- Jun 2022
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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kathy davidson whose article you see here or whose book
Cathy N. Davidson. Now You See It: How the Brain Science of Attention Will Transform the Way We Live, Work, and Learn
https://www.amazon.com/Now-You-See-Attention-Transform/dp/0670022829/
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- May 2022
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An early reference to the idea of digital gardens with respect to not only the digital space but gardening within education.
Could this have potentially influenced Mike Caulfield's Garden and the Stream essay?
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- Jan 2022
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www.cathydavidson.com www.cathydavidson.com
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Now You See It “Starts where Malcolm Gladwell leaves off, showing how digital information will change our brains. We need this book.”
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- Dec 2021
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www.newyorker.com www.newyorker.com
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It’s not an accident or a misfortune that great-books pedagogy is an antibody in the “knowledge factory” of the research university, in other words. It was intended as an antibody. The disciplinary structure of the modern university came first; the great-books courses came after.
It seems at odds to use Charles W. Eliot as an example here as his writings described by Cathy Davidson in The New Education indicates that Eliot was specifically attempting to create standards in education that are counter to Menand's argument here.
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- Nov 2021
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www.theatlantic.com www.theatlantic.com
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Once it was not just okay but admirable that Chua and Rubenfeld had law-school students over to their house for gatherings. That moment has passed. So, too, has the time when a student could discuss her personal problems with her professor, or when an employee could gossip with his employer. Conversations between people who have different statuses—employer-employee, professor-student—can now focus only on professional matters, or strictly neutral topics. Anything sexual, even in an academic context—for example, a conversation about the laws of rape—is now risky.
Is it simply the stratification of power and roles that is causing these problems? Is it that some of this has changed and that communication between people of different power levels is the difficulty in these cases?
I have noticed a movement in pedagogy spaces that puts the teacher as a participant rather than as a leader thus erasing the power structures that previously existed. This exists within Cathy Davidson's The New Education where teachers indicate that they're learning as much as their students.
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