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COMM 250 Agenda - Week 15

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COMM 250 Agenda - Week 15. Housekeeping. RP3 Due Today (Put in Folders) ... You disagreed with a professor's argument that knowledge was 'subjective' in some way. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: COMM 250 Agenda - Week 15


1
COMM 250 Agenda - Week 15
  • Housekeeping
  • RP3 Due Today (Put in Folders)
  • Peer Evaluations (Using MY Form)
  • Course Instructor Evaluations
  • Questions about the Final Exam
  • Lecture
  • Naturalistic Inquiry
  • Intellectual Development
  • (Bonus Content the Purpose of College)
  • ITE 15

2
Overall Peer Evaluation
  • Rate Your Teammates
  • Do NOT Rate Yourself
  • Total Points 10 x the Teammates
  • You Cant Give Everyone the Same Score
  • Use Whole Numbers Make Sure They Add Up!
  • This is a Secret Ballot
  • No Talking or Comparing Scores
  • Place Rating Sheets Face Down
  • Staple or Clip Them Together

3
  • You do not get an education in the
  • classroom you learn how to get an
  • education, which in the long run you
    only
  • acquire by yourself. In fact, the
    word
  • "educate" comes from the Latin,
    educare
  • which means "leading out" the
    student in
  • a wider world of knowledge.
  • It is by stimulating a zest for learning in
    general
  • that teachers can perform their
    greatest
  • service to those in their care, for
    a zest for
  • learning is a zest for life.
  • - The Importance of Teaching

4
.
  • Teaching is not presenting a lesson.
  • The result of teaching is learning.
  • If learning does not occur, there has been no
    teaching.
  • - www.teachingtips.com
  • Education is not the filling of a pail,
  • but the lighting of a fire.
  •  (William Butler Yates)

5
Exercise
  • Each person spend 1 minute giving a VERY BRIEF
    SUMMARY of a situation that happened to them in a
    college course, where
  • You were still confused about an issue you had
    studied about in depth.
  • A professor talked about something (theoretical)
    that you did not understand.
  • You and/or the professor confused fact and
    interpretation.
  • You disagreed with a professors argument that
    knowledge was subjective in some way.
  • --------------------------------------------------
    --------------------------------------------------
    --------------------------------------------------
    --------------------------------------------------
    --------------------------
  • No Written Deliverable

6
Intellectual Development
  • William Perry
  • Forms of intellectual and ethical development in
    the college years A scheme
  • A Qualitative Research Study
  • Interviewed Harvard Students in the 50s, 60s
  • Asked What stands out for you this year?
  • Perry Tracked Individual Development
  • Created a 9-Position Model Using Induction

7
Caveats Before Presenting Perry
  • Everyone goes through these stages
  • College simply accelerates your movement
  • This is Finns version of Perry
  • Remember Models are not the truth
  • Models are approximations (in the world of ideas)
    of phenomenon (in the physical world)

8
Preview of Perry
  • A summary of where were headed
  • There are several major stages of intellectual
    and ethical development
  • Duality
  • Multiplicity
  • Relativism
  • Commitment
  • The concept of relativism is not to be feared
  • It does not imply you cant have beliefs
    commitments
  • Relativism actually strengthens your beliefs
    commitments
  • Yet people speak out against it all the time

9
Relativism
  • Several Types
  • Aesthetic Relativism
  • Cognitive (Rational) Relativism
  • Moral Relativism
  • Two Things in Common
  • Any concept (e.g. art, knowledge, or values) is
    relative to the particular framework or world
    view being used (e.g. the individual, the
    culture, the era, the language).
  • No one point of view is uniquely privileged over
    all the others

10
Basic Duality (Position 1, 2)
  • Our first view of knowledge is basic duality
  • Everything is either
  • Right or wrong, Black or white, Good or bad
  • There are no shades of gray
  • All questions/problems are solvable
  • Authorities have the answers, or can get them
    (parents, teachers, experts, government)
  • Knowledge an objective body of facts
  • Assignments Designed to get the right answer

11
Positions 1 2 Duality
  • 1. Basic Duality
  • 2. Multiplicity Pre-Legitimate
  • As we get older, we notice that conflicting
    points of view exist
  • We assume not all authorities have the truth
    some are mistaken
  • I know there are other viewpoints AND, they are
    wrong.
  • Assignments Work through the issues, but come up
    with the (one) right answer

12
Multiplicity (3, 4a)
  • 3. Multiplicity Subordinate
  • 4a. Multiplicity Correlate
  • In multiplicity subordinate, there are 2 kinds
    of problems those with known answers, and those
    where the answer is not yet known Authority
    still has the answers
  • In multiplicity correlate, people accept
    epistemological uncertainty as a legitimate view
  • Knowledge facts and principles that can be
    proven
  • Assignments worry about whether this is a
    problem where the answer is not yet known

13
Relativism (4b, 5, 6)
  • 4b. Relativism Subordinate
  • 5. Relativism Correlate, Competing, Diffuse
  • 6. Commitment Foreseen
  • In relativism correlate
  • there is more than one approach to a problem
  • Math / science has answers humanities, criticism
    do not)
  • Knowledge the way anyone choose to organize and
    interpret the information
  • Assignments the goal is to give the teachers
    what they want many students learn to shoot
    the bull

14
Relativism (4b, 5, 6)
  • 4b. Relativism Subordinate
  • 5. Relativism Correlate, Competing, Diffuse
  • 6. Commitment Foreseen
  • In relativism diffuse
  • Full-blown acceptance of relativism
  • Knowledge by its nature, is seen as contextual
  • Assignments some answers are better than others,
    depending on the context. The students job is to
    practice evaluating solutions.

