Zero pedagogy: A hyperbolic case for curation and creation over education in the age of the MOOC (#moocmooc)

The crazy argument for Zero pedagogy

Pedagogy of the Oppressed
Pedagogy of the Oppressed (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Pedagogy does not matter. It has always been a discipline aimed at making people learn something they don’t particularly want to learn.

If we can truly provide open access to all the resources necessary for learning, then it won’t matter what order, format, etc. they are in. People with sufficient motivation have always been able to learn it.

True, there are other barriers to access than cost or availability in space. Some types of materials can be inaccessible to people with certain modal disabilities (modes being sight, hearing, cognitive decoding difficulties, etc.). The other types of barriers can be barriers of language or prior learning.

But we can harness the power of networked communities to help remove those types of barrier. Masses of people are learning to type. Let them transcribe YouTube videos. Others are learning foreign languages, let them translate texts. Having a voice coaching lesson? Record some blogs into audio! And so on.

The only pedagogical move necessary for a MOOC is the removal of any unified pedagogy. The rest of the effort should be focused on open access, open communities and open content.

This may not square well with traditional curricula and conceptions of education. But patterns resembling traditional schooling will emerge. But if they emerge with less central control, consistency and, please, please, less excellence, we will all be better for it.

Some background of pedagogical skepticism

A few weeks ago Mills Kelly of edwired.org was prompted by my comment to look for an X-prize style award "Recognizing excellence in transforming learning". The original comment was:
“I’ve been searching in vain for an educational reform aimed at content or pedagogy that made a transformation of the education system in accordance with its goals. And I could not find one.”
My response to his call was skeptical:
The problem is that it’s not difficult to find examples of “teaching excellence” (as appalling a cliche as it is). From what I understand of your “Lying about history” course, Mills, I’m sure you’d be a candidate.

There are also a whole lot of approaches that have produced amazing learning at all levels. Montessori, Critical education, Problem-based learning, Project-based learning or even Synthetic phonics. When led by dedicated and enthusiastic educators, all of these can succeed. And there’s plenty of evidence of this. What I’m asking about, though, is an example of one of these turned into a system-wide reform, that at the very least, transformed outcomes and, at best, society in a way they set out.

But the reason there aren’t any, I have begun to suspect, is because they are impossible. System-wide reforms are subject to different processes and factors than pilots or individual experiments. As I said, the only reforms that can succeed in this way are those aimed at funding, governance or access (which is the reason I’m so bullish on MOOCs).

The problem with an X Prize is that it only works with problems that can be measured on a uni-dimensional scale. An electric vehicle will travel X miles, a shuttle with X per cent of private funding will deliver a payload. But any putative educational reform that would be worth such a prize would 1. not be measurable along a single scale, 2. take too long to see the results, and 3. could only be done one at a time in any one country (and if run in several countries at once would not be transferable).

Of course, you could have an X Prize system for individual achievements but never with the assumption that the winning approach would be implemented system wide. But it seems to me what you’re talking about is some sort of a (micro) grant system for teaching parallel to the one for research. These exist in different forms already but it would be interesting to see how it would work if they became more of a norm rather than the exception.

When I put this together with my heretical rejection of pedagogy above, I come to the…

Conclusion

English: IMERIR pedagogy Français : pédagogie ...
English: IMERIR pedagogy Français : pédagogie à l'IMERIR (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Despite its etymology, pedagogy [leading of boys], cannot be given. It must be sought. The learner is her own pedagogue. There may be more or less clearly given explanations, more or less productive sequences of learning, more or less accessible learning materials. But none have made, will make or can make a difference to the resistant learner.

If pedagogy could really make a difference to mass learning, it would have already done so. Advances in mass literacy, numeracy and other skill increases seem to always happen prior to putative advances in pedagogy but following the expansion of access.

A self-directed, self-motivated learner, will take any resources (no matter how pedagogically naive or badly instructionally designed - Khan Academy, iTunesU lectures, iPad ebooks, labs, conventional classes or TED videos) and use them to learn. As the learner becomes more aware of their own learning (gaining metacognitive skills), they will look for resources that suit their learning better. And, in many cases, will create such resources. That’s why we need to encourage a culture of the remix. Or in starker terms: Curation and creation over education.

Note on equality

Diversity and equality are fundamentally incomensurable. Most of the time we keep them in a precarious equilibrium but at times of flux, this becomes unbalenced. So perhaps the next step in a MOOC pedagogy is a quest for equality in diversity. And, I would not be opposed to asking the likes of Dewey and Freire for inspiration here because standardized testing or traditional credentials are not it!

