With college tuitions ballooning to the point of implosion, and free educational content proliferating online, the future of education is a scorching hot topic.
So where are we heading?
Coursera and Khan Academy? Video game-based curricula? Experience-driven microlearning?
Or school buildings that moonlight as candy?
So suggested one of the younger participants in a workshop led by the University of Wisconsinâs Assistant Professor of Interdisciplinary Creativity, cartoonist and author Lynda Barry (aka Professor Long-Title).
Barryâs messianic embrace of the arts has proved popular with students of all ages. When the universityâs Counterfactual Drawing Board Project invited faculty, staff, and others to consider what the âappearance, purpose, atmosphere and community of the campusâ would be like in 100 years time, Barry deliberately widened the pool to include children.
Yes, their innovations tended toward volcano schools that erupt at dismissal, but presumably some of those same children will be in the vanguard when itâs time for initiatives that seem unimaginable now to be implemented. Rome wasnât built in a day, and all that.
Or as one gimlet-eyed youth put it, in a hundred years âthe teachers will all be dead.â
No wonder few adult participants can see past a button-driven, hermetically sealed, digital future wherein every student has a chip implanted in his or her head.
Barry, no stranger to depression, manages to laugh such gloomy forecasts off, despite what they portend for the tactile, handmade ephemera she reveres. A sense of humor—and humanity—is at the core of every educational reform she practices.
Rather than rip each otherâs writing to shreds during in-class critiques, her students call each other by outlandish pseudonyms and draw meditative spirals as each othersâ work is read aloud. Every reader is assured of a hearty âgood!â from the teacher. She wants them to keep going, you see.
Surely there are institutions where this approach might not fly, but why poo-poo it? Isnât fueling the creative spirit a practical investment in the future?
âItâs there in everybody,â Barry believes. âYou have to give people an experience of it, a repeated experience of it that they generate themselves.â
Maybe someday, some kid who hasnât had the love of learning squelched out of him or her will apply all that creativity toward curing cancer. Thatâd be great, huh? At worst, that carefully tended spark can give solace in the dark days ahead. As fans of Barryâs work well know, art exists to carry us through times of âsorrow and grief and trouble.â
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Lynda Barry, Cartoonist Turned Professor, Gives Her Old Fashioned Take on the Future of Education is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
The post Lynda Barry, Cartoonist Turned Professor, Gives Her Old Fashioned Take on the Future of Education appeared first on Open Culture.
Lynda Barry, Cartoonist Turned Professor, Gives Her Old Fashioned Take on the Future of Education
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