TY - JOUR
T1 - Revisiting the student centered
T2 - Review of Bruce Macfarlane's Freedom to Learn: The Threat to Student Academic Freedom and Why it Needs to be Reclaimed.
AU - Sarauw, Laura Louise
AU - Alemu, Sintayehu Kassaye
AU - Welch, Penny
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Has the orthodoxy of progressive pedagogy, or what praise as the student centered, become means of an overall managerial turn that erodes students’ freedom do learn? This is the main question in Bruce Macfarlane’s book Freedom to learn - The Threat to Student Academic Freedom and Why it Needs to be Reclaimed (2017). In eighth well-written chapters, Macfarlane explores an often-overlooked paradox in higher education teaching and learning: The idea of the student centered learning, deriving from humanist psychology and progressive pedagogy, has been hijacked by increased and continuous demands of bodily, cognitive and emotional performance that restricts students’ freedom to develop as autonomous adults. Macfarlane’s catch 22 is, however, that his heritage from humanist psychology, i.e. the idea that we as humans are born with an inner potential that we should be free to realise though education, paradoxically supports the neoliberal paradigm that he opposes throughout the book
AB - Has the orthodoxy of progressive pedagogy, or what praise as the student centered, become means of an overall managerial turn that erodes students’ freedom do learn? This is the main question in Bruce Macfarlane’s book Freedom to learn - The Threat to Student Academic Freedom and Why it Needs to be Reclaimed (2017). In eighth well-written chapters, Macfarlane explores an often-overlooked paradox in higher education teaching and learning: The idea of the student centered learning, deriving from humanist psychology and progressive pedagogy, has been hijacked by increased and continuous demands of bodily, cognitive and emotional performance that restricts students’ freedom to develop as autonomous adults. Macfarlane’s catch 22 is, however, that his heritage from humanist psychology, i.e. the idea that we as humans are born with an inner potential that we should be free to realise though education, paradoxically supports the neoliberal paradigm that he opposes throughout the book
U2 - 10.3167/latiss.2019.120106
DO - 10.3167/latiss.2019.120106
M3 - Literature review
SN - 1755-2273
VL - 12
SP - 93
EP - 102
JO - Learning and Teaching: The International Journal of Higher Education in the Social Sciences
JF - Learning and Teaching: The International Journal of Higher Education in the Social Sciences
IS - 1
ER -