Title: EDD 5229
1EDD 5229 Liberal Studies in Knowledge Society
Lecture 3 Understanding the Meaning of
Liberal Studies A Historical Account
2Understanding the Meanings of Liberal Studies in
HKSAR
- The myth of Liberal Studies in language game of
HKSAR education reform (2004) - Liberal Studies as the panacea of education in
knowledge society
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4Understanding the Meanings of Liberal Studies in
HKSAR
- The myth of Liberal Studies in language game of
HKSAR education reform - Liberal Studies as the panacea of education in
knowledge society - Liberal Studies as disaster in HKSAR education
reform
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- ????,?????????????????,??????????????,??? Liberal
Education,????????????????,?????????????????(
Education that enlarges and disciplines the mind
and makes it master of its own powers,
irrespective of the particular business or
profession one may follow.)
8Understanding the Meanings of Liberal Studies in
HKSAR
- Confusion of connotations of liberal studies
- Liberal Studies
- Liberal education
- General Education
- Liberal Arts Education
9Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
10Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- The origins of liberal education can be traced to
the Ancient Greece in B.C. - Liberal art (artes liberalis in Greek) was
understood as an education ideal underlining the
idea of liberalis in Greek. It means relating to
freedom or fitted for freedom. - Accordingly, liberal art education was
understood as education for free citizens in
the city-state of Ancient Greece. - However, in the political context of the Ancient
Greece, which was built on a social system of
slavery, liberal art education was in fact simply
meant education of free citizens with leisure to
study (Kimball, 1986, p.14)
11Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- The origins of liberal education can be traced to
the Ancient Greece in B.C. - Nevertheless, the idea of liberal arts education
found in the writings of Plato and Aristotle
carries a more profound meaning. It signifies the
educational ideal that it is an education to free
individuals rather than simply education for
eligible free individuals. - Plato, following Socrates' teaching, saw
"knowledge leads directly to virtue." He viewed
liberal art education as "an endeavor that
liberates the mind from chains of its showy cave
of ignorance." (Kimball, 1986, p. 17) - While Plato's student Aristotle sees liberal arts
education as a means to elevate human minds to
self-reflective level. He underlines that the
unexamined life is not worth living for human
being. (Aristotle, quoted in Nussbaum, 1997, p.
8)
12The Trial of Socrates
13Platos School of Athens
14Plato and Aristotle
15Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- The idea of trivium and quadrium in 5th and sixth
century During the Roman Empire in 5th to sixth
century, liberal arts education indicated a
curriculum consisted of seven arts. They can
further be divided into trivium and
quadrivium - Trivium was made up of grammar, logic and
rhetoric. They constituted the lower division of
university studies in the Middle Age - Quadrivium composed arithmetic, geometry, music
and astronomy. They constituted the upper
division of university studies in the Middle Age. - Nevertheless, liberal arts education in this
period was still confined to be education for the
eligible few, i.e. Roman citizens.
16Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- After the fall of Roman Empire and the Barbarian
invasion to Rome, the Romans idea of liberal art
education of trivium and quadrivium came
under the domination of Christianity or more
specifically the Church in the Middle Ages from
the sixth to sixteenth centuries. (Lawton and
Gordon) University of Bologna was founded in the
twelfth century. It was soon followed by such
place as Paris, Oxford and Cambridge. However,
these early universities "were developed as a
response to the need for institutions to educate
priests and monks." (Lawton and Gordon, 2002, p.
51-52)
17Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- The humanist of the Renaissance and the scientist
of the Scientific Revolution in the sixteenth and
seventeenth century respectively broke the
pursuit of knowledge away from the domination of
the Christianity worldview. - The movement of Renaissance humanism can be
represented by Pico della Mirandola famous text
entitled in which he emphasized the genius of
man ... the unique and extraordinary ability of
the human mind.
18Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- The humanist of the Renaissance and the scientist
of the Scientific Revolution in the sixteenth and
seventeenth century respectively broke the
pursuit of knowledge away from the domination of
the Christianity worldview. - The movement of Scientific Revolution can of
course be signified by Galileo Galilei and Isaac
Newton and their work. More specifically, it is
Galilie conflict with the Catholic Church, which
finally came down to the trial by the Inquisition
in Rome in 1633. It signifies the liberation of
scientific mind from the Christian doctrine,
which subsequently brought about the movement of
the Enlightenment and the advent of the Modern
Age.
