Complexity and Education Inquiries Into Learning, Teaching, and Research

“Complexity and Education: Inquiries Into Learning, Teaching, and Research” by Brent Davis, published by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates in 2006, delves into the role of complexity thinking in educational research and practice. This 202-page book presents a pragmatic approach, emphasizing theoretical premises and methodology rather than specific applications. It aims to position complexity thinking as a significant perspective for educators and researchers, exploring global issues through an educational lens.
Readers will find discussions on various practices and studies informed by complexity research, along with practical advice for structuring projects in alignment with complexity thinking. The book addresses a range of phenomena, including the workings of the brain, consciousness, intelligence, and the impact of emergent technologies on social dynamics. By challenging conventional assumptions and theoretical commitments, “Complexity and Education” serves as an introduction to this emerging field, particularly for educational researchers, graduate students, and inquiry-oriented teacher practitioners.
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This book explores the contributions, actual and potential, of complexity thinking to educational research and practice. While its focus is on the theoretical premises and the methodology, not specific applications, the aim is pragmatic–to present complexity thinking as an important and appropriate attitude for educators and educational researchers. Part I is concerned with global issues around complexity thinking, as read through an educational lens. Part II cites a diversity of practices and studies that are either explicitly informed by or that might be aligned with complexity research, and offers focused and practiced advice for structuring projects in ways that are consistent with complexity thinking.
Complexity thinking offers a powerful alternative to the linear, reductionist approaches to inquiry that have dominated the sciences for hundreds of years and educational research for more than a century. It has captured the attention of many researchers whose studies reach across traditional disciplinary boundaries to investigate phenomena such as: How does the brain work? What is consciousness? What is intelligence? What is the role of emergent technologies in shaping personalities and possibilities? How do social collectives work? What is knowledge? Complexity research posits that a deep similarity among these phenomena is that each points toward some sort of system that learns. The authors’ intent is not to offer a complete account of the relevance of complexity thinking to education, not to prescribe and delimit, but to challenge readers to examine their own assumptions and theoretical commitments–whether anchored by commonsense, classical thought or any of the posts (such as postmodernism, poststructuralism, postcolonialism, postpositivism, postformalism, postepistemology) that mark the edges of current discursive possibility.
Complexity and Education is THE introduction to the emerging field of complexity thinking for the education community. It is specifically relevant for educational researchers, graduate students, and inquiry-oriented teacher practitioners.
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