Showing posts with label education reform. Show all posts
Showing posts with label education reform. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

"Weaponized" Education?

The Artdog Quote of the Week


I don't know about you, but I rarely think of education as a weapon. My general concept of education has always been that it is more of a path through a tool shop, although I suppose some of those tools could be considered sharp-edged weapons . . . especially those in the Critical Thinking Department.

And yet two of my earlier Quotes of the Week this month have looked at education as a way to fight poverty and terrorism, both of which are well worth trying to combat.

I think this "education is a weapon" concept is why folks at the more authoritarian end of the political spectrum so often seek to subvert, control, or de-fund universal education. They may come out openly against it (as does the Taliban).

Others may give lip service to the importance of education, but follow a more hyper-individualist and/or fundamental religious philosophy that can produce varying degrees of destruction as a side-effect (as do the extreme tax cuts in Kansas that were supposed to "free" businesses to create jobs but didn't, or the push to use public education money for vouchers to fund parochial schools).

However we think of education, we must always remember that it is a powerful force, a sharp-bladed tool. It can improve lives all over our country and our planet--or it can be subverted in ways that stunt and warp and destroy. As thinking adults, we must keep our wits, look at outcomes, and make our choices about education as wisely as we can, lest that weapon fall into the wrong hands.

IMAGE: Many thanks to "Basic Knowledge 101" for this quote image.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Slight Delay in the "Digital Natives" Series

Next time I'll consider digital-vs.-dead trees
I apologize for another slight delay in this series. I am running another art show, and it's pulling me away from this effort a bit more than anticipated (stuff always takes longer than you think it will!).

I hope to have the next installment of this series posted during the upcoming week!

My topic will be the relative merits of digital textbooks vs. the dead-trees version!

IMAGE CREDIT:
This image is from the interesting blog of Dr. Patricia Fioriello, on K-12 Education Practices and Issues. the particular post from which the image came is "Digital Textbooks Online."