• Philosophy & Science of Learning

    Learning, Participation and After Virtue

    What makes a good person?

    This is an old and important question.  Philosophers and theologians through the years have sought an answer including Aristotle, Aquinas, Hume, Kierkegaard, Newman, Nietzsche and others.

    Alasdair MacIntyre provides a useful analysis of the history of thinking on this question and the current state of moral philosophy in his books After Virtue (1984) and Whose Justice? Which Rationality? (1988). MacIntyre argues that a full understanding of moral philosophy today is constrained by failure to appreciate historical context.

    He proposes a disquieting scenario to illustrate what he deems the state of affairs today. Imagine, he suggests, through some terrible catastrophe all the scientists in the world were wiped out and with them the thinking and practice they engaged in. Some time later, when people seek to revive science they would only be partly successful; they would have to rely on clues from remnants of documentation, pieces of laboratory apparatus and a scattering of folk ideas. The practice of science would be gone.

    Although MacIntyre uses this vista to illustrate how, he believes, we have lost the way (and means) of moral philosophy, he is also making a point about ‘practice’. Human activities directed and sustained toward a particular goals are practices. Thus science and its sub-fields are practices, as are many of the activities we engage in such as medicine, engineering, academic scholarship, the arts and sports etc.. MacIntyre (1981a p30) makes clear his understanding of practice:

    By a ‘practice’ I am going to mean any coherent and complex form of socially established cooperative human activity through which goods internal to that form of activity are realised in the course of trying to achieve those standards of excellence which are appropriate to, and partially definitive of, that form of activity, with the result that human powers to achieve excellence, and human conceptions of the ends and goods involved, are systematically extended.

    To me, this conceptualising of practice, internal goods and the extension thereof resonates with work by Davidov, Engeström and other proponents of Activity Theory and Learning as Expansion. It is also consistent with the arguments I make (Casey, 2013) that the ultimate goal, purpose  and direction, or telos, of learning is toward participation in practice. MacIntyre argues that ‘internal goods’ are always shared and belong to the practice. Internal goods act for the betterment of practice. I think this is what we mean when we use phrases like ‘in the service of Science’ or for ‘contributions to Agriculture’.

    In order to answer the question of what makes a good person you would need to provide a context. A good scientist would be a person who extends the practice of science through participation and the realisation of internal goods particular to science. A good person today (in a general way) participates. Through participation we share in the development of, and are in the service of, societal practices. What is virtuous today differs from what was considered virtuous in the past. Why? Because practices have evolved and extended. Our understanding of issues such as climate change, world hunger, human rights and even ‘how we learn’ are the internal goods of the present time. With that in mind I’ll leave the last word to MacIntyre on his definition of a virtue:

    A virtue is an acquired human quality the possession and exercise of which tends to enable us to achieve those goods which are internal to practices and the lack of which effectively prevents us from achieving any such goods.

    MacIntyre (1981a p32)

    References

    Casey, L. (2013). Learning Beyond Competence to Participation. International Journal of Progressive Education Special issue: Educating for Democracy and the Process of Authority, 9(2), 45-61. Available from http://goo.gl/Pg0T3O

    MacIntyre, A. (1981). After Virtue: A study in moral theory (London, Duckworth).

    MacIntyre, A. (1981a). The nature of the virtues. Hastings Center Report, 11(2), 27-34.

    MacIntyre, A. C. (1988). Whose justice? Which rationality? : Duckworth London.

  • For Students,  Philosophy & Science of Learning

    Why We Learn

    Sometimes big questions just sit under our noses and are too close and obvious to warrant attention. The matter of why we learn falls into this category. It seems obvious that we learn every day of our lives and that learning is important but why is it so?

    Part of the answer lies in our evolutionary past. To understand why we learn we need to appreciate the benefits of learning in terms of survival and growth of human beings. Learning is a special way in which we can gain advantage in our quest for success.

    Every person and indeed all animals have innate abilities developed through natural selection. Over many generations animals adapt to their environment and acquire specialist abilities for hunting, defence, reproduction and so on. When we observe animals in their environment we appreciate the usefulness of these assets. Mink have fur coats to survive the cold winter, cheetahs run very fast and hedgehogs have spines and roll in a ball when under threat.

