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Building a Publicly Responsive Education from the Ground Up: Ethical Challenges and Possibilities Sharon Todd Department of Education Maynooth University.

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Presentation on theme: "Building a Publicly Responsive Education from the Ground Up: Ethical Challenges and Possibilities Sharon Todd Department of Education Maynooth University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Building a Publicly Responsive Education from the Ground Up: Ethical Challenges and Possibilities Sharon Todd Department of Education Maynooth University

2 Framing ideas…. Reclaiming the term ‘Public Education’ Ethics as a relationship to otherness at the centre of public education Marginalised communities and individuals need to claim their space and their right to speak in ways that will be heard

3 Outline 1.Why Public? Why Now? 2.Ethical Challenges of Facing Diversity 3.Ethical Possibilities 4. The Day in Question (2010) 5.Building a Publicly Responsive Education

4 1. Why Public? Why Now? Tensions between: educating the masses in order to preserve order in society and educating them to create a learned, participatory public citizenry; education’s role in conserving cultural tradition and its role in promoting agents of free thought and change; education’s task in fulfilling private interests and its place in serving the common good; the ideal of education being available for all and the reality of exclusion conducted in its name.

5 Aims of public education are currently under threat Scope of public education is being challenged

6 How do we understand diversity? Cultural Diversity Religions Ethnicities Languages Economic levels Cultures not distinct ‘groups’, but rather defined through overlapping and sometimes contesting ‘practices’.

7 Resulting in… The ‘exoticisation’ of others – ‘positive’ attributes – ‘negative’ stereotypes and biases A desire for ‘them’ to be like ‘us’ – Who gets defined as ‘us’ is often dependent upon who is the ‘them’ – Reflects more about ourselves than it does others

8 Equality 1 – Treating everyone the same – Commonality; ‘humanity’ Equality 2 (equity) – Treating everyone differently based on their different needs – Diversity, pluralism, difference

9 Philosophical framings – Pluralism as a human condition (Hannah Arendt) – Difference as basic not incidental (Emmanuel Levinas) – Diversity not just numerical but constitutive (Zygmunt Bauman – polycultural society)

10 2. Ethical Possibilities Transformation – More than socialization or qualification (which are necessary aims of schooling). At its core is freedom. (Biesta, 2015) – Moving from ‘noise’ to voices that can be heard (Säfström, 2011) – Schooling may or may not practice ‘education’

11 Listening and Voice – Face the difficulty of giving something of ourselves to others through actively engaged forms of listening – Listening is not a behaviour but an experience – Mutual activity - the other person needs to feel they have been listened to – Attentive to very otherness of the other, not only to what is being said

12 3. The Day in Question

13 https://www.dropbox.com/s/bmrvdibo22m7g qw/Clip%202.wmv?oref=e&n=337191043 https://www.dropbox.com/s/bmrvdibo22m7g qw/Clip%202.wmv?oref=e&n=337191043 http://section8.ie/wordpress/?p=304

14 4. Building a Publicly Responsive Education Staging spaces carefully to create opportunities for voice and listening Educational processes A common project of working toward change Building a Publicly Responsive Education is part of what it means to practice Ethical Education


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