason for this – surprise – is crass consumerism. The “gifts” that are essential to the kindergarten experience became marketed so aggressively that production flaws would change or “enhance” the tools used in the class: “the gifts have been transformed, the educational objective for what is left of the occupations has been lost of corrupted” (page 40). Similarly, the teachers that continued the tradition of Froebel’s kindergarten didn’t have the kind of subtle and detailed training that was required. A certain amount of finesse was required for the differentiated and nuanced work that took place every day in the class.

Funnily enough, consumerism is part of what’s ruining education today as well! Public schools are being forced to “comply” with specific curriculum as is often created by private companies and organizations. There are ferocious bidding wars by groups like Prentice Hall and Holt to be the “official” textbook within a school. Millions of dollars are at stake. The material? About as good as a one-size-fits-all solution can be. At a recent professional development meeting, the presenter mentioned that most questions within English textbooks rarely invoke the higher order thinking skills in Bloom’s taxonomy. (Synthesize??? What’s that?!)

But Why in High School?
Today, students come into my class at the beginning of the year wary, uninterested, and expecting to do the work to pass the class. The curiosity factor is nil. The occasional expressive and interested student is seen as a thrilling anomaly and is quickly fetishized by a handful of teachers. Most are not the “sensitive, inquisitive” children of Froebel’s dreams. And if that sounds like a slight to the students I teach, it’s not: the things that my students write, create, or express continually amaze me throughout my class. However, somewhere along the line, students were programmed to stop asking questions, stop having fun, and start learning how to bubble in the “right” answers on by-rote exams on a semi-annual basis. Yes, schools really do kill creativity.

Students need to feel comfortable playing; this is part of the process of learning and being creative. We need a system for students to get back into the habit of having fun.

What Would This Look Like in High School?
A lot of this is about changing what happens inside the classroom. Why can’t there be a sense of mystery in an English class? Why can’t your history class be inquiry based and allow room for “play”?

What most excites me about the Black Cloud game is the opportunity to completely throw students off balance. Not only will students be playing a game for a month and a half in my class, but – for most of the time – they won’t even know they are playing a game. The entire project relies on student curiosity. Yes, we’re still learning the necessary English skills I’m required to teach, but we’re doing it in a way that Froebel would probably admire. (And just like in Kindergarten, the actual learning and “goals” of the unit remain hidden. The premise of play and discovery are all that is visible for the students).

Kindergarten is a pedagogical tool that can be adapted for all ages. It’s classroom interaction, student and teacher roles within the classroom, and school activities re-envisioned. It was invented more than 150 years ago and it just might be the most refreshing way to transform the current educational landscape.

EDIT: No, I don’t know why I wrote “Post-secondary” when I was talking about high school… it’s fixed now. It’s monday and it’s already been a long week…

Consciousness is Coknowledge: Notes on The Spell of The Sensuous

This post serves as a culling of texts and videos related to the second book in the Beyond Pedagogy series, The Spell of the Sensuous.

Additionally, the conversation last night was far from conclusive and an extension on any of the thoughts or ideas related to the book can be vetted here. Feel free to question, challenge, or reframe parts of the book at any time.

Our next book will be  Blank Slate. As always, anyone is welcome to participate. Details can be found here.

Related texts and videos:
New Yorker: Has an Amazonian Tribe Upended our Understanding of Language? – Previously written about here


TED Talks: My Stroke of Insight– Amazing 18 minute video

Song Learning Birds Shed Light on Our Ability to Speak

Ants Have Algorithms

Man: A Course of Study – Anyone know where to find a copy of this curriculum?

So what were your thoughts about last night’s discussion?

Notes on Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology: “In a Network of Lines that Intersect”

As the Beyond Pedagogy meeting dates continue, I’ll be creating posts for each of the books discussed and read in the group. Notes from the discussions, key points, and further questions will be added here for future reference. This is also a place to try to cull together the various side conversations I’ve been having with several of you over the last couple days.

For now, this serves as a place for participants to add comments, clarifications, and generally continue the discussion (albeit in a limited form) that began Thursday night.

Personally, I left the meeting with more questions than with answers, though I’d imagine that is rather intentional considering the nature and title of the book.

One member of our group wrote:

I still don’t see this happening on a large scale, so I need to work on liberating my imaginary. Even in schooling – it’s all about how much are people willing to give up? for teachers, how much control, over students and content, and delivery of content? I guess it’s all about norming…you know, tax relief v. pay fair share.

Another group member and I continued our discussion around the concept of “liberation in the imaginary” the kind of phrase that seemed to glow iridescently after our conversation, ripening with time.

Please add any other thoughts of comments if you have a place you are interested in further developing in further meetings. Where will the Spell of the Sensuous connect?