    Notice it is not easy to distinguish a behavioural ability such as knowing when to run and a physical ability such as well-developed muscle and skeleton for running. If you look at anatomy and physiology it only makes sense in terms of the behaviour it supports. Behaviour in turn, can be best understood when we look at context and environment.

    Notice also that it is not always easy to see what is acquired through natural selection and what may be learned during the lifetime of an organism. Many animals display innate tendencies to behave in a certain way – dogs are curious because that’s the way they are. Other behaviours are learned through experiencing the world. Abilities such as knowing where to find food or how to avoid danger are developed through experience in the world. Even physical abilities such as speed, although primarily acquired through evolution, may be further enhanced during life. We can learn to run fast or stand on our heads – nature gives us the raw materials but we use learning to make the most of them.

    We are better learners than all other animals. It is our ability to learn that has given human beings the competitive edge in terms of dominating the environment. Many animals do learn but very few can even approach the levels of sophistication in learning that we achieve. Learning is our ‘super ability’ and through our superior learning we achieve all that we are.

    When viewed through the lens of evolution and survival, it is easy to appreciate why we need to learn. Here are some types of learning and why they are important to us:

    • We learn to REMEMBER – in this way we associate places, events and situations with what has gone before.
    • We learn to THINK – in this way we can imagine new situations, avoid dangers and harness our efforts toward desirable goals.
    • We learn skills in order to ACT – in this way we nurture specialist abilities to gain further advantage in anticipated situations – skills are not just physical,cognitive skills are also developed, of these language and literacies are perhaps the most important skills for humans.
    • We learn to PARTICIPATE – in this way we work together by contributing to and relying on others to achieve our social, economic and spiritual well being.

    These four forms of learning are closely interlinked and Learning to Participate can be said to encapsulate the others.

    So to answer the question of ‘why we learn’ we learn to participate as people in the world in order to make all our lives better.

    Image

  • Philosophy & Science of Learning

    MOOCs – Promise and Opportunity

    In case you don’t know by now, MOOC stands for Massive Open Online Course and they are causing an upheaval in higher education worldwide. We should be careful when describing something as a ‘game changer’ but perhaps this is one instance where it is appropriate and warranted. In essence MOOCs are online courses that are generally free of charge and delivered on a range of topics from prestigious universities and colleges.

    MOOCs are made available through various platforms or providers – the big providers are Coursera, EdX, Udacity and ClevrU. A clance through any of these sites will give you a sense of the range and quality of courses on offer.

    The numbers taking some of these courses are staggering – class sizes in the tens of thousands are not unusual. However, completion rates are modest enough with an average of about 20% – a good interactive source on completion rates is found here at Katy Jordan’s site.

    The big question is why a prestigious institution like Harvard, Stanford University and MIT would want to offer courses free-of-charge and risk destroying a valuable source of future revenue?

    The answer may lie in a new emphasis on the provision of quality support, assessment and certification rather than content delivery in itself. This is a welcome shift – away from a view of learning in terms of transfer of knowledge and nurturing skills’ development such as communication, collaboration and problem-solving.

    However, it would be a mistake to belive that participation on a MOOC is all about passive watching of video lectures and very little by way of engagement. I am taking a MOOC on Aboriginal Worldviews and Education by  Jean-Paul Restoule of the University of Toronto and it is really excellent. The learning tasks are varied and interesting and there are ample fora for discussion and integration. The course acts as a portal to an interesting and alternative perspective on how we see education and culture.

    MOOCs are certainly disrupting the business models in higher education and perhaps this is for the better. The idea of opening-up learning opportunities to the widest possible audience seems to me to be a very positive development. Perhaps unexpectedly, the ‘free’ material will build an entire new market for students who would otherwise not have considered taking college courses.

    In the end a good shake-up of the sector is long overdue and with the advent of MOOCs we might finally have an opportunity to replace the industrial models of learning and education with something more appropriate for 21st Century living.

