Title: EDD 5229
1EDD 5229 Liberal Studies in Knowledge Society
Lecture 5 Understanding the Curriculum
Content of Liberal Studies I Society and Culture
in Informal-Global System
2From Metacognition to Metatheory
- Conception of metacognition
- Flavell defines metacognition as ones knowledge
concerning ones own cognitive processes and
products (1976, quoted in Son and Schwartz,
2002, P.16) - Hacker defines the concept of metacognition as
thinking about ones own thoughts. This thinking
can be of what know (i.e.metacognitive
knowledge), what one is currently doing (i.e.
metacognitive skill), or what ones current
cognitive and affective state is (i.e.
metacognitive experience). . Metacognition
sometimes has been defined simply as thinking
about thinking, cognition of cognition, or using
Flavalls (1979) word, knowledge and cognition
about cognitive phenomena. (Hacker, 1998, p. 1)
http//logic.itsc.cuhk.edu.hk/b885764/Metacogniti
on2.html
3From Metacognition to Metatheory
- Conception of metacognition
- Nelson and Narens model of metacognition
- Levels of cognition
- Object-level cognition
- Meta-level cognition
- Process of metacognition
- Monitoring
- Control
4(No Transcript)
5(No Transcript)
6Meta-level
RETRIEVEL
Confidence in Retrieved Answers
Termination of Search
Output of Response
Monitoring
Control
Self-directed Search
Selection of Search Strategy
Feeling-of-knowing Judgments
RETENTION
Flow of Information
Termination of Study
Maintenance of Knowledge
Allocation of Time
ACQUISITION
Judgments of learning
On-going Learning
Selection of Kind of Processing
Ease-of-learning Judgments
In Advance of Learning
Object-Level
Source Nelson and Narens, 1994
7From Metacognition to Metatheory
- Two paradigms in cognition (Bruner, 1996)
- Computionalism
- Culturalism
8From Metacognition to Metatheory
- Metatheory in understanding the curriculum of
liberal studies - Metatheory has been perceived by social
scientists as the fundamental theoretical
framework underlying theories on social phenomena
- Accordingly, metatheory underlying any
disciplinary-based school curriculum is the
knowledge system of the respective discipline
itself. - However, in understanding the curriculum of
liberal studies, which is interdisciplinary or
integrative based, the metatheory or metatheories
underlying the curriculum do not come with a
well-established discipline and teachers have to
constructed them by themselves.
9From Metacognition to Metatheory
- Metatheory in understanding the curriculum of
liberal studies - Examples of metatheories in understanding the
curriculum of liberal studies in the context of
knowledge society. - Society and culture in informational-global
system - Self and identity in post-traditional and
individualized society - Science and technology in reflexive-modernity and
risk society
101st Draft
112st Draft
12Final Version 2007
13Final Version 2007
14Final Version 2007
To what extent does science and technology
enhance the Development of public health
2. Science, technology and public health
How do energy technology and environmental
problems relate to each other?
1. The influences of energy technology
15Understanding the Structure of the Areas of
Study Society and Culture
- The formal structure outlined by the CCD and
HKEAA - Module 2 Hong Kong Society
- Theme1 Quality of life
- Theme2 Rule of law and socio-political
participation - Theme3 Identity
- Module 3 Modern China
- Theme1 Chinas reform and opening-up
- Theme 2 Chinese culture and modern life
- Module 4 Globalization
- Theme Impact of globalization and related
response
16Understanding the Structure of the Areas of
Study Society and Culture
- The organic theoretical structure
- Globalization under the information technology
paradigm - Social consequences in HK and China
- Cultural consequences in HK and China
17Globalization under the in the Age of Information
Technology
- Debate on the origins of globalization
- A.G. Frank Grill (1993) World History
Perspective Originated 5000 year ago - Braudel (1979) Wallerstein (1974) World-system
Approach Originated from the 16th century and
the rise of mercantile capitalism - J. W. Meyer (1979) World Polity Perspective
Originated from the late 18th early 19th
century and the constitution of inter-state
competition world polity - M. Castell (1996) M. Carnoy (2000) Global IT
Economy Perspective Originated from 1970s
18Globalization under the in the Age of Information
Technology
- Globalization under the Information-Technology
paradigm - Compression of time and space In connection to
the penetrating, reconfiguring and converging
capacities of IT, the globalization at the end of
the twentieth century has outgrown its ancestors
in bridging if not annulling the temporal and
spatial distances between human societies and
cultures - Anthony Giddens (1994) in The Consequences of
Modernity indicates that globalization is
really about the transformation of space and
time. I would define it as action at distance,
and relate its growth over recent years to the
development of means of instantaneous global
communication and mass transportation. (1994, p.
