Friends, Romans, Countrymen!

I would strongly advise anyone who is thinking of starting an MOQ 
reconstruction model for education that they read Everett W. Reimer's classic 
text "School is Dead; An Essay on Alternatives in Education" BEFORE Dewey and 
Freire because Reimer puts these two great educationalists in CONTEXT.  It can 
be downloaded for free from:

www.arvindguptatoys.com/arvindgupta/dead.pdf

Reimer's text took me only about four hours to read but is stacked full of new 
progressive ideas (unsurprizingly it was written in the late 1960s!) that will 
make for a refreshing read for anyone disillusioned with the direction of 
modern education (especially in North America and Western Europe) over the last 
150 years and especially the last forty.

In fact, Reimer's "School is Dead" book will be forming the basis of the new 
MOQ College of Arts which will be enrolling its first students towards the end 
of this year (in Liverpool). Paulo Freire is mentioned throughout Reimer's book 
so his ideas about education (though Dewey and, of course, Pirsig's too) will 
be the "guiding lynchpins" about how this new university will operate.

Reimer initially thought in the 1950s - with his friend & colleague Ivan Illich 
- that everyone in the world should go to school but after spending time - on 
the ground so to speak - in Latin America, eventually realised the stupity of 
such a project in so many ways.  For a start, there simply is not enough 
resources in the world to give every child a SCHOOL education from 5 to 18 and 
most GENUINE, USEFUL education is actually done at home and at work i.e. in 
practice. 

Schools and universities also tend to support the status quo (see how they 
responded in Nazi Germany compared to the more independent Churches) and - just 
like right-wingers who ignorantly exploit the poor and marginalised - don't do 
many children much good in the long run.  Why do you think it's a criminal 
offence in many countries - such as England - for NOT sending your child/ren to 
school?

Think about it!!!

Ant

------------------------------


I used to get mad at my school

The teachers who taught me weren't cool

You're holding me down, turning me round

Filling me up with your rules (...foolish rules)



[But] I've got to admit it's getting better 

A little better all the time (It can't get much worse)

I have to admit it's getting better 

It's getting better since YOU'VE been mine...

(Lennon-McCartney, Northern Songs, 1967)


On Jun 23, 2014, at 8:01 AM, ARLO JAMES BENSINGER JR <[email protected]> wrote:
 
I've mentioned Freire several times over the years. The perennial and, now, 
generational "educational crisis" in America, I believe, results from a 
societal inability to answer the fundamental question "why educate?" We talk 
about testing and assessment and standards but few can articulate a 'purpose' 
behind the structure, and those that can (and do) are those that have come to 
see education as a servant to capitalism; the goal of education is to meet 
labor demands.
 
Ron Kulp responded June 24th:

I had thought so, the more I develop a clearer understanding of Pragmatism and 
RMP's MOQ, the more it becomes evident that the primary thrust and direction of 
that solution space lies in critical pedagogy.

I am currently still in the discovery stage and it's pleasing to see that this 
is a subject that has some history here.  To me, this is what a MOQ 
reconstruction Model looks like.
 


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