  • For Students,  Tips

    Ten Tips for Writing Academic Papers

    Completing academic writing assignments is one of the most important skills you will need to develop as a student.  This is true regardless of your subject or discipline.

    Based on my own experience writing and correcting papers and discussions with students I have compiled these ten tips to help you get going.  I have used these at the Academic Writing Club we set up in National College of Ireland to support students through the challenges of this process.


    1 Read the task

    Spend time reading and analysing the task you have been assigned.  Look for action words such as ‘discuss’, ‘compare’, ‘critique’ and so on.  Check if you need to provide examples or to analyse or deal with a particular context.   Write the task at the head of your essay and make sure you address every component of the assignment.


    2 Get on with it!

    Start writing straight away – don’t keep putting it off.  Many students say they need to read first and write later.  It is better to read and write at the same time (see tip 4 below).  

    3 Use the opening paragraph as your plan

    Start with something like “In this assignment I will….” and then go on to describe what the reader can expect. Write this paragraph first. Then leave it alone – don’t keep reworking it during the writing process – wait until your assignment is near to completion and then (and only then) rewrite the opening.

    4 Read and research with purpose

    Once you have a plan (based on your opening paragraph) you can then attack the required background reading.  The secret is to be ‘purposeful’ in your approach.  Continuously ask yourself why you are reading the specific text before you and what it will contribute.  Write snippets as you go. Don’t get taken in by mindless reading and avoid ‘nice to know’ sidetracks – if you come across something interesting but not directly helpful to your assignment put it in a folder for future reading.

    5 Make three points

    I want to make three points about this tip.  First it’s a useful starting point for a new topic – it gives a simple structure and the reader knows what to expect.  Second it stretches your thinking so you can easily compare and contrast the ideas you wish to discuss.  Finally, you can always keep going to add more and more points later.

    6 Use paragraphs to provide structure  

    One of the most useful and often neglected devices for both writer and reader is the paragraph. It is often possible to write separate paragraphs from different parts of your assignment and to connect these in later drafts.  An advantage of this approach is that your notes and memos will gradually build to become paragraphs.  Each paragraph should have it’s own structure – pay attention to the key sentence that usually carries the main message of the paragraph. Make backward and forward connections with linking sentences throughout your paper.

    7 Remember you are the writer 

    Many students fail to grasp that a term paper assignment is essentially a learning task that requires their engagement in the process of writing.  It is more important to provide your own thoughts (even if you feel they are inadequate) rather than reproducing the work of others. Keep quotations to a minimum and cite all your sources using one system of referencing such as APA, MLA of Harvard.

    8 Keep it clear

    Write in a clear straightforward style.  Avoid complex sentences.  Make your argument with precision and elegance and use no more words than necessary.

    9 Write a little every day

    Writing can be tiring especially if you are not used to it.  It’s a good idea to break the task down and write something each day until the assignment is due.  Even if you are busy with other things or feeling tired try to accomplish some part of the work – such as proof reading or formatting – in every session.

    10 Write a summary and conclusion 

    A summary captures the main points that you have made such as “here I have provided ten tips on academic writing for students” while a conclusion provides a key message that can be inferred from your paper such as “it’s over to you now good luck with your academic writing“.

  • Philosophy & Science of Learning

    Alienation and Learning

    I want to talk about alienation as I believe it to be a topic of concern to most of us and it is an important influence on how we live our lives today.

    Karl Marx was one of the first to highlight how the structures of modern society inevitably lead to alienation.  He describes how, in industrial settings, many workers are alienated from the products they produce.  For example, an assembly line worker is far removed from the completed product.

    The alienation of the worker in his product means not only that his labor becomes an object, an external existence, but that it exists outside him, independently, as something alien to him, and that it becomes a power on its own confronting him. 

    Marx K, Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844. First Manuscript p29

    Sunset

    In contrast, many professionals such as teachers, architects, entrepreneurs and hairdressers remain closely affiliated with their productive output.

    There are other ways in which we experience alienation in the modern world. 

    Often we experience alienation as customers when organisations conceive their clientèle in purely economic terms.  We may experience this in for example, in airline, telecommunications and fast food industries – customer-provider interactions are kept to a minimum and are strictly orchestrated – we are reduced to commodities and with each transaction the organisation becomes more powerful at our expense.

