Agony in Education: The Importance of Struggle in the Process of Learning
Enchanted with novelty and obsessed with power, control, and efficiency, technocrats eagerly and imprudently plow under what they deem anachronistic relics. Utility and ease are their passwords, and the poor individual with sole recourse to personal resources and ingenuity is viewed as a waste of time and energy. What this means for education is that uniformity, predesigned programs, and abdication to an elite corps of experts have come to dominate and characterize our institutions. As antidotes for the technological age, Kuhlman suggests motifs and imagery from the classical world, such as agon, arete, and paideia. He reminds us of the agonies of the artist in the gestation of the great, soul-fulfilling creations of our past. He wonders if truly great accomplishments are possible without the pain and agony of individual struggle. He suggests that the individual psyche is withering on the vine because it is not expected to undergo the suffering necessary to transform it into an educated self.
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Agony in Education: The Importance of Struggle in the Process of Learning
Enchanted with novelty and obsessed with power, control, and efficiency, technocrats eagerly and imprudently plow under what they deem anachronistic relics. Utility and ease are their passwords, and the poor individual with sole recourse to personal resources and ingenuity is viewed as a waste of time and energy. What this means for education is that uniformity, predesigned programs, and abdication to an elite corps of experts have come to dominate and characterize our institutions. As antidotes for the technological age, Kuhlman suggests motifs and imagery from the classical world, such as agon, arete, and paideia. He reminds us of the agonies of the artist in the gestation of the great, soul-fulfilling creations of our past. He wonders if truly great accomplishments are possible without the pain and agony of individual struggle. He suggests that the individual psyche is withering on the vine because it is not expected to undergo the suffering necessary to transform it into an educated self.
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Agony in Education: The Importance of Struggle in the Process of Learning

Agony in Education: The Importance of Struggle in the Process of Learning

by Edward Kuhlman
Agony in Education: The Importance of Struggle in the Process of Learning

Agony in Education: The Importance of Struggle in the Process of Learning

by Edward Kuhlman

Hardcover

$95.00 
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Overview

Enchanted with novelty and obsessed with power, control, and efficiency, technocrats eagerly and imprudently plow under what they deem anachronistic relics. Utility and ease are their passwords, and the poor individual with sole recourse to personal resources and ingenuity is viewed as a waste of time and energy. What this means for education is that uniformity, predesigned programs, and abdication to an elite corps of experts have come to dominate and characterize our institutions. As antidotes for the technological age, Kuhlman suggests motifs and imagery from the classical world, such as agon, arete, and paideia. He reminds us of the agonies of the artist in the gestation of the great, soul-fulfilling creations of our past. He wonders if truly great accomplishments are possible without the pain and agony of individual struggle. He suggests that the individual psyche is withering on the vine because it is not expected to undergo the suffering necessary to transform it into an educated self.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780897893749
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 03/30/1994
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.56(d)
Lexile: 1390L (what's this?)

About the Author

EDWARD L. KUHLMAN is Professor of Education at Messiah College in Grantham, Pennsylvania. He is the author of An Overwhelming Interference (1985) and Master Teacher (1987).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Tyranny of Technology
Struggle and Civility
The Agon Motif
Agonism in Education
Transcendence and Technology
Ciphering the Schools
A Note about Narcissism
Agon and Motivation
Imagery of Agony
Agon and Creativity
Agon and Athletic Imagery
Agon and Military Metaphors
Experiential Education
A Modest Proposal: Agonic Curriculum
Bibliography
Index

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