The Education Conundrum: One academic's thoughts on a wicked problem

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Education & Teaching, Higher Education, Science & Nature, Science
Cover of the book The Education Conundrum: One academic's thoughts on a wicked problem by Greg Foley, Greg Foley
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Greg Foley ISBN: 9781630413521
Publisher: Greg Foley Publication: November 13, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Greg Foley
ISBN: 9781630413521
Publisher: Greg Foley
Publication: November 13, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Inspired by 25 years’ experience of working in the Irish university sector, this book is an exploration of all aspects of Irish education with a particular emphasis on third-level education. As well as dealing with issues relating to the very purpose of education, it deals with the organization of the education system and casts a critical eye on the teaching and learning ‘culture’. The book also focuses on the business and culture of science, especially the funding of science and provides insight into the vagaries of academic life including worries about managerialism and commercialism. A theme which runs through the book is the author’s perception that much of what we do today is based on the concept of plausibility. Whether it is the role of education in the economy or the way we structure our third level institutions or how we organise research around the notion of a ‘centre of excellence’, the underlying justification is usually one based on plausibility rather than real evidence. This leads to an alarming degree of groupthink within the education sector and a failure to address some of the truly important issues, many of which are as much societal as they are educational.
The book is about academic matters and it is written by an academic but it is not written in an academic style. It is structured as a large series of over one hundred short commentaries, divided among seven chapters, and written in a style that should be accessible not only to ‘insiders’ but also the general reader with an interest in any of the topics discussed in the book. The layout of the book will allow the busy reader to ‘dip in and out’ without having to commit to the whole book at any given time. The commentaries can be read by the reader in any order he or she chooses.
This book is ultimately the culmination of an increasing sense on the author’s part that he was being bombarded every day by ‘waffle’ and meaningless jargon: industry leaders talking about 21st century skills, policy-makers talking about the transformational effects of new technologies, politicians talking incessantly about that most meaningless of concepts, the ‘knowledge economy’, educators innovating for innovation’s sake and scientists with vested interests extolling the virtues of basic research. This book is a pragmatic reply to the jargon.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Inspired by 25 years’ experience of working in the Irish university sector, this book is an exploration of all aspects of Irish education with a particular emphasis on third-level education. As well as dealing with issues relating to the very purpose of education, it deals with the organization of the education system and casts a critical eye on the teaching and learning ‘culture’. The book also focuses on the business and culture of science, especially the funding of science and provides insight into the vagaries of academic life including worries about managerialism and commercialism. A theme which runs through the book is the author’s perception that much of what we do today is based on the concept of plausibility. Whether it is the role of education in the economy or the way we structure our third level institutions or how we organise research around the notion of a ‘centre of excellence’, the underlying justification is usually one based on plausibility rather than real evidence. This leads to an alarming degree of groupthink within the education sector and a failure to address some of the truly important issues, many of which are as much societal as they are educational.
The book is about academic matters and it is written by an academic but it is not written in an academic style. It is structured as a large series of over one hundred short commentaries, divided among seven chapters, and written in a style that should be accessible not only to ‘insiders’ but also the general reader with an interest in any of the topics discussed in the book. The layout of the book will allow the busy reader to ‘dip in and out’ without having to commit to the whole book at any given time. The commentaries can be read by the reader in any order he or she chooses.
This book is ultimately the culmination of an increasing sense on the author’s part that he was being bombarded every day by ‘waffle’ and meaningless jargon: industry leaders talking about 21st century skills, policy-makers talking about the transformational effects of new technologies, politicians talking incessantly about that most meaningless of concepts, the ‘knowledge economy’, educators innovating for innovation’s sake and scientists with vested interests extolling the virtues of basic research. This book is a pragmatic reply to the jargon.

More books from Science

Cover of the book Immortal Unchained by Greg Foley
Cover of the book Squeezed: What You Don't Know About Orange Juice by Greg Foley
Cover of the book The Cross-Cultural Practice of Clinical Case Management in Mental Health by Greg Foley
Cover of the book Fitness, Performance, and the Female Equestrian by Greg Foley
Cover of the book Developments of Harmonic Maps, Wave Maps and Yang-Mills Fields into Biharmonic Maps, Biwave Maps and Bi-Yang-Mills Fields by Greg Foley
Cover of the book The Hungry Steppe by Greg Foley
Cover of the book And The Sea Called Her Name by Greg Foley
Cover of the book Gateway to Thera by Greg Foley
Cover of the book Stardust 4: Die Ruinenstadt by Greg Foley
Cover of the book O Príncipe by Greg Foley
Cover of the book Weltgesellschaft: Kritisiert die Al Qaida die globalen Modelle der Weltgesellschaft? by Greg Foley
Cover of the book The Year of the Dragon, Books 1-4 Bundle by Greg Foley
Cover of the book Transformation of the African American Intelligentsia, 1880–2012 by Greg Foley
Cover of the book Advances in Macromolecules by Greg Foley
Cover of the book Not Just Race, Not Just Gender by Greg Foley
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy