Article
Details
Citation
Fenwick T (2006) The audacity of hope: Towards poorer pedagogies. Studies in the Education of Adults, 38 (1), pp. 9-24.
Abstract
This paper critically examines popular discourses of pedagogy circulating in adult education theory and practice: pedagogy as (heroic or nurturing) person, as prescriptive strategy, as political purpose, and as situated practices. I argue that problematic conceptions and desires can be identified across these discourses that lead to orientations of control and discipline, animated by moral essentialism, in the teaching-learning relation. In an effort to conceptualise more open, generative and compassionate orientations, two interconnected forms of pedagogical relations are explored: ethical and ecological. Ethical relations are examined as ongoing coping: appropriate responsiveness in the immediate, reminiscent of Levinas' "caring encounter." Ecological relations have to do with attunement to biological as well as social, political and cultural interconnectivity: the ongoing co-specification of elements improvised in complex systems. The concluding implications for educators encourage a movement to less grand and totalising, more local and contingent orientations - "poorer" pedagogies. The paper is theory driven, drawing from complexity theory and pedagogical writers aligned with local, ecological conceptions of teaching and learning.
Keywords
adult education; complexity theory; ecological theory; pedagogy
Journal
Studies in the Education of Adults: Volume 38, Issue 1
Status | Published |
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Publication date | 30/04/2006 |
Publisher | National Institute of Adult Continuing Education |
ISSN | 0266-0830 |
eISSN | 1478-9833 |
People (1)
Emeritus Professor, Education