    Alienation is not the same as isolation or disengagement. It is potentially more sinister – it involves a diminution of aspects of human nature.  It is not simply ignoring someone it’s a more active process of regulation and imposition of externally convenient limits.

    Alienation is part of the price we pay for progress and economy.  If we want cheap air travel, digital devices and convenient nourishment then we will experience alienation.  Most people can cope and are willing to accept much in exchange for greater freedom at other times. 

    Similarly, all those ‘small cogs in a big wheel’ workers in multi-nationals, manufacturing industries and the like, certainly do experience alienation from product.  However, in contrast with the 1800’s when Marx first wrote about the topic, there are many possibilities for fulfilment in other ways.  People work in teams, take pride in achieving goals and have very rich lives outside of the workplace. 

    Today, we experience new and often more powerful manifestations of alienation.  One of the most prevalent is the way in which we treat people who are unemployed as economic commodities.  Certain skills are no longer regarded as useful while others are in demand.  The simplistic solution of reskilling is often proposed as a quick-fix for a more complex state of affairs.

    Participation is the opposite side of alienation and I argue that ‘learning to participate’ is the big, on-going task of adult education.  We will continue to experience alienation throughout our lives – for some it’s caused by new technology, others experience it in employment or as customers.  The antidote to alienation is participation and the path to participation is through learning.

    Participation is empowering, it involves purposeful activity that enriches the person while working with others.  It can manifest as engagement in the digital world but it is also evident in conscious decisions not to follow the trend.  When we learn to participate it may involve acquisition of new skills and competence but it is also an autonomous and liberating action.

    Alienation is a powerful influence on all our lives.  This is especially the case during hard times.  It is important that we establish strong foundations for our own well-being. Otherwise we become vulnerable, at risk of being overwhelmed by external forces.  We build our strength by becoming knowledgeable and making our own meaning.  This is what we do.

  • For Students,  Tips

    From marks to Marx: Shifting your mindset for learning

    We all like to achieve and when it comes to doing a course or gaining a qualification we want to achieve the best result possible.

    Naturally we want to get an A+ or a First Class Honour in whatever subject we study.  Striving to get a good mark – a Distinction, Merit or Commendation – is a useful approach to learning and for many people it is the driving force guiding their learning effort.

    Doo Lough County Mayo
    We all like to achieve in learning but what should we really aim for? (My picture of Doo Lough, County Mayo)

    However, it is worthwhile to ask if it the ‘best’ approach?  Is there a better, more fruitful and, in the long-term more rewarding target to aim for?

    I argue that there is and want to make a case for moving beyond a simple focus on marks and assessment to the more expansive idea of growing your mind through ideological critique and praxis.

    If you are an active participant on a course you will likely have learning goals.  These are implicit and explicit statements of what you wish to achieve.  How you approach different topics and learning challenges, where you apply effort and how you measure progress are all parts of your learning strategy which in turn is guided by your goals.

    It is useful to be aware of your learning goals and to be prepared to question and review them regularly. 

    What do I want to achieve? 

    This is the most important decision you can make about your own learning.  You could decide “I want to pass the exam” or even go further “I want to get an honours grade” or further again “I want first class honours”

    or

    you could go beyond grades and shift your goals toward an intrinsic interest in the subject and strive to master the topic in itself. 

    You could also consider goals that relate to your own competence such as “I want to develop a new design for….” or “I want to investigate why…..” or “I wish to become very knowledgeable on…..”.  These goals are stated without reference to the formal assessment process.

    Karl Marx in 1861

    As an adult, you can go further again.  Here I quote from Karl Marx, the last line from Thesis on Feuerbach

    The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways; the point is to change it.

    The term ‘praxis’ is used to denote a process whereby theory, skills or knowledge are used to realise and enact the potential therein.  Through the writings of Paulo Friere we see how literacy education results in emancipation.  Lives can be transformed and the prevailing order challenged.  Imagine that as a learning goal “I want to change the world”. 

