Collaborative Education: Difference between revisions
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(Created page with "Collaborative education refers to collaboration between teacher and student to make that relationship mutually beneficial for the sake of learning on both sides: #Student is...") |
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#It is the student's responsibility to correct the teacher, if the teacher cannot correct themselves. | #It is the student's responsibility to correct the teacher, if the teacher cannot correct themselves. | ||
#Silence is acquiescence | #Silence is acquiescence | ||
#Everything is up for questioning, and the curriculum evolves continuously as the learning community grows. | |||
Applications: if material is presented and nobody questions it or corrects it, that material becomes the accepted version of 'the truth.' This applies to both the curriculum and its applications. For example, if a student designs something and the teacher doesn't question it, the design is assumed to be correct. | Applications: if material is presented and nobody questions it or corrects it, that material becomes the accepted version of 'the truth.' This applies to both the curriculum and its applications. For example, if a student designs something and the teacher doesn't question it, the design is assumed to be correct. |
Revision as of 03:25, 2 April 2022
Collaborative education refers to collaboration between teacher and student to make that relationship mutually beneficial for the sake of learning on both sides:
- Student is willing to change role with teacher, and vice versa. Relationship is fluid and without ego.
- Teacher is willing to be corrected, and therefore is willing to learn
- Student is willing to be corrected, and therefoer is willing to learn
- It is the teacher's responsibility to correct the student, if student cannot correct themselves
- It is the student's responsibility to correct the teacher, if the teacher cannot correct themselves.
- Silence is acquiescence
- Everything is up for questioning, and the curriculum evolves continuously as the learning community grows.
Applications: if material is presented and nobody questions it or corrects it, that material becomes the accepted version of 'the truth.' This applies to both the curriculum and its applications. For example, if a student designs something and the teacher doesn't question it, the design is assumed to be correct.