(I’ve tried framing this in term’s of Hesse’s Glass Bead game in an earlier post. Perhaps it’s easier, instead to quote the rather problematic Calvino’s If On A Winter’s Night a Traveler: “Speculate, reflect: every thinking activity implies mirrors for me…. The moment I put my eye to a kaleidoscope, I feel that my mind, as the heterogeneous fragments of colors and lines assemble to compose regular figures, immediately discovers the procedure to be followed: even if it is only the peremptory and ephemeral revelation of a rigorous construction that comes to pieces at the slightest tap of a fingernail on the side of the tube, to be replaced by another, in which the same elements converge in a dissimilar pattern.”)

Haphazard Beyond Pedagogy Explanation #3

To be as concise as possible, one of my biggest challenges in regards to educational reform is the language and method of discourse. Namely, our method of discourse has become diluted by words of half-meanings. We have locked ourselves into a standstill because of our over reliance on certain concepts and terminologies.

That being said, Beyond Pedagogy is a reading group comprised of educators and those with a vested interest in the field of education. We will not be reading standard education texts. We’re reading broadly but we’re reading purposefully. We’re discussing education but on other fields’ terms.

We’re inviting you to read these texts too. Where can such a “revolutionary ‘exodus’” take us? Let’s find out.

Beyond Pedagogy Meeting Dates (Updated 5/11)

2/28 – Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology by David Graeber
3/20 – Spell of the Sensuous by David Abram
4/17 – Blank Slate by Steven Pinker -MEETING CANCELED – WILL RESCHEDULE ON 5/8
5/8 – Inventing Kindergarten by Norman Brosterman
6/5 – Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism by Jay Lifton
6/19 – Operating Manual For Spaceship Earth by Buckminster Fuller

7/3 –  Blank Slate by Steven Pinker -Meeting Rescheduled from 4/17

8/28 – Dialectics of Seeing by Susan Buck-Morse

9/4 – Beyond Pedagogy Debriefing

The meetings are all scheduled to run from 5-7 p.m. at the Mentor LA Offices located at 1035 S. Grand Ave., 2nd Floor Los Angeles, CA 90015. Please park in the lot on the corner of Grand and 11th.

All are welcome!

Alternate explanation found here and here.

Thanks to Fritz Haeg and the “Planet of the Humans” book club for the inspiration to form this group.

“The Shifting Hegemony of Now this, Now that Science or Art”: Haphazard Beyond Pedagogy Explanation #2

The Glass Bead Game imagines a futuristic society that is somehow governed by a game whose instructions are never made explicit. However, the basic premise of the game is made clear. Connections are drawn between various themes. They are conducted and organized by the Magister Ludi. They are the innate fabric that contends to hold the society together.

On the other hand, in today’s less than futuristic society, we are a specialized people. I studied English therefore I did not study biology (unless I double-majored, but I definitely did not study Architecture). You studied Political Science therefore you did not study Film Criticism. We’re not programmed to connect themes across the varied fields of academia. And where does that place the role of the educator: I teach English therefore I will not teach (or know) the other fields (unless there is social studies teacher that is willing to team teach).

“Beyond Pedagogy” is a prototyped attempt at donning the role of Magister Ludi – to borrow the title from Hermann Hesse’s novel The Glass Bead Game – and draw the needed connections amongst myriad fields of study to broaden the scope of education dialogue. It is an extensive and unrelenting look at “why” with unwavering to return more than statistics as formulated response.

Beyond Pedagogy Meeting Dates
3/20 – Spell of the Sensuous by David Abram
4/17 – Blank Slate by Steven Pinker
5/8 – Inventing Kindergarten by Norman Brosterman
6/5 – Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism by Jay Lifton
6/19 – Operating Manual For Spaceship Earth by Buckminster Fuller
7/?? – Dialectics of Seeing by Susan Buck-Morse

The meetings are all scheduled to run from 5-7 p.m. at the Mentor LA Offices located at 1035 S. Grand Ave., 2nd Floor Los Angeles, CA 90015. Please park in the lot on the corner of Grand and 11th.

All are welcome!

Alternate explanation found here.

Splashing Through the Effervescence of (Imaginary?) Change: Haphazard Beyond Pedagogy Explanation #1

You are late.

You are running to your car and you are late.

You are late for that presentation that you have been preparing for.

You are splashing through a puddle and the puddle has a rock.

You trip on the unseen rock in the puddle that you are splashing through. Maybe it was an imaginary rock (it probably wasn’t).

Your index cards are all a jumble. That could be a real problem, couldn’t it? The whole purpose is now enfolded upon itself. An accordion with no wind.

Things are out of order. There is no order. You stumble across Pt. 2 of a sandbox that explains the purpose of the sandbox that begins in Pt. 1. But the sandbox is imaginary. You find mention of All Time Educational Buzz Word #1. ATEBW#1 makes you suspicious – this is not my beautiful house!

You’re wary because ATEBW#1 is duplicitous. It and the other ATEBW#1 contenders (“social justice” “culturally relevant” “reform” “standardized” “benchmarks” “engagement” & “authenticity” for instance) are the kinds of words that are fixing us in place. We’re not able to grow from here and you’re the only one who knows this. You’re very sharp, after all. A presentation. A presentation is what’s needed.