    This is not some vague, idealistic notion that can be countered by the shallow challenge of “that’s all very well but I need to pass my exams”.  The most important goals in adult learning should be ideological critique and praxis.  Everyone who learns has a responsibility to contribute and improve our world. 

    Students in our schools, colleges and universities are often well placed to use praxis as a purpose and means of learning.  For example, in National College of Ireland we have an elective module on Service Learning available to our business undergraduates.  However, many students fail to grasp the opportunity.   They see the purpose of college in narrow terms and focus on their next assessment and look for formulae to get good marks without much effort.

    As educators we need to take responsibility for providing a limited view of learning.  Much of the assessment infrastructure is built around pre-defined learning outcomes and an instrumental view of what it means to achieve.  We need to question the system and challenge the underlying assumptions.  It’s time to critique the ideology of our education system – in short, to shift mindsets from marks to Marx.

    Strangely enough, at a personal level if you move your learning mindset beyond the next assessment and adopt critique and praxis as your ultimate learning goals you will likely achieve high marks in all that you do.

  • Feature,  Philosophy & Science of Learning

    Learning about Thinking from James Joyce

    In my view one of the best ways to study learning and thinking is to look to literature and in this arena one figure stands out for the manner in which he conveys the human thought process in print. I am of course referring to James Joyce.

    In this short review I present some aspects of Joyce’s work from the perspective of insights on how we think and learn.

    My argument is that great literature resonates with our thought processes. In reading Joyce we are provided with a working model of the inner structures and mechanisms through which we experience the world.

    I approach this analysis from the perspective of the average reader rather than the rich practice of Joycean scholarship. As such, my remarks are confined to my own, somewhat surface, impressions and interpretations of the literature. Almost at every point in Joyce’s work there are many layers of meaning and great pleasure can be derived from reading and rereading the passages.

    My analysis is based around five short lessons:

    Lesson One The Inner Narrator

    Consider the opening lines from A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man:

    Once upon a time and a very good time it was there was a moocow coming
    down along the road and this moocow that was coming down along the road
    met a nicens little boy named baby tuckoo…
    His father told him that story: his father looked at him through a
    glass: he had a hairy face.

    In this passage we are introduced to Stephen Dedalus as a child. The language is obviously childlike and there is a wonderful lyrical-jaunty quality about it. But who is the narrator? Is it Stephen or someone else? If it is someone else what age is the narrator?

    The use of subjective narration and narrative ambiguity is to be found throughout Joyce’s work. Joyce’s storytellers are never neutral they add to the meaning and the memory.

    The short story ‘A Painful Case’ from the Dubliners collection provides an apparently more straightforward example of self-narration in a description of the lonely main character of Mr Duffy:

    He had an odd autobiographical habit which led him to compose in his mind from time to time a short sentence about himself containing a subject in the third person and a predicate in the past tense. He never gave alms to beggars, and walked firmly, carrying a stout hazel.

    What’s interesting here is that this ‘odd autobiographical habit’ seems also to be in evidence in the first quotation above. I suggest that when the narrator says ‘his father told him that story’ it is actually Stephan recalling his childhood. The text reproduces these are memories infused as they are with the sensual realism of childhood experience together with evidence of more complex structures over-layered through adult recall and retelling.

    The take-away from this lesson is that ‘we are the stories we tell’ and we construct these stories through our own inner narrative.

    Lesson Two Structure and Meaning

    There is a wonderful Irish tune called the Mason’s Apron that has about six parts and when its played well it provides a great platform for musicians to show off their skills by varying the style and tempo whilst still finding a way pack to the central theme.

    In the same way Joyce’s Ulysses is a structural masterpiece not because it displays one great structural device but because it has so many. One way of appreciating this entire work is to see it as an exhibition of structural virtuosity.

    In addition to varieties of inner and outer narration, there is an episode written as a play complete with stage directions, there is also a section using newspaper narrative with headlines and a section (scholars call it the Ithaca episode) written as if it was meant to be learned by rote in the form of question and response. This hilarious situation involves the two characters Leopold Bloom and Stephen Dedalus who are both quite drunk as they arrive at Bloom’s home in Eccles Street:

    What action did Bloom make on their arrival at their destination?
    At the housesteps of the 4th of the equidifferent uneven numbers, number 7 Eccles street, he inserted his hand mechanically into the back pocket of his trousers to obtain his latchkey.