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22Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- Liberal education in the Enlightenment in the
18th century - Liberal education as the Enlightenment
- According to Immanuel Kant definition,
Enlightenment is mans release from his
self-incurred tutelage. Tutelage is mans
inability to make use of his understanding
without direction from another. Self-incurred is
this tutelage when its cause lies not in lack of
reason but in lack of resolution and courage to
use it without direction from another. Sapere
aude (Dare to know)! Have courage to use your
own reason! - that is the motto of
enlightenment. - In connection to ideal of the Enlightenment,
liberal education in the 18th century took on an
egalitarian meaning. It is the liberating and
enlightening education for all human being and
every human being is entitled to the reasoning
power.
23Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- Liberal education in the Enlightenment in the
18th century - Liberal education as part of the project of
modernity - Jürgen Habermas' formulation of the project of
modernity as collective efforts of human kinds,
especially those in Europe in the 18th century
bearing the consequences of - Differentiating the holistic reason of religion
and metaphysics of Christianity in Europe before
the 18th century into autonomous sphere of
science, morality and art in the Modern Times - Constituting of separate areas of inquiry
Knowledge and truth, justice and moral-rightness,
and taste, authenticity and beauty - Developing of the cognitive-instrumental,
moral-practical and aesthetic-expressive
rationalities - Institutionalizing of domains of culture
scientific discourse, theories of moral and
jurisprudence, and production and criticism of
art.
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25Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- Liberal education in the Enlightenment in the
18th century - Liberal education as part of the project of
modernity - It is in the context of modernity that liberal
education invokes it modern meanings - To liberate human mind from religion and
superstition and lead it into scientific
reasoning and practice - To liberate human mind from social and political
tutelage and suppression and lead it into
democratic reasoning and practice - To liberate human mind from aesthetic domination
and hegemony and lead it into free and creative
expressions of self - However, the separation and division of human
reason into separate domains and then
institutions have sowed the seed of the
degradation of the liberal education ideal in
modern schooling system in the twenty century.
26Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- The debate between general education and
specialized education - Max Webers thesis of division of labor and
specialization of education - Industrialization and bureaucratization elicit
complex division of labor in production process - Fragmentation of skills and knowledge
- System of knowledge was divided into separate
disciplines - Constitution of regular curricula and
standardized examination within each discipline - As U.S. universities, most notably Harvard,
re-oriented their missions from the Oxbridge
tradition of teaching of the Classics to the free
pursuit of scientific knowledge, the
single-standard curriculum for undergraduate
study instituted in liberal art colleges in the
U.S. was to be compartmentalized into
specialties, streams and departments.
27Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- As World War II came to an end, confronted by
devastating effects of the Nazism of Germany,
Fascism of Italy, and militarism of Japan,
educators especially university educators were
forced to reflect on the appropriateness of the
education and knowledge that they felt fit to
inculcate into the young generations. One of such
reflection was to look hard into the curriculum
of major-concentrated, specialized,
professionalized, vocationalized and to some
extent instrumentalized mode of study in most of
the undergraduate programs in universities.
28Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- As World War II came to an end, confronted by
devastating effects of the Nazism of Germany,
Fascism of Italy, and militarism of Japan,
educators especially university educators were
forced to reflect on the appropriateness of the
education and knowledge that they felt fit to
inculcate into the young generations. One of such
reflection was to look hard into the curriculum
of major-concentrated, specialized,
professionalized, vocationalized and to some
extent instrumentalized mode of study in most of
the undergraduate programs in universities.
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30Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- The Harvard Committees (HC) idea of General
Education in a Free Society (1945) (HC Report)
and its effort to reconcile the emerging conflict
between disciplinary-knowledge and liberal
education . - HC Report defines the general education as the
modernized version of liberal education and the
main difference between them is that general
education attempts to universalize the
liberal-education ideal to all citizens in a
democratic society.
31Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- General Education in a Free Society (1945)
- Clearly, general education has somewhat the
meaning of liberal education, except that, by
applying to high school as to college. If one
cling to the root meaning of liberal as that
which befits or helps to make free men, then
general and liberal education have identical
goals. (HC, 1945, p.52) However, in order to
universalize the ideal of liberal education in
modern democratic society, educators are
confronted by the structural contradiction
between general and special education.
32Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- General Education in a Free Society (1945)
- The task of modern democracy is to preserve the
ancient ideal of liberal education and to extend
it as far as possible to all members of the
community. To believe in the equality of human
beings is to believe that the good life, and the
education which trains the citizen for the good
life, are equally the privilege of all. And these
are the touchstones of the liberated man - First, is he free that is to say, is able to
judge and plan for himself, so that he can truly
govern himself? In order to do this, his must be
a mind capable of self-criticism he must lead
that self-examined life which according to
Socrates is alone worthy of a free man. Thus he
will possess in inner freedom, as well as social
freedom.
33Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- General Education in a Free Society (1945)
- the touchstones of the liberated man
- Second, is he universal in his motives and
sympathies? For the civilized man is a citizen of
the entire universe he has overcome
provincialism, he is objective, and is a
spectator of all time and all existence. Surely
these two are the very aims of democracy itself.
(HC, 1945, p. 53)
34Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- General Education in a Free Society (1945)
- We are living in an age of specialism.
Specialism is the means for advancement in our
mobile social structure yet we must envisage the
fact that a society controlled wholly by
specialists is not a wisely ordered society. We
cannot, however, turn away from specialism. The
problem is how to save general education and its
values within a system where specialism is
necessary. (HC, 1945, p. 53) -
35Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- General Education in a Free Society (1945)
- Specialism enhances the centrifugal forces in
society. The business of providing for the needs
of society breeds a great diversity of special
occupations, and a given specialist does not
speak the language of the other specialists. In
order to discharge his duties as a citizen
adequately, a person must somehow be able to
grasp the complexities of life as a whole. . - Our conclusion, then, is that the aim of
education should be to prepare an individual to
become an expert both in some particular vocation
or art and in the general art of the free man and
the citizen. Thus the two kinds of education once
given separately to different social class must
be given together to all alike. (HC, 1945, p.
53-54)
36Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- General Education in a Free Society (1945)
- Accordingly, the HC identifies four
characteristics which they think are essential
traits for the liberated mind of citizens in
democratic society (HC, 1945, Pp. 64-87) - Effective thinking It consists of the ability of
logical thinking, relational thinking and
imaginative thinking - Effective communication The effective
communication depends on the possession not only
of skills such as clear thinking and cogent
expression but of moral qualities as well, such
as candor. (HC, 1945, p. 68)
37Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- General Education in a Free Society (1945)
- traits for the liberated mind of citizens
- Making of relevant judgments The aptitude of
making relevant judgment cannot be developed by
theoretical teaching being an art, it comes from
example, practice, and habituation. The teacher
can do a great deal nonetheless he can relate
theoretical content to thee students life at
every feasible point, and he can deliberately
stimulate in the classroom situations from life.
Finally, he can bring concrete reports of actual
cases for discussion with the students. The
essential thing is that the teacher should be
constantly aware of the ultimate objectives,
never letting means obscure ends, and be
persistent in directing the attention to the
student from the symbols to the things they
symbolize. (HC, 1945, p. 71)
38Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- General Education in a Free Society (1945)
- traits for the liberated mind of citizens
- Discrimination among values The ability to
discriminate in choosing covers not only
awareness of different kinds of values but of
their relations, including a sense of relative
importance and of the mutual dependence of means
and ends. (HC, 1945, p. 71)
39Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- Similarly, two other universities in the US had
also produced substantive reports on reforms of
their general education curriculum, namely the
University of Chicago (1950) The Idea and
Practice of General Education and Columbia
University (1966) The Reforming of General
Education.
40Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- Similarly, two other universities in the US had
also produced substantive reports on reforms of
their general education curriculum, namely the
University of Chicago (1950) The Idea and
Practice of General Education and Columbia
University (1966) The Reforming of General
Education.
41Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- The debate on the required course of Western
civilization in Stanford University in the 1980s - The issue of the Core Reading List for the
year-long required course
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43Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- The debate on the required course of Western
civilization in Stanford University in the 1980s - The issue of the Core Reading List for the
year-long required course - The list was criticized as ethnocentric in
several terms, i.e. Eurocentric, male-centric and
Christian-centric. - The outcome of the debate is the input of
sensitivity and reflectivity to multiculturalism
into the curriculum of nurturing liberated minds
44Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- The debate on the required course of Western
civilization in Stanford University in the 1980s - Accordingly, Martha C. Nussbaum (1997) redefined
the trait of the liberated mind into - Critical self-examination The capacity for
critical examination of oneself and ones
traditions. (p. 9) - World citizen An ability to see themselves not
simply as citizens of some local region and group
but also, and above all, as human being bound to
all other human beings by ties of recognition and
concern. (p.10) - Narrative imagination The ability to think what
it might be like to be in the shoes of a person
different from oneself, to be an intelligent
reader of that persons story, and to understand
the emotions and wish and desires that someone so
placed might be. (p. 10-11) In other words, it
is the ability of sympathetic understand and
sympathetic imagination.
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46Ideas of Liberal Education in Historical Context
- To summarized, the ideas of liberal studies
embedded three conflicting themes in its
educational objects, which can be traced to three
structural changes in human societies - Elitism vs. universalism Liberating the minds of
a selected few or those of the general public and
structural contradiction between slave or federal
society and free society - General education vs. specialized education
Structural contradiction between gentry and
literati education in agrarian society and
specialist education in industrial society - Ethno-cultural and nationalistic education vs.
multicultural and cosmopolitan education
Structural contradiction between nationalistic
ethno-cultural education and global multicultural
education
47Liberal Education in 21st Century
- As human society enters the new millennium, a
number of salient social trends have triggered to
the reinvention of liberal education at
university and secondary education levels. - Donald N. Levine in his book Powers of the Mind
The Reinvention of Liberal Learning in American,
points to the fallout from the modernity
revolution and suggests that liberal education
as educational means to encounter these defaults
of the project of modernity .
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49Liberal Education in 21st Century
- Donald N. Levine in his book Powers of the Mind
The Reinvention of Liberal Learning in American, - Modernity revolution and its effects
50Liberal Education in 21st Century
- Donald N. Levine in his book Powers of the Mind
The Reinvention of Liberal Learning in American, - Reform agenda of liberal education
51Liberal Education in 21st Century
- Donald N. Levine in his book Powers of the Mind
The Reinvention of Liberal Learning in American, - Reform agenda of liberal education
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56Liberal Education in Knowledge Society
- Definition of the problem
- Four trend have changed the problem of
liberal education beyond recognition in recent
decades - knowledge is growing so rapidly and
uncontrollably that the very idea of an
all-round (or general) education is coming to
seem unfeasible - nonetheless, it seems increasingly obvious that
knowledge skills of some kind are essential in a
society where knowledge work has become the
most productive and highly remunerated kind of
work - moreover, it seems clear that these knowledge
skills, whatever they are, cant be confined to
an elite, but must be imparted to everyone
57Liberal Education in Knowledge Society
- Definition of the problem
- Four trend have changed the problem of
liberal education beyond recognition in recent
decades - in a pluralist society, the old classical model
of learning knowledge skills (illustrated for
example by European elite education) is
challenged by some groups in society who reject
the culture in which such education has been
embedded. (Smith, 2002, p. 1)
58Liberal Education in Knowledge Society
- Redefinition of the educated and liberated mind
- Educated mind is perceived as container of
educational knowledge and liberated mind as
container of liberating knowledge - Following the development of cognitive science,
mind is perceived as network processing
knowledge, information and data - Liberal education, especially in the knowledge
age and/or society, is defined as an effort of
enculturation into what Karl Popper termed World
3.
59Liberal Education in Knowledge Society
- Redefinition of the educated and liberated mind
- According to Poppers classification
- World 1 consists of the knowledge of the physical
world - World 2 consists of the knowledge of the
subjective and mental world - World 3 is the world of ideas. It consists of
immaterial knowledge objects that can be
discussed, modified, replaced and so on.
(Bereiter, 2002, p.27) It consists of the
discussible proposition or declarative knowledge
??theories, conjectures, problem formulations,
historical accounts, interpretations, proofs,
criticism, and the like. (Bereiter, 2002, p. 29)
It basically coincides with the conception of
meta-cognitive knowledge or knowledge of
intentional cognition. More generally speaking,
it is the knowledge of knowledge-building and
knowledgability.
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61Lecture 4 Understanding the Meaning of Liberal
Studies A Historical Account End