22)
19Globalization under the in the Age of Information
Technology
- Globalization under the Information-Technology
paradigm - Compression of time and space
- Zygmunt Bauman (1998) Globalization as
annulment of temporal/spatial distances (1998,
p.18). - David Harvey (1989) in The Condition of
Postmodernity has simply defines globalization as
time-space compression. It signifies processes
that so revolutionize the objective qualities of
space and time that we are force to alter how
we represent the world to ourselves. (p. 240)
20Globalization under the in the Age of Information
Technology
- Globalization under the Information-Technology
paradigm - Space of flow Manuel Castells (1996) in The
Network Society defines globalization as the
process of separating simultaneous social
practices from physical contiguity, that is
time-sharing social practices are no long
embedded in space of physical place. As a result,
the traditional notion of space of places has
been transformed into space of flows. As a
result, the globe is now able to work as a unit
in real time on a planetary scale.
21Globalization and Its Social Consequences I The
Advent of Community of Flow
- The advent of the virtual community
- Transformation of pattern of communication
- Instantaneous social practices are separated
from physical contiguity, the traditional
face-to-face and time-consuming communications,
which are the cornerstone of primary association,
have given way to fast, cheap and forgetting
communications (Benedikt, 1995, quoted from
Bauman, 1998, p.16).
22Globalization and Its Social Consequences I The
Advent of Community of Flow
- The advent of the virtual community
- Dissolve of community of yoke
- The so-called 'closely knit communities' of
yore were brought into being and kept alive by
the gap between the nearly instantaneous
communication inside the small-scale community
(the size of which was determined by the innate
qualities of 'wetware', and thus confined to the
natural limits of human sight, hearing and
memorizing capacity) and the enormity of time and
expense needed to pass information between
locality. On the other hand, the present-day and
short life-span of communities appears primarily
to be the result of the gap shrinking or
altogether disappearing inner-community
communication has no advantage over
inter-communal exchange, if both are
instantaneous. (Bauman, 1998, p.5)
23Globalization and Its Social Consequences I The
Advent of Community of Flow
- The advent of the virtual community
- Cultural-spatial based communities are replaced
by virtual community - Erosion of spatial based communities scattered
around factories and industrial compound in
advanced industrial societies as globalized and
flexible economy emerged. Class-based and
ethnic/religious-based communities also
evaporated with the factory-location based
communities - The emergence of the cyberspace The space of
place and that based on physical contiguity is
replace by the space of flow and that based on
informational flow.
24Globalization and Its Social Consequences I The
Advent of Community of Flow
- The advent of the virtual community
- Cultural-spatial based communities are replaced
by virtual community - In their replacement advents the virtual
community. - Howard Rheingold in The virtual community
Homesteading on the electrical frontier (1989)
specifies that - Virtual communities are social aggregations
that emerge from the Net when enough people carry
on those public discussions long enough, with
sufficient human feeling, to form webs of
personal relationship in cyberspace. (p.3)
25Globalization and Its Social Consequences I The
Advent of Community of Flow
- New notions of community in knowledge society
(Carnoy, 2000) - In flexible economy new communities will have to
incorporate workers who are more educated, more
choice-oriented, more flexible, more
time-conscious, and more eager to influence their
environment. The new bond that holds these
individuals together in the global information
age is the search for knowledge. (Carnoy, 2000,
p. 171)
26Globalization and Its Social Consequences I The
Advent of Community of Flow
- New notions of community in knowledge society
(Carnoy, 2000) - Accordingly, Martin Carnoy categorizes these
knowledge-searching communities into - The self-knowledge community Ethnicity, gender
and cultural identity. For examples, black Muslim
communities in the US constituted in the 1960s,
feminist communities emerged in the 1980s,
fundamentalist Muslim in global context since the
late 1990s. - The knowledge-use community Professional
identification and work networks - Informal work-information network
- Temporary agencies as knowledge-use networks
- Computer networks as knowledge-use communities
27Globalization and Its Social Consequences I The
Advent of Community of Flow
- New notions of community in knowledge society
(Carnoy, 2000) - Accordingly, Martin Carnoy categorizes these
knowledge-searching communities into - The knowledge-production community Schools as
community centers - Knowledge-production centers themselves can
be the organizing space for new communities.