Inspirations and irritations

This post is loosely following up on the following:

Discuss, go ahead, you know you want to!

Archive comments

16 comments archived from the original WordPress blog. New comments below.

  1. Robin Wharton (@rswharton)
    After our productive exchange during the #moocmooc Twitter chat today, I wanted to take some time to respond in a more considered way to your post. As you observed during that exchange, I think we weren't making an appropriate separation between the idea of teacher as a guide or facilitator, and the idea of the teacher as a source of learning. At heart, I'm old school; I still return to Augustine's "On the Teacher" as a source of inspiration and a guiding foundation for how I think of myself as a teacher. In an imagined dialogue with his deceased son, a dialogue modeled on a Socratic exchange, Augustine argues, inter alia, that only a fool would send a child to school to learn what the teacher knows. Learning occurs when the student realizes what he already knows. For Augustine, the dawning of the light of the student's internal knowledge is a manifestation of the divine. For me, I think it represents the moment the student accepts the daunting responsibility of her own agency as a learner. Nevertheless, I think Augustine was definitely on to something. Learning involves far more than the transfer of knowledge from instructor to pupil. Learning is a dialogue, an exchange in which the student's engaged and active participation is absolutely essential to the generation of knowledge. Pedagogy has a long, long history. Throughout that history, debates have raged over what role, exactly, the teacher should play in the learning process. One of the reasons Hybrid Pedagogy exists is to try and make sure those discussing technology and education reform don't forget the history. You are right, MOOCs disrupt paradigms in which the teacher is the source of knowledge. They call into question what we even mean by the words "teacher" and "pedagogy." I don't think that necessarily means, though, that the MOOCs we build won't benefit from both. Thank you very much for this provocative post and for contributing to the #moocmooc discussion. I've learned a great deal from our dialogue!
  2. Dominik Lukeš
    As seems to happen so often, through all the discussion we end up fundamentally in agreement. Though, I probably could not be less of a Platonist. But I would get behind Augustine if we just changed it to "Learning occurs when the student realizes what he CAN know."
  3. Zero Pedagogy: Curation and Creation Over Education in MOOC Era | #moocmooc) | Campus Entrepreneurship
    [...] could. Today (day #3) the topic is Participant Pedagogy. Thanks Dominik Lukes for this interesting blog post on learning, participants and pedagogy: Despite its etymology, pedagogy [leading of boys], cannot [...]
  4. Curation and Creation Over Pedagogy and Classical Education « Things I grab, motley collection
    [...] Full article: http://researchity.net/2012/08/15/zero-pedagogy-a-hyperbolic-case-for-curation-and-creation-over-edu... [...]
  5. Zero Pedagogy: Curation and Creation Over Education in MOOC Era | The Entrepreneurship Blog
    [...] could. Today (day #3) the topic is Participant Pedagogy. Thanks Dominik Lukes for this interesting blog post on learning, participants and pedagogy: Despite its etymology, pedagogy [leading of boys], cannot [...]
  6. Zero Pedagogy: Curation and Creation Over Education in MOOC Era | The Entrepreneurship Site
    [...] could. Today (day #3) the topic is Participant Pedagogy. Thanks Dominik Lukes for this interesting blog post on learning, participants and pedagogy: Despite its etymology, pedagogy [leading of boys], cannot [...]
  7. Clay
    A thoughtful educator at my institution made a point about MOOCs that I think is being touched on here: http://computinged.wordpress.com/2012/04/20/udacitys-cs101-who-are-you-talking-to/ Paraphrasing what seems to me the key point: the challenge of higher ed really is about getting through to those who don't have the internal motivation to learn a given topic: the others don't need help. To the extent that we don't live in a world where self-motivated learning covers all the things we need, collectively and individually, a role for pedagogy remains. This turns out to be a big space.
  8. Dominik Lukes (@techczech)
    Well, I make the point elsewhere (much of it still in development) that we make too many unwarranted assumptions about how many of these topics are actually important. There's a lot of voodoo in the "broad balanced education" argument. So, I think we agree on the role of pedagogy in the case of learning in the "captivity" of a set curriculum. But we would probably disagree about the need for a set curriculum. You we need to get through to them. But the barriers through which we need to get are of our own making. I would also like to open the idea of just-in-time learning. We make too much of front-loading education (motivated by our own feelings of 'if I'd only listened when the told me'). Which is where the idea of flipping the school year could come in. There's obviously a lot to be said for learning for pleasure, but if we don't put people off learning through overinstrumentalising it (particularly where the relevance isn't obvious), maybe more of them will do it.
