A separation of research, teaching, and testing branches of education
is therefore analogous to a separation of legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government — Pfhorrest
. . . that one person should not both write the textbook, and teach from it, and test the students on whether they know their stuff. But, arguing for or against that is going to be a topic of one of those later threads — Pfhorrest
Surely, in the last century we may saw a move away from the academic elite having the ultimate say about knowledge and a move towards a more lively open exchange of ideas. — Jack Cummins
Ultimately, do you think that your academic elite process of peer review would accept such a site as this, or would it seek for it to be under the control and governance of the academic 'experts'? Also, would there be more censorship of views and ideas which the academic hierarchy saw as 'false'? — Jack Cummins
A teacher should not be teaching to texts that they wrote themselves, nor testing their own students on how well they have learned what the teacher wanted them to learn; and neither should the one doing the testing be the author of the text against which the students are tested. — Pfhorrest
The ideal form of such a system of education would, I think, see the pastor role described above as the central figure, to whom laypeople come as students with questions and arguments to be resolved. Those pastors then turn, on the one hand, to the authors of tertiary sources for their knowledge, who in turn turn to authors of secondary sources, who in turn turn to the authors of primary sources; while on the other hand the pastors turn to teachers and to public educators to better inform those laypeople coming to them as students. — Pfhorrest
And this pastor would be . . . . . . . . a philosopher? — jgill
your response is similar to saying that sometimes it could be better if there weren't a separation of powers in government, — Pfhorrest
Say you're a high school student, or an undergrad in college -- you know, general education, like the general public gets already. — Pfhorrest
Maintaining a generally equal level of information between all the members of society is of utmost importance . . . — Pfhorrest
freethinking education requires what we might call a proselytizing approach to information distribution: when new information is discovered, that news must somehow become widespread, and not remain only known to those who discovered it and those closest to them. — Pfhorrest
So, how would you overcome the inabilities of the general public to understand specialized information? — jgill
Do you mean new discoveries in math must be promulgated to the general public and not kept locked away in incomprehensible journals for fellow experts? — jgill
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.