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Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

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Who Teaches? What do the stats tell us? What are the implications?

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Page 1: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

Page 2: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

Curriculum, Knowledge & Learning

• Who teaches?• How is the material taught?• What material is taught?

Page 3: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

Who Teaches?

• What do the stats tell us?• What are the implications?

Page 4: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

How is the material taught?

• Pedagogy is the art or science of teaching

• Critical pedagogy is a teaching approach which attempts to help students question and challenge domination, and the beliefs and practices that support the proposed domination.

Page 5: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

Feminist Pedagogy

• embraces the idea of treating female and male students equally

• embraces the idea of transforming the curriculum to make it more gender-inclusive

• Traditional classroom replicates patriarchal power relations

Page 6: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

Key Points

• shifts the attention from the teacher to the students • encourages students to take control of the material and to

relate it to their every day experiences. • discussion of the reading material is given precedence over the

traditional lecture/delivery method • students participate in collaborative, connective learning: we

learn from each other • knowledge is socially constructed and that there is always a

tendency to create knowledge in one's own image. • Students learn to reject monolithic solutions to complex

problems, learn to contextualize discourse, and learn to question the very criteria of what has been defined as "appropriate" knowledge

Page 7: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

Key points continued

• collaborative learning environment where student ideas count as contributions to knowledge

• they also believe that students must learn to be responsible for their own learning

• strives to make classrooms more hospitable to women by drawing on examples from their lives, acknowledging the broad range of their accomplishments, and treating their life experiences as normal.

Page 8: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

Themes in Feminist Pedagogy

• Authority• Position• Empowerment• Non-neutrality of education

Page 9: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

What material is taught?

• Epistemology: The branch of philosophy that studies the nature of knowledge, its presuppositions and foundations, and its extent and validity.

• Feminist epistemology consists of theories of knowledge created by women, about women's modes of knowing, for the purpose of liberating women.

Page 10: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

Dominant knowledge practices disadvantage women by…

• (1) excluding them from inquiry, • (2) denying them epistemic authority, • (3) denigrating their “feminine” cognitive styles

and modes of knowledge, • (4) producing theories of women that represent

them as inferior, deviant, or significant only in the ways they serve male interests,

• (5) producing theories of social phenomena that render women's activities and interests, or gendered power relations, invisible, and

• (6) producing knowledge (science and technology) that is not useful for people in subordinate positions, or that reinforces gender and other social hierarchies.

Page 11: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

They aim to…

• (1) explain why the entry of women and feminist scholars into different academic disciplines, especially in biology and the social sciences, has generated new questions, theories, and methods,

• (2) show how gender has played a causal role in these transformations, and

• (3) defend these changes as cognitive, not just social, advances

Page 12: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

Three approaches to Feminist Epistemology

• feminist standpoint theory• Knowledge socially situated

• feminist postmodernism• Knowledge exchanged - not one privileged over

another• feminist empiricism

• Is science neutral and bias free?

Page 13: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

Academic freedom

• It is the right to teach, learn, study and publish free of orthodoxy or threat of reprisal and discrimination.

• It includes the right to criticize the university and the right to participate in its governance.

• Tenure provides a foundation for academic freedom by ensuring that academic staff cannot be dismissed without just cause and rigorous due process

Page 14: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

Academic Freedom

http://www.caut.ca/en/policies/academicfreedom.asp

What are your thoughts on the pros and cons of this?

Page 15: Curriculum, Knowledge and Learning Oct 2nd, 2006

Blog Work

• How do you envision the ‘perfect’ classroom?

• What styles of learning work best for you?

• How do your learning experiences in HE compare/contrast with your style of learning?