  9. Zero pedagogy: A hyperbolic case for curation and creation over education in the age of the #MOOC (#moocmooc) #paulofreire | Café puntocom Leche | Scoop.it
    [...] The crazy argument for Zero pedagogy Pedagogy does not matter. It has always been a discipline aimed at making people learn something they don't particularly want to learn.  [...]
  10. Curation and Creation Over Pedagogy and Classical Education | Learning in a changing world | Scoop.it
    [...]   As the learner becomes more aware of their own learning (gaining metacognitive skills), they will look for resources that suit their learning better. And, in many cases, will create such resources.   That’s why we need to encourage a culture of the remix. Or in starker terms: Curation and creation over education."    [...]
  11. Andrew Chambers (@atsc)
    The problem is the learner has to reach that stage of self awareness. This reminds me of psyc101 and Maslow's hierarchy of needs. In learning as in life not everyone can get to the necessary level. In the mean time we must have people acting as facilitator and guide on the side...
  12. Curation and Creation Over Pedagogy and Classical Education | TeachThought | Scoop.it
    [...] Robin Good: What is it more important?   To refine a science of how to transmit, explain and illustrate what "needs to be known" or that we empower learners to create their own learning direction, approach, scaffolding and pace, by providing them with the ability to "drive" and "build" their learning value and not by having them become open sponges that memorize and comprehend what we offer them?   From the original article by Dominik Lukes: "A self-directed, self-motivated learner, will take any resources (no matter how pedagogically naive or badly instructionally designed – Khan Academy, iTunesU lectures, iPad ebooks, labs, conventional classes or TED videos) and use them to learn. As the learner becomes more aware of their own learning (gaining metacognitive skills), they will look for resources that suit their learning better. And, in many cases, will create such resources. That’s why we need to encourage a culture of the remix. Or in starker terms: Curation and creation over education."   Rightful. 7/10   Full article: http://researchity.net/2012/08/15/zero-pedagogy-a-hyperbolic-case-for-curation-and-creation-over-education/      [...]
  13. Digital Spaces. Curation and Creation Over Pedagogy and Classical Education | Library learning spaces | Scoop.it
    [...] Robin Good: What is it more important?To refine a science of how to transmit, explain and illustrate what "needs to be known" or that we empower learners to create their own learning direction, approach, scaffolding and pace, by providing them with the ability to "drive" and "build" their learning value and not by having them become open sponges that memorize and comprehend what we offer them? From the original article by Dominik Lukes: "A self-directed, self-motivated learner, will take any resources (no matter how pedagogically naive or badly instructionally designed; Khan Academy, iTunesU lectures, iPad ebooks, labs, conventional classes or TED videos) and use them to learn. As the learner becomes more aware of their own learning (gaining metacognitive skills), they will look for resources that suit their learning better. And, in many cases, will create such resources. That's why we need to encourage a culture of the remix. Or in starker terms: Curation and creation over education.". Hmmm ....  [...]
  14. Zero pedagogy: A hyperbolic case for curation and creation over education in the age of the MOOC (#moocmooc) | Linguagem Virtual | Scoop.it
    [...] The crazy argument for Zero pedagogy Pedagogy does not matter. It has always been a discipline aimed at making people learn something they don't particularly want to learn.  [...]
  15. Curation and Creation Over Pedagogy and Classical Education | Teaching in Higher Education | Scoop.it
    [...] Robin Good: What is it more important?   To refine a science of how to transmit, explain and illustrate what "needs to be known" or that we empower learners to create their own learning direction, approach, scaffolding and pace, by providing them with the ability to "drive" and "build" their learning value and not by having them become open sponges that memorize and comprehend what we offer them?   From the original article by Dominik Lukes: "A self-directed, self-motivated learner, will take any resources (no matter how pedagogically naive or badly instructionally designed – Khan Academy, iTunesU lectures, iPad ebooks, labs, conventional classes or TED videos) and use them to learn.   As the learner becomes more aware of their own learning (gaining metacognitive skills), they will look for resources that suit their learning better. And, in many cases, will create such resources.   That’s why we need to encourage a culture of the remix. Or in starker terms: Curation and creation over education."    <- the abundance of information is changing education in so many ways... (JS)  [...]
  16. Hybrid Pedagogy | Building in the Humanities Isn’t New
    […] pedagogy/scholarship. Within the post-secondary academy, we often talk about building, curation, and creative production as if they are new methods for approaching the study of literature, […]

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