Individuals and families may no longer be linked
socially to a particular neighborhood, but those
with children are increasingly linked to
child-care centers, preschools, and elementary
schools. Children and parents build friendships
and social and civic activities around their
childrens care and learning, wherever it takes
place. Thus, their community space is defined
by their childrens day care and schooling rather
by where they live. (Carnoy, 2000, p. 183)
28Globalization and Its Social Consequences II The
Advent of Flexible Family
- The brief history of the fundamental unit of
social integration Family - Family in agrarian society
- Family as reproduction unit of society
- Family as production unit of economy
- All members held designated role in the
production process and were interdependent on
each others - Family in early industrialized society
- Structural differentiations between reproduction
and production functions of family - Man and matured children usually boys worked away
from home - Man assumed the breadwinning role and woman
submitted to the dependent role in the family
structure
29Globalization and Its Social Consequences II The
Advent of Flexible Family
- The brief history of the fundamental unit of
social integration - Family in Post-WWII welfare-state
- Welfare-state intervened into family functions
through social policy measures, such as
birth-control policy, child labor laws, education
policy, housing policy, social welfare policy
etc. - Family was deprived of most of its functions
reproductive, productive, and socializing
functions and left with only emotional and
spiritual supportive function. - Nevertheless, family assume a new function in
mass consumption society, i.e. as consumption and
even investment unit - Woman liberation movement spawned structural
changes in the role/power structure of family.
Woman would no long assume to dependent or even
submissive roles in the patriarchal structure of
family
30Globalization and Its Social Consequences II The
Advent of Flexible Family
- Flexible family and flexible work
- The very concept of a job is changing. In the
years after World War II, industrial societies
constructed the ideal of a full-time, secure job
working thirty years for one company with
ever-rising real wages. Pay in this job would be
high enough that within American family
households, only the man had to work. His wife
could stay at home, raising the children and
managing the household. The ideal of secure work
and increasing consumption was matched by
government policies that constructed social
security (old-age pension, unemployment
insurance, and health insurance) largely around
the ideal of a men and very little paid work for
women is going by the boards, and the new
information technology is only one cause of
change. The simplest description of the nature of
this transformation is increased flexibility.
(Carnoy, 2000, p.64-65)
31Globalization and Its Social Consequences II The
Advent of Flexible Family
- Flexible family and flexible work
- Flexibility in work implies
- Flexible in work schedule as well as work
duration - Flexible in work locations as well as positions
- Flexible in work conditions, flexibility has
replaced fixed-term contract and long-term
commitment between employers and employees - With increased competition in the globalized
economy and the rapidly rising capacity to use
world time to enhance productivity, the very
best workers are now those who never sleep, never
consume, never have children, and never spend
time socializing outside of work. (Carnoy, 2000,
p. 143)
32Globalization and Its Social Consequences II The
Advent of Flexible Family
- Flexible family and flexible work
- In knowledge economy and lifelong learning
society, family is demanded to assume a new
function. It is expect to be the basic unit
supporting the everlasting learning projects
demand for both working parents and their
children - Fundamental contradiction in functions of
flexible family - What result is a serious social
contradiction the new workplace requires even
more investment in knowledge than in the past,
and family are crucial to such knowledge
formation, especially for children but also for
adults. The new workplace, however, contributes
to greater instability in the child-centered
nuclear family, degrading the very institution
crucial to further economic development. (ibid,
p.110)
33Globalization and Its Social Consequences II The
Advent of Flexible Family
- Changes in family structure in flexible economy
- Less people would enter into marriages. Even if
they did, they were much more likely to be
divorced than in the 1960s. - Marriages were delayed and child rearing were
also delayed or even more likely forgone. - A smaller percentage of the population lived in a
nuclear family household headed by a married
couple with children. - More percentage of the population lived in
nuclear family with no child or even stayed
single.
34Globalization and Its Cultural Consequences
- The Advent of Post-Traditional Society
- Culture as the symbolic universe of a society
- Time-space compression entails compression of
symbolic universes - Legitimation bases of symbolic universes under
threats - Detradionalization and the rise of
post-traditional society - A post-tradition social orderis not one in
which tradition disappears - far from it. It is
one in which tradition changes its status.
