5,703 research outputs found
Fighting a Resurgent Hyper-Positivism in Education is Music to My Ears
In this article, I argue that one of the gifts of the Age of Enlightenment, the ability to measure, to experiment, to predict—turned rancid by hyper-positivism—is re-asserting itself globally in the field of education (including music education). I see a neoliberal, neocolonial connection—in terms of the ideologies that fuel them—between some of the homogenizing, epistemologically/culturally imperialist aspects of globalization and this resurgent hyper-positivism that has been accompanied by a corporatization of education. I posit that critical education, including critical music education, is an essential component of a necessary—if rancorous—dialogue in maintaining a definition of education that is as varied and diverse as those students we wish to educate. In essence, I argue that critical education is one of many tools to help us fight a ‘re-colonization’ by this resurgent hyper-positivism in education
A Neocolonial Warp of Outmoded Hierarchies, Curricula and Disciplinary Technologies in Trinidad’s Educational System
I re-appropriate the image of a space-time warp and its notion of disorientation to argue that colonialism created a warp in Trinidad’s educational system. Through an analysis of school violence and the wider network of structural violence in which it is steeped, I focus on three outmoded aspects as evidence of this warp--hierarchies, curricula and disciplinary technologies--by using data (interviews, documents and observations) from a longitudinal case study at a secondary school in Trinidad. Colonialism was about exclusion, alienation, violence, control and order, and this functionalism persists today; I therefore contend that hierarchies, curricula and disciplinary technologies are all enforcers of these tenets of (neo)colonialism in Trinidad’s schools. I conclude with some nascent thoughts on a Systemic Restorative Praxis (SRP) model as a way of de-stabilizing the warp, by stitching together literature/approaches from systems thinking, restorative justice and Freirean notions of praxis. SRP implies that colonialism (and this modern-day warp) has rendered much psychic and material damage, and that any intervention to address structural violence has to be systemic and iterative in scope and process, include healing, be participatory, and foster an ethic of horizontalization in human relations
Hakim Mohandas Amani Williams, Assistant Professor of Africana Studies
In this new Next Page column, Hakim Mohandas Amani Williams, Assistant Professor of Africana Studies, shares with us highlights from a recent trip to Trinidad he took with students, where he gets his daily dose of news, and which book gives him fire after each reading
Solitons on intersecting 3-branes
We consider a system consisting of a pair of D3 branes intersecting each
other along a line such that half of the 16 supersymmetries are preserved. We
then study the existence of magnetic monopole solutions corresponding to a
D1-brane suspended between these D3 branes. We consider this problem in the
zero slope limit where the tilt of the D3-branes is encoded in the uniform
gradient of the adjoint scalar field. Such a system is closely related to the
non-abelian flux background considered originally by van Baal. We provide three
arguments supporting the existence of a single magnetic monopole solution. We
also comment on the relation between our construction and a recent work by
Mintun, Polchinski, and Sun.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figure, minor typos fixed. Reference adde
Critically Assessing Forms of Resistance in Music Education
In their classrooms, music educators draw upon critical pedagogy (as described by Freire, Giroux, and hooks) for the express purpose of cultivating a climate for conscientização. Conscientização, according to Paulo Freire (2006), “refers to learning to perceive social, political, and economic contradictions and to take action against the oppressive elements of reality” (p. 35). This consciousness raising is a journey teachers pursue with students, together interrogating injustices in communities and the world in order to transform the conditions that inform them. Learning to perceive social, political, and economic contradictions often leads to multiple forms of resistance in and out of music classrooms. This chapter explores the following question: What do critical forms of assessment look like in music classrooms that use critical pedagogy and embrace resistance to foster conscientization
Lingering Colonialities as Blockades to Peace Education: School Violence in Trinidad
Book Summary: Bringing together the voices of scholars and practitioners on challenges and possibilities of implementing peace education in diverse global sites, this book addresses key questions for students seeking to deepen their understanding of the field. The book not only highlights ground-breaking and rich qualitative studies from around the globe, but also analyses the limits and possibilities of peace education in diverse contexts of conflict and post-conflict societies. Contributing authors address how educators and learners can make meaning of international peace education efforts, how various forms of peace and violence interact in and around schools, and how the field of peace education has evolved and grown over the past four decades.