15
  • The test of a first-rate intelligence is the
    ability to hold two opposing ideas in mind at the
    same time and still retain the ability to
    function.
  • - F. Scott Fitzgerald

16
Commitment (7, 8, 9)
  • 7. Initial Commitment
  • 8. Orientation in Implications of Commitment
  • 9. Developing Commitment
  • In Initial commitment
  • People realize they need to make choices about
    what (base of knowledge) to believe in
  • To take action, to be effective, you must put a
    stake in the ground
  • Not as w/ Duality, but having examined
    legitimate, competing alternative structures of
    knowledge
  • Knowledge constructed from ones experience

17
Commitment (7, 8, 9)
  • 7. Initial Commitment
  • 8. Orientation in Implications of Commitment
  • 9. Developing Commitment
  • In 8 and 9
  • 8 people see the trade-off between expansive
    possibilities and then narrowing after choosing
  • 9 a continual expansion and updating of
    commitments
  • Knowledge relativists apply a complex test to
    novel ideas and issues
  • Commitments are defensible and explainable in the
    context of a tested belief structure

18
Final Thoughts on Intellectual Development
  • Perry is a simply one roadmap
  • Its a structure to help explain the process in
    college and beyond
  • Think about Perrys Positions when you dont
    understand why a teacher did something (graded,
    critiqued, asked questions)
  • The frustration, upset or confusion you feel may
    be traceable to being pushed to think at the
    next position (before youre actually there)

19
Naturalistic Inquiry
  • The Basic Motives
  • Understanding and Explanation
  • What makes people tick?
  • Why do they believe what they believe?
  • How do their beliefs translate into some
    behaviors and not others?
  • What are the political consequences of their
    beliefs and actions? How do they affect others
    or the society as a whole?

20
Assumptions of theTraditional Scientific
Approach
  • Determinism
  • Objective Reality, Objective Science
  • Human behavior (DVs) is caused by (objective)
    social attributes social forces (IVs).
  • The Task ? Determine which attributes or forces
    cause or shape specific social actions or
    behaviors.
  • Example ? Studies of the Glass Ceiling

21
Missing from the Scientific Approach?
  • What does the Glass Ceiling mean,
    experientially?
  • What is the experience of women in large
    organizations?
  • What is it like to be a woman in a large
    organization? What daily experiences add up to a
    sense of frustration or alienation?
  • Imagine the benefits, to a researcher, of talking
    with, and getting to know, women who work in
    large organizations.

22
Assumptions of Naturalistic Research
  • No assumption of determinism, objective reality,
    objective research
  • Human action is not guided by objective social
    forces.
  • What people do depends upon what they perceive,
    upon their internalized understanding of their
    social world.
  • Human behavior is guided and patterned by the
    meanings that are created by communities and held
    by individuals."

23
Four Assumptions Naturalistic Inquiry
  • 1. What people say and do are the result of how
    they interpret and understand their social world.
    (Its a Question of Ideology and Worldview.)
  • 2. These ideologies are socially constructed.
    (We are socialized into a particular way of
    looking at ourselves and the social world.)

24
Four Assumptions Naturalistic Inquiry
  • 3. Different communities/societies impose
    different senses onto the same social reality.
    (Loggers versus environmentalists in the Pacific
    Northwest.)
  • 4. Different Ideologies/Worldviews carry
    different political implications. (Researchers
    should pay attention to the political
    implications of their consultants worldviews.)

25
The Goals of Naturalistic Inquiry
  • Understanding peoples social world and social
    actions from THEIR point of view.
  • What social experiences make up an individuals
    or community's reality?
  • And how do people "make sense" of their reality?
    How does this "sense" guide their actions?
  • What are the social and political implications of
    their actions, ideologies, and worldviews?

26
The Practice of Naturalistic Research
  • Immersion in Social Settings
  • Being There.
  • Listening Immersion in Language and Informants
    Way of Speaking.
  • Immersion in Natural Settings
  • What practices and rituals make up the daily life
    of this social community? What ideologies about
    the world inform and animate these daily rituals?
  • Discovery through breaking the rules.
  • Immersion in Language
  • The language informants use holds vital clues re
    how they interpret their world.
  • The stories they tell The metaphors they use

27
Naturalistic ResearchA Journey of Discovery
  • The researcher journeys into new, unknown, or
    misunderstood social terrain.
  • The researcher immerses her/himself in the
    ideologies and practices that distinguish this
    social terrain.
  • The researcher tries to interpret and make sense
    of this social reality, from the subjects
    (consultants) points of view.
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