    Was it there?
    It was in the corresponding pocket of the trousers which he had worn on the day but one preceding.

    Why was he doubly irritated?
    Because he had forgotten and because he remembered that he had reminded himself twice not to forget.

    What were then the alternatives before the, premeditatedly (respectively) and inadvertently, keyless couple?
    To enter or not to enter. To knock or not to knock.

    Bloom’s decision?
    A stratagem. Resting his feet on the dwarf wall, he climbed over the area railings, compressed his hat on his head, grasped two points at the lower union of rails and stiles, lowered his body gradually by its length of five feet nine inches and a half to within two feet ten inches of the area pavement, and allowed his body to move freely in space by separating himself from the railings and crouching in preparation for the impact of the fall.

    This is great fun to read and the structure is often referred to as the catechism approach. Joyce was perhaps poking fun at the teaching methods he encountered for religion and theology.

    The take-away from this lesson is to recognise how we embed meaning in the structures and manner in which we communicate.


    Lesson Three Hypertext 

    Most people involved in computer science will recognise the term ‘hypertext’ (it is in fact the ‘h’ in the familiar http string that we find in Internet addresses). However, the origins of the term predate the Net. In the 1960’s Theodore H Nelson described the term as electronic text that was characterised as non sequential. By this he was referring to the reader’s ability to trace a series of different paths through the same piece of text. If you want a good example of this then look up ‘hypertext’ on wikipedia and see where your reading takes you.

    Reading hypertext is an active process as it involves choice and exploration of layers of meaning. This characteristic is also true of great works of literature (I am not the first to posit this idea and should you so wish you can hypertext off to study Derrida, Foucault and Landow).

    Long before the Internet Joyce understood the power of interconnection, inference, hints and echoes in literature. Throughout Ulysses there is an obvious underlying intertextual resonance with Homer’s Odyssey.  However, the hyper-textual framework extends throughout the novel and it conveys a much deeper, broader and inter-connected network of meaning. For example, one of the characters Stephen Dedalus was first encountered in an earlier novel by Joyce, while the timeframe as one day (16th of June 1904) starts twice: once with Stephen and once with Leopold.

    Each episode has an underlying theme and it’s almost impossible to read the main text without your thoughts spinning off in many different directions. In the extract below from Sirens we encounter a form of musical overture to Bloom’s later erotic observations of waitresses in the Ormond Hotel:

    BRONZE BY GOLD HEARD THE HOOFIRONS, STEELYRINING IMPERthnthn thnthnthn.
    Chips, picking chips off rocky thumbnail, chips. Horrid! And gold flushed more.
    A husky fifenote blew.
    Blew. Blue bloom is on the
    Gold pinnacled hair.
    A jumping rose on satiny breasts of satin, rose of Castille.
    Trilling, trilling: I dolores.
    Peep! Who’s in the… peepofgold?
    Tink cried to bronze in pity.
    And a call, pure, long and throbbing. Longindying call.
    Decoy. Soft word. But look! The bright stars fade. O rose! Notes chirruping answer. Castille. The morn is breaking.
    Jingle jingle jaunted jingling.

    The take-away from this lesson is that much of our thinking is characterised as more like a hyper-textual network of associations rather than any logical, hierarchical or similarly organised system.
     
    Lesson Four A Theory of Aesthetics 
    In the Portrait there are a series of episodes involving Stephen working through some theological and philosophical arguments. The following extracts are spoken by Stephen as a college student to a fellow student called Lynch and concern the essence of beauty – I suggest that Joyce’s own views that are in evidence here:

    … Plato, I believe, said that beauty is the splendour of truth. I don’t think that it has a meaning, but the true and the beautiful are akin. Truth is beheld by the intellect which is appeased by the most satisfying relations of the intelligible; beauty is beheld by the imagination which is appeased by the most satisfying relations of the sensible. The first step in the direction of truth is to understand the frame and scope of the intellect itself, to comprehend the act itself of intellection.

    and later when they argue on the subjectivity of beauty

    This hypothesis, Stephen repeated, is the other way out: that, though the same object may not seem beautiful to all people, all people who admire a beautiful object find in it certain relations which satisfy and coincide with the stages themselves of all esthetic apprehension. These relations of the sensible, visible to you through one form and to me through another, must be therefore the necessary qualities of beauty. Now, we can return to our old friend saint Thomas for another pennyworth of wisdom.

    Even though these arguments are provided as the student Stephen working through his own approach to philosophy (and there is much evidence in the text of a kind of an innocent, tentative naivety in this) we are presented, as in the case of the examples above, with some very useful insights.

    The take-away from this lesson is Joyce’s affirmation of what Jurgan Habermas later refers to as communicative rationality – process by which societal constructs such as beauty, truth and justice are formed.

    Lesson Five Stream of Consciousness
    Finally, Joyce is well known for his use of a stream-of-consciousness technique to convey an impression of how people think.

    The frequently cited example is perhaps the Molly Bloom soliloquy which comes at the end of Ulysses. The extract I present here is from an earlier part of the book where Stephen is walking on the beach. I have inserted a dash / to indicate the transition from narrator to stream-of-consciousness and back.

    His gaze brooded on his broadtoed boots, a buck’s castoffs, /nebeneinander/. He counted the creases of rucked leather wherein another’s foot had nested warm. /The foot that beat the ground in tripudium, foot I dislove. But you were delighted when Esther Osvalt’s shoe went on you: girl I knew in Paris. Tiens, quel petit pied! Staunch friend, a brother soul:
    Wilde’s love that dare not speak its name. His arm: Cranly’s arm. He now will leave me. And the blame? As I am. As I am. All or not at all.
    nebeneinander. He counted the creases of rucked leather wherein another’s foot had nested warm. The foot that beat the ground in tripudium, foot I dislove. But you were delighted when Esther Osvalt’s shoe went on you: girl I knew in Paris. Tiens, quel petit pied! Staunch friend, a brother soul: Wilde’s love that dare not speak its name. His arm: Cranly’s arm. He now will leave me. And the blame? As I am. As I am. All or not at all.

    The take-away from this lesson is in the form of ‘exhibit a’ – this is what we are taking about when we think of ‘thinking’. Surprisingly, we don’t get grammar as we know it, there seems to be little by way of logical progression or obvious structure and yet we have to agree (I certainly do) that this exhibit rings very true. I have often argued that writing is a form of thinking and that a consequence of the writing process is the manner in which it forces us to impose progressive arguments and logical structure on our thoughts. Thankfully, stream-of-consciousness as above would seem to be the norm though.

    In the preceding discussion I have presented, what I choose to call, five lessons from Joyce that provide insights on how we think and how we experience the world. These are just the tip of the iceberg and further reading of Joyce will continue to provide a powerful lens through which we can view our own minds and those of others.

  • Philosophy & Science of Learning

    Learning Without Assessment and The Willie Clancy Summer School

    If you’re ever lucky enough to find yourself in Miltown Malbay, County Clare, Ireland, around the early part of July each year you will find a most wonderful musical and learning event taking place: the Willie Clancy Summer School. Sadly, one of its founders Muiris Ó Rócháin passed away this year. Many years ago I made a TV documentary called Up Sráid Eoin about the wren boys of Dingle and Muiris featured prominantly in the film. Ar dheis De go raibh a anam usual (trans: May he be honoured at the right hand of God) .

    Now let me tell you about this school. It uses a form of cascade to facilitate musicians of all levels (and ages) to improve their playing of traditional music. The development of Irish set dancing skills is also an integral part of the week long programme. So experts teach the proficient, the proficient teach the novices etc.. In addition, there is a very strong social aspect to playing traditional music, its fullest expression is through group playing with a mixture of fiddle, flute, tin whistle, uilleann pipes, accordion, guitars, banjo and bodhráns.

    Throughout the week there is a mix of structured classes and spontaneous sessions usually in the local pubs. These sessions embrace young and old, expert and novice – what we get is one continuous, joyous expression of music – all the while people are learning new tunes and developing their skills.

