In today’s programming class, we
finished our web app on Heroku! It’s very simple and only says “Hello World!”,
but it’s a start in order to build more interesting apps like Euclid’s Sorting
Hat.
Today’s debriefing was a little
different than it’s used to, because Bert showed us a video called, Stuck on an Escalator, about how people
think they are stuck in something when they are really not stuck at all. The
other thing Bert shared with us was a couple of quotes regarding education and
personal commitment. The main reason Bert shared these with us was to reflect
on how we are feeling at the MPC, and how that is a natural thing to feel that
we can overcome if we work together.
This is the quote he showed to us:
"Socrates was one of the first to recognize the intimate and necessary relationship between education and personal commitment. His pedagogy was skillfully shaped to penetrate the protective armor of custom and opinion to release in the suddenly exposed and vulnerable individual a sense of shocked engagement. The aim of the elenchus—the name given to his teaching method—was to give birth to a desire for authentic learning. Intellectually, the elenchus, as it worked on the student, moved from strongly held opinion, to floundering uncertainty, to loss, to not-knowing, that engendered the authentic quest for meaning, the desire for finding out. Emotionally, the elenchus began with smug ease (‘I know what I think’) that dissolved into unease, then into anguish, then into concern and, finally, into collaborative and reflective curiosity." (Peter Abbs, The Educational Imperative: Socratic and Aesthetic Learning, p. 17)
This is the quote he showed to us:
"Socrates was one of the first to recognize the intimate and necessary relationship between education and personal commitment. His pedagogy was skillfully shaped to penetrate the protective armor of custom and opinion to release in the suddenly exposed and vulnerable individual a sense of shocked engagement. The aim of the elenchus—the name given to his teaching method—was to give birth to a desire for authentic learning. Intellectually, the elenchus, as it worked on the student, moved from strongly held opinion, to floundering uncertainty, to loss, to not-knowing, that engendered the authentic quest for meaning, the desire for finding out. Emotionally, the elenchus began with smug ease (‘I know what I think’) that dissolved into unease, then into anguish, then into concern and, finally, into collaborative and reflective curiosity." (Peter Abbs, The Educational Imperative: Socratic and Aesthetic Learning, p. 17)
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario