ABSTRACT

This updated edition of Inventions of Teaching: A Genealogy presents an examination of the many and varied metaphors of teaching in English. These metaphors serve as sites to excavate conflicting historical, con-ceptual, and philosophical influences that have contributed to modern teaching practices.


Though the Eurocentric perspectives of the first edition remain a focus, they are placed in a broader context that acknowledges their, as the authors coin it, ‘WEIRDness’ (i.e., western, educated, industrialized, rich, democratic nature). In this revised and expanded edition, these perspectives are accompanied by multiple case studies of non-Western and Indigenous educational traditions. Chapter discussions are organized as a genealogy around key conceptual bifurcations in thought rather than case-by-case analysis or a chronology. This structure allows the authors to examine the origins of distinctions that are often taken for granted, such as cognitivism vs. behaviorism, or constructivism vs. positivism. The genealogy develops around breaks in opinion that gave or are giving rise to diverse interpretations of knowledge, learning, and teaching--highlighting historical moments in which vibrant new figurative understandings of teaching emerged. A new chapter has been added, addressing the habits of interpretation needed to render the ‘WEIRD’ world sensible; alongside a much elaborated closing discussion, intended to bring WEIRD inventions of teaching into sharper relief by contrasting them with non-WEIRD cultures and some of their approaches to teaching.


Inventions of Teaching: A Genealogy is an informative text for senior undergraduate and graduate courses in curriculum studies and foundations of teaching, It is also relevant for students, faculty, and researchers across the field of education who want to explore the consequences of diversities of opinion, belief, and practice concerning teaching and closely related topics of learning, knowing and formal education.

part 1|46 pages

Inventing Modern Educational Obsessions

part 2|140 pages

Western Inventions of Teaching

chapter 6|10 pages

Gnosis: Mysticism ∨ Religion

chapter 6a|6 pages

Mysticism: Teaching As Drawing Out

chapter 6b|6 pages

Religion: Teaching As Drawing in

chapter 7|10 pages

Epistēmē: Rationalism ∨ Empiricism

chapter 7a|6 pages

Rationalism: Teaching as Instructing

chapter 7b|6 pages

Empiricism: Teaching as Training

chapter 9a|8 pages

Embodiment: Teaching as Facilitating

chapter 9b|6 pages

Embeddedness: Teaching as Enculturating

chapter 10|12 pages

Participation: Emergence ∨ Enaction

chapter 10a|8 pages

Emergence: Teaching as Occasioning

chapter 10b|6 pages

Enaction: Teaching As Enminding

chapter |4 pages

Interlude

part 3|80 pages

Non-WEIRD Inventions of Teaching