Traditions have to explain themselves, to become
open to interrogation or discourse. In a
globalizing, culturally cosmopolitan society,
traditions become forced into open view reasons
or justifications have to be offered for them.
(Giddens, 1994, p.23)
35Globalization and Its Cultural Consequences
- The Advent of Post-Traditional Society
- The rise of fundamentalism
- "The rise of fundamentalism has to be seen
against the backdrop of the emergence of the
post-traditional society. What is
fundamentalism? It is, so I shall argue, nothing
other than tradition defended in the tradition
way - but where that mode of defence has become
widely called into question. In a globally
cosmopolitan order such a defence become
dangerous, because essentially it is a refusal of
dialogue." (Giddens, 1994, p.23) - An explanation of the September 11 incidence
Terrorism in post-traditional and global
societies
36Globalization and Its Cultural Consequences
- Cultural logic of late capitalism in the
information age - Production of information and knowledge replacing
production of manufacturing goods, especially
heavy industrial goods, as the core of
productivity enhancement and wealth accumulation - The rise of mass production, mass distribution,
mass consumption, and mass communication - Accelerations of the commoditfication cycle
M?C?P?C?M, i.e. Money capital ? Commodity (i.e.
labor and the means of production) ? Production ?
Commodity (products) ? Money
37Globalization and Its Cultural Consequences
- Cultural logic of late capitalism in the
information age - The commodification of culture and information
- The use value of cultural products Communicative
values and meaningfulness - The exchange value of cultural products Reifying
cultural meaningfulness into cultural commodities
and cultural industries - Culture of signifiers of referent depth was
replaced by self-referencing and free-floating
signifiers, information, data, icon - Empirically and objectively existing reality
replaced by hyper-reality and virtual reality - The proliferation of simulacra and the coming of
the culture of simulacra - The culture of heritage and tradition was
replaced by culture of pastiche and hybrid
38(No Transcript)
39Globalization and Its Cultural Consequences
- The rise of culture of consumerism
- Retreat of culture of production and spirit of
capitalism Culture of asceticism and endurance,
industrious, and enterprising investment
40Globalization and Its Cultural Consequences
- The rise of culture of consumerism
- Constituents of culture of consumerism
- Hedonism Consumption as desire-satisfaction was
replaced by consumption as desire-creation.
Desire does not desire satisfaction. To the
contrary, desire desires desire." (Bauman, 1998,
p. 25) - Ephemeralism "Consumer goods are meant to be
used up and to disappear the idea of
temporariness and transitoriness is intrinsic to
their very denomination as objects of
consumption" (Bauman, 1998, P.28)
41Globalization and Its Cultural Consequences
- The rise of culture of consumerism
- Constituents of culture of consumerism
- Instantaneousness "Ideally, the consumer's
satisfaction ought to be instant, and this in a
double sense. Consumed goods should bring
satisfaction immediately, requiring no delay, no
protracted learning of skills and no lengthy
groundwork but the satisfaction should end the
moment the time needed for their consumption is
up, and that time ought to be reduced to a bare
minimum." (Bauman, 1998, p. 25) - Fetishism From consumption of commodity to
collection of commodity from consumption as act
of desire-satisfaction to consumption (or
possession) as identification of status and life
style
42Globalization and Its Cultural Consequences
- The constitution of culture of Information
Management and Publicity - Rational critical citizens of the 19th century
relegate to clients of the welfare state and
consumers of welfare services in post WWII - From culture-debating public to culture-consuming
public - The rise of cultural industry and mass media
- Commodification of culture Meanings and
consensus are no longer constituted through
critical-rational debates but manufacture by
cultural industry and mass media - The rise of the professions of public relation,
publicity and image consultancy
43Globalization and Its Cultural Consequences
- The constitution of culture of Information
Management and Publicity - From culture-debating public to culture-consuming
public - The replacement of a reading public that debated
critically about matters of culture by the mass
public of culture consumers (Habermas, 1989,
p.168) - Going to salons and book clubs are replaced
by going to movies, listening to radio and
watching TV. These activities are noncommittal,
one-sided non- participatory activities - Debating public relegated into captive audience
44Globalization and Its Cultural Consequences
- The constitution of culture of Information
Management and Publicity - Rational public debates relegated to administered