Powers of the Mind
The Reinvention of Liberal Learning in America
Powers of the Mind
The Reinvention of Liberal Learning in America
It is one thing to lament the financial pressures put on universities, quite another to face up to the poverty of resources for thinking about what universities should do when they purport to offer a liberal education. In Powers of the Mind, former University of Chicago dean Donald N. Levine enriches those resources by proposing fresh ways to think about liberal learning with ideas more suited to our times.
He does so by defining basic values of modernity and then considering curricular principles pertinent to them. The principles he favors are powers of the mind—disciplines understood as fields of study defined not by subject matter but by their embodiment of distinct intellectual capacities. To illustrate, Levine draws on his own lifetime of teaching and educational leadership, while providing a marvelous summary of exemplary educational thinkers at the University of Chicago who continue to inspire. Out of this vital tradition, Powers of the Mind constructs a paradigm for liberal arts today, inclusive of all perspectives and applicable to all settings in the modern world.
256 pages | 7 line drawings | 6 x 9 | © 2006
Education: Higher Education, Philosophy of Education
Sociology: Occupations, Professions, Work, Theory and Sociology of Knowledge
Reviews
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Prologue: Missing Resources in Higher Education
Part I. Crises of Liberal Learning in the Modern World
1. The Place of Liberal Learning
Sites of Secondary Enculturation
The Modernity Revolutions
Liberal Education Encounters Modernity
2 The Movement for General Education
Fallout from the Modernity Revolutions
Quest for a New Common Learning
Part II. Enter Chicago
3. The Making of a Curricular Tradition
Enter Chicago
Forming and Nurturing a Tradition
Themes of the Chicago Tradition
The Chicago Tradition of Liberal Learning
4. Dewey and Hutchins at Chicago
Dewey as Educator
Hutchins as an Unwitting (?) Deweyan
The Hutchins-Dewey Debate
5. Richard McKeon: Architecton of Human Powers
Entering the Fray
Changing the Humanities Course
Reconfiguring the Liberal Curriculum
The Return in the 1960s
McKeon as Teacher
6. Joseph Schwab’s Assault on Facile Teaching
Genesis of an Educator
Transforming the Natural Science Curriculum
Transforming Classroom Pedagogy
Transforming Pedagogy through Examinations
Transforming Educational Systems
Pluralistic Thoughtways and Communal Practice
Schwab and the Chicago Tradition
7. What Is Educational about the Study of Civilizations?
"Civilization" in Educational Discourse
Civilizational Studies at Chicago
So, What Is Educational about the Study of Civilizations?
Part III. Reinventing Liberal Education in Our Time
8. New Goals for the Liberal Curriculum
Contested Principles for the Liberal Curriculum
Choosing a Path
9. Goals for the Liberal Curriculum I: Powers of Prehension
Audiovisual Powers
Kinesthetic Powers
Understanding Verbal Texts
Understanding Worlds
10. Goals for the Liberal Curriculum II: Powers of Expression
Forming a Self
Inventing Statements, Problems, and Actions
Integrating Knowledge
Communicating
11. New Ways of Framing Pedagogy
Modalities of Teaching and Learning
From "Teaching" to Teaching Powers
A Repertoire of Teaching Forms
Approaches to Testing
12. My Experiments in Teaching Powers
Searching for Disciplines
Basic Practice
Disciplines as Ways of Getting into Conversations
Disciplines as Ways of Connecting Conversations
Epilogue: The Fate of Liberal Learning
Appendix: Three Syllabi for Teaching Powers at Chicago
References
Index
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