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What counts as "learning" for educational purposes
depends on cultural, social, economic and political factors,
because implicit in education as a deliberate enterprise is
the notion of prescription. Education is supposed to be a Good
Thing. So having a phobia about worms is learned
behavior, but it does not count as Education. Nor does acquiring
greater skill in breaking into cars as a result of learning
from peers in prison.

The process starts with what the society considers to be
desirable knowledge, and indeed what counts as knowledge at
all: consider the ambivalence about astrology, or complementary
medicine. The social structure is also reflected in the attitude
to the knowledge — is it unquestioned truth, to be learned and
reproduced but not modified, or is it provisional knowledge
on which critical faculties can be trained? (As one sociologist
said, "Newton stood on the shoulders of those who went
before: sociologists stand on their heads!") This leads
into culturally endorsed
models of the
learning process, and variable acceptance of the initiative
of the learner — as seen in
constructivism
or andragogy.
The subject matter, framed by culture, imposes
its own discipline: it may be linear (like math, in which you
have to learn the concept of number, counting, addition,
subtraction,
multiplication and division, in that order, before you can go
on to anything else) or accessible at any point. It may be governed
by a clear philosophical structure (like science), or by its
history (like law), or none of these. It may be
convergent
or divergent. See inter al.
Kolb
on this.
The society produces an educational system in
its image, whether it makes use of informal —
“situated”
learning — or is seduced (as
Illich
would see it) by the Western model of dedicated educational
institutions, whose inadequacies have been so clearly discussed
in Becker’s wonderful essay.
Then that educational system imposes its own constraints
on what can be taught and learned and what counts as learning,
through its assessment and accreditation procedures. This
in turn is filtered and interpreted by the teacher. The
micro-culture of the learner's group or class may encourage,
inhibit or distort various kinds of learning. Then there
is the learner as a person, making continuous "cost-benefit
decisions"
(Claxton,
1996) about what it is worth learning, and endowed with
certain aptitudes and preferences: until finally we reach
the "learning bit" of that person.
Critical Approaches to Education
For a selection of different critical stances to the
construction of knowledge and educational assumptions, start
(!) with: COLLINS M (1991) Adult Education as Vocation London:
Routledge
DEWEY J (1938) Experience and Education New York:
Macmillan
FREIRE P (1972) The Pedagogy of the Oppressed
Harmondsworth: Penguin
ILLICH I (1970) De-Schooling Society Harmondsworth:
Penguin
and go on to Habermas and Marcuse
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www.learningandteaching.info/learning/
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