    There is no assessment, no barriers to ‘giving it a go’, no penalties for mistakes and great learning takes place.

    This entire approach is completely at variance with our institutionalised version of education. We often take for granted the assumption that all learning must be assessed and we see learning as an individual and often lonely process. The Willie Clancy Summer School gives us a different perspective on this.

    Thanks Muiris.

  • For Students,  Tips

    How to Write a Literature Review for a Dissertation


    Writing a Literature Review
    Writing a dissertation is one of the great learning tasks of college education. However, many students find it a daunting process. One of the first challenges you face is writing a literature review and the purpose of this post is to help you get started with the process, to keep you on track as you proceed and to provide a means of self-reviewing your outputs when you (think you) have completed.
    Let’s start with a simple set of questions: What constitutes a literature review? What is it used for? and What distinguishes a good literature review from a poor one?
    As the name implies, a literature review is a review of other people’s work in a particular field of scholarship. Such a review is always directed and informed by the research question to be addressed. For example, if your research question is related to adult literacy then you will need to provide a review of other works, be they theoretical models, research reports or practice studies, that relate to adult literacy. Most importantly, a literature review cannot be of any value unless it is referenced to some form of research question or problem.

    It is a common mistake for students to misunderstand the purpose of a literature review – it is not a means for the student to demonstrate wide ranging knowledge or to reproduce theory or to provide a history of developments in a particular field (although it can involve each of these). It is simply a matter of ‘re’viewing the literature from the perspective of the research question or topic. In other words, asking and addressing questions of the form ‘if such and such says or has found this then what are the implications for my research?’ 

    The purpose of a literature review is to guide and support you and your reader in furthering the investigation or inquiry at hand. In academic scholarship you can and should build on the works of others – provided they are properly cited. 
    Here is an analogy that might be useful: If you were planning to visit Rome then you would likely consult a guidebook and some web sites for information. You would be very interested in the section dealing with the specific area were you intend to stay, and you would also focus on the sites you plan to visit. To a certain extent, you don’t need to read everything in the guidebook. However, you might need to bring the guidebook with you and consult it during your visit.  Imagine if each visitor had to explore the entire city for the first time – we would have very poor experiences in Rome. It is wise therefore to find out from other sources all that you need to know to make your particular journey as successful as possible. So (please forgive me if this sounds patronising!) consider the following – the value of a guide book is always considered with respect to the place and time of your visit and similarly, literature reviews are intended to support the research inquiry at hand.

    In academic scholarship you can use a literature review to address the following issues:

    • To outline a conceptual framework for your research question
    • To develop an argument as to the importance of your research question and to discuss the wider implications amd context
    • To discuss the theoretical and philosophical (epistemological) underpinnings of the problem
    • To refine, focus and improve the research question
    • To discuss relevant and related theory, models or frameworks
    • To discuss other relevant research
    • To discuss research approaches and methods (although a fuller treatment of this is normally part of a later section on methodology) 
    A good literature review is never passive – the writer is constantly making connections between the work of others and the current research or inquiry. Indicators of a good review:
    • It is constructed from and connected to the research question
    • It is comprehensive in relation to the research question
    • It is connected and well structured
    • It provides a sound foundation for the other components of the dissertation
    • The writer adopts a critical stance  
    The most straightforward way to organise a literature review is to structure it around the central themes that arise from the research question.
    Here are 10 questions you can use to self-assess your literature review:
    1. Have I clearly stated my research question or problem at the onset?
    2. Have I provided an introduction that indicates the structure of my review and a rationale for that structure?
    3. Have I discussed each of the concepts/terms as used in my research question and provided a rationale for their inclusion?
    4. Have I conducted a comprehensive search for, and included the key relevant theoretical and research works related to my topic?
    5. Have I connected all parts of the review to my research question?
    6. Have I adopted a critical stance in my writing?
    7. Have I included discussion on other similar research?
    8. Have I argued for the importance of my research question and framed it in terms of wider issues and philosophies?
    9. Have I correctly used the Harvard Referencing System or similar?
    10. Have I proof read the review such that it is free from typos and errors?