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E-raamat: Textbook and the Lecture

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Why are the fundamentals of education apparently so little changed in our era of digital technology? Is their obstinate persistence evidence of resilience or obsolescence? Such questions can best be answered not by imagining an uncertain high-tech future, but by examining a well-documented past—a history of instruction and media that extends from Gilgamesh to Google. Norm Friesen looks to the combination and reconfiguration of oral, textual, and more recent media forms to understand the longevity of so many educational arrangements and practices.

Friesen examines the interrelationship of reading, writing, and pedagogy in the case of the lecture and the textbook—from their premodern to their postmodern incarnations. Over hundreds of years, these two forms have integrated textual, oral, and (more recently) digital media and connected them with changing pedagogical and cultural priorities. The Textbook and the Lecture opens new possibilities for understanding not only mediated pedagogical practices and their reform but also gradual changes in our conceptions of the knowing subject and of knowledge itself.

Drawing on wide-ranging scholarship in fields as diverse as media ecology and German-language media studies, Foucauldian historiography, and even archaeological research, The Textbook and the Lecture is a fascinating investigation of educational media.

Arvustused

Through its multiple examples and case studies, The Textbook and the Lecture shows the philosophical assumptions underpinning longstanding debates and serves to inform and perhaps even empower educational workers by helping them understand why they do what they do. LSE Friesen's book should be attractive to students and instructors of curriculum and instruction as well as instructional designers and educational technology professionals. Educational start-ups and entrepreneurs might fnd it particularly helpful in placing new products in the context of the longue durée of education history. Donald Lankiewicz, Emerson College, Publishing Research Quarterly

Muu info

Encouraging readers to look at newer forms of media used in education through a historical lens, Friesen deconstructs two successful archetypes of educational media-the lecture and the textbook-to expose their deep structure. This book should be attractive to teachers, school administrators, and anyone involved in higher education. -- William A. Ferster, author of Sage on the Screen: Education, Media, and How We Learn
Preface: Education as Technological from the Start vii
PART I Education and Media, New and Old
1 No More Pencils, No More Books?
3(14)
2 Writing Instruction in the Twenty-First Century: 2000 BCE versus 2000 CE
17(20)
PART II Media, Psychology, and Theory
3 Psychology and the Rationalist "Transcript of the Mind"
37(10)
4 The Romantic Tradition: "A Cry of Nature"
47(8)
5 Romantic versus Rationalist Reform
55(12)
6 Theorizing Media---by the Book
67(20)
PART III The Textbook and the Lecture: Re-forming the Book and Performing the Text
7 A Textbook Case
87(23)
8 From Translatio Studiorum to "Intelligences Thinking in Unison"
110(16)
9 The Lecture as Postmodern Performance
126(13)
Conclusion: Educations and Generations 139(14)
Notes 153(12)
Bibliography 165(10)
Index 175
Norm Friesen is a professor in the Department of Educational Technology at Boise State University. He is the editor and translator of Forgotten Connections: On Culture and Upbringing and the editor of Media Transatlantic: Media Theory in North America and German-Speaking Europe.