You were going to change the world! You made index cards, dammit! Why can’t anyone fix the goddamn potholes in this city anyway?

We need to fix these puddle gaps. We need to fix these puddle gaps because a hole in one’s logic and a hole in the street are just as faulty. Is one any more real than the other? Is there any other way to fill a (w)hole than to supplicate it with the real? How would your request be addressed? A supplication of asphalt? A supplication of new knowledge?

We’ve got the shovels. Let’s fill in some holes. No more puddle splashing and splayed index cards.

Invite a friend. Bring a hard hat (best to also tell your friend to bring a hard hat). It’s time to landfill:

Beyond Pedagogy Meeting Dates
3/20 – Spell of the Sensuous by David Abram
4/17 – Blank Slate by Steven Pinker
5/8 – Inventing Kindergarten by Norman Brosterman
6/5 – Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism by Jay Lifton
6/19 – Operating Manual For Spaceship Earth by Buckminster Fuller
7/?? – Dialectics of Seeing by Susan Buck-Morse

The meetings are all scheduled to run from 5-7 p.m. at the Mentor LA Offices located at 1035 S. Grand Ave., 2nd Floor Los Angeles, CA 90015. Please park in the lot on the corner of Grand and 11th.

All are welcome!

Sandbox Pt. 2

Completing the sandbox sketch from the previous post. I realize many of these terms sound “buzzy” in isolation. The problem with creating a new tool set out of a dated mode of discourse is that there is no “new” word that can be inserted. Graeber is left with joining (sometimes rather uncomfortably) words in ways that find liberation in the greased joints and corners of un-hyphenation (was that supposed to be hyphenated??). These joined words are not meant to be slogans, even in me isolating them here.

“Totalizing system” (page 43)
“Revolutionary action” (page 45)
“Revolutionary ‘exodus’” (page 60) – is “engaged withdrawl”
“Institutionalized raiding” (page 65)
The State as “imaginary totality” (page 65)
“Global citizenship” (page 68)
Temporary Autonomy Zones” (page 74)
“Consensus process” (page 85)
“Liberation in the imaginary” (Page 102)

Some last minute contenders

Over the holiday break I ended up reading Murakami’s Hardboiled Wonderland and the End of the World. Had I known how great the book was going to be, I would have reserved a spot on the ol’ year end list. As it stands, I’d probably bump Raw Shark Texts, which feels ok as the two books are kinda similar.

I’m midway through Junot Diaz’ The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao and I’m loving it. If I can eek out the rest of it in the next few days it too would make the list.

Along with ed books, I’m toying with the idea of tackling some of the bigger classics I’ve been putting off: Moby Dick, Brothers K. as well as a couple of Vollmann books I’ve yet to read (usually weighing in at the 600 or 700 page mark). As a result, I don’t think I’ll exceed the book a week mark I did this year. Not a race, obviously, but it’s nice to have that sense of completion every five or six days.

List Time

Top 10 books (re)read in 07

Fiction:
Will You Please Be Quiet, Please?
Harry Potter
The Engagement
The Turning
The Raw Shark Texts
No Country For Old Men
After Dark
Poker Without Cards
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
Extremely Loud and INcredibly Close

Non Fiction:
The Audible Past
Impro
The Los Angeles River: It’s Life Death and Possible Rebirth
Magic of the State
Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology
Crowds and Power
Buckminster Fuller’s Universe
Much Depends on Dinner
Tending the Wild

Debating if I’ll do the traditional music top 10, movie top 10, and/or comic book top 10…

Alright, out with it then

First, I think that this . . . well, frankly I don’t know what to think. I’ve been looking at it on amazon for the better part of a week now and just can’t decide how to feel about it. Obviously this is a giant leap in the advancement of human development. Don’t get me wrong, I am completely repulsed by this, but its sheer existence says something. I’m not sure what. I’m tempted to click “buy” out of spite but don’t think I’d be able to watch it to make a more formative analysis. This really is a case for someone like Chuck Klosterman (and I grew out of my need to ape his writing quirks a couple years ago… at least I hope I did).

Next, as I mentioned yesterday, this week’s book club was of the usual mind blowing variety. A smaller crowd than usual, but I have a feeling the book pushed back against many of our usual attendees. If anything, I’m now left with a feeling of envy that us western folk are relegated to kick around phrases “magic” and “spirits” simply because we need to label that which isn’t natural to us. That is, concepts of spirituality and spells and magic are foreign to commofidied, “proper” Yanks. We give these concepts fancy terms to show we don’t believe they happen, even though Taussig argues they not only happen but they essentially help run or propel the happenings of the ever ubiquitous and undefined “state.” I’d have more to say on this except for the fact that I’m reluctant to say I fully understood the text…which I also suspect was intentional on the author’s part.

Spent a good deal of my afternoon watching this and the other linked exhibits. Just great.

Spent a good deal of the morning subjecting my students to the new Saul Williams album. While I’m not as smitten with it as Ms. Rogers, it is a remarkable album. Wish the album had more Thavius and less Trent…sacrilegious? Probably.