On Learning, Volume 2 Philosophies, Concepts and Practices

On Learning, Volume 2 Philosophies, Concepts and Practices by David Scott is published by UCL Press in 2024 and comprises 320 pages. This volume presents an original interpretation of learning as both a concept and a practice, with contributions that delve into the intricate relationship between knowledge and learning. The authors examine these meta-concepts through various lenses, including epistemic, social, political, and economic frameworks, highlighting their connections to other relevant ideas.
Readers will find a thorough exploration of significant concepts related to learning, such as epistemology, phenomenology, and critical realism. The book addresses the complexities of learning and knowledge while challenging reductionist views that have influenced educational management. It also emphasizes the importance of values in understanding our lives and the normative aspects of social policy and theory. This edition invites readers to engage with philosophical discussions that question conventional narratives surrounding education and assessment.
Official synopsis Publisher
An original and provocative interpretation of learning as a concept and as a practice.
The contributors to this volume focus on two meta-concepts: knowledge and learning, on the relationship between the two, and the way these can be framed in epistemic, social, political, and economic terms. Knowledge and learning, as meta-concepts, are positioned in various networks or constellations of meaning, principally: their antecedents, their relations to other relevant concepts, and the way the concepts are used in the lifeworld.
The various authors in this book explore several important concepts that are relevant to the idea of learning: Meta-concepts such as epistemology, inferential role semantics, phenomenology, rationality, thinking, hermeneutics, critical realism, and pragmatism. Meso-concepts such as probability, woman, training, assessment, education, system, race, friendship, Bildung, curriculum, ecology and pedagogy. Like David Scott’s first volume of On Learning, this collection also focuses on philosophy, concepts, and practices as a response to empiricist and positivist conceptions of knowledge. It challenges reductionist ideas of learning that have filtered through to the management of our schools, colleges, and universities; confronts over-simplified messages about learning, knowledge, curriculum, and assessment; and fosters the denial that values are central to understanding how we live and how we should live, the normative dimension to social policy and social theory.
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