Chapter Summary: By using data on school violence from field research in Trinidad and Tobago (TT), I argue that in the knowledge production of \u27school violence,\u27 \u27school\u27 is subtracted as a descriptive [term], and in its place is hoisted the category of \u27youth,\u27 inscribed as the \u27Other,\u27 the predominant signifier of violence. In so doing, the predominating discourse about what constitutes school violence itself, and its drivers/\u27causes,\u27 takes on a limiting and individualizing nature. As a result, the principal interventions that emanate from such a discourse are correspondingly narrow and therefore fail to reveal the structural violence in which youth violence in school is embedded. I posit this discursive violence as a lingering coloniality, and thus, as a blockade to the implementation of sustainable peace education in TT\u27s schools. [excerpt
Teachers’ Nascent Praxes of Care: Potentially Decolonizing Approaches to School Violence in Trinidad
Zero tolerance, punitive and more negative peace-oriented approaches dominate school violence interventions, despite research indicating that comprehensive approaches are more sustainable. In this article, I use data from a longitudinal case study at a Trinidadian secondary school to focus on the role of teachers and their impact on school violence; I show that institutional constraints are not fully deterministic, as teachers sometimes deploy their agency to efficacious ends. In combining Noddings’ postulations on care and Freire’s notions of praxis as a symbiosis of reflection and action, I explicate the nascent praxes of care of six teachers at this school, as they strive for more positive peace-oriented approaches to school violence. I characterize these praxes as nascent because they are not fully interrogative of the structural violence of the entire system. However, I do argue that these nascent praxes possess decolonizing and transgressive potentiality in the face of a logic of coloniality that reinforces hierarchy, exclusion, and marginalization in the Trinidadian educational system. I conclude by contending that these nascent praxes must be scaled-up to more mature, radical praxes, including the cultivation of a systemic praxis of care; in other words, a deeper and broader postcolonial peace education
Fearless: Professor Hakim Williams
With his consistently energetic and enthusiastic personality, his progressive teaching methods using discussion and debate in the classroom, and his desire for his students to develop more comprehensive understandings of the problems facing education in a global context, Dr. Hakim Williams fearlessly uses his passion for change and justice in education to enlighten his students, sharpen their critical thinking skills, and change their outlooks on the future. [excerpt
Spectral Analysis of Non-Ideal MRI Modes: The effect of Hall diffusion
The effect of magnetic field diffusion on the stability of accretion disks is
a problem that has attracted considerable interest of late. In particular, the
Hall effect has the potential to bring about remarkable changes in the
dynamical behavior of disks that are without parallel. In this paper, we
conduct a systematic examination of the linear eigenmodes in a weakly
magnetized differentially rotating gas with special focus on Hall diffusion. We
first develop a geometrical representation of the eigenmodes and provide a
detailed quantitative description of the polarization properties of the
oscillatory modes under the combined influence of the Coriolis and Hall
effects. We also analyze the effects of magnetic diffusion on the structure of
the unstable modes and derive analytical expressions for the kinetic and
magnetic stresses and energy densities associated with the non-ideal MRI. Our
analysis explicitly demonstrates that, if the dissipative effects are
relatively weak, the kinetic stresses and energies make up the dominant
contribution to the total stress and energy density when the equilibrium
angular momentum and magnetic field vectors are anti-parallel. This is in sharp
contrast to what is observed in the case of the ideal or dissipative MRI. We
conduct shearing box simulations and find very good agreement with the results
derived from linear analysis. As the modes in consideration are also exact
solutions of the non-linear equations, the unconventional nature of the kinetic
and magnetic stresses may have significant implications for the non-linear
evolution in some regions of protoplanetary disks.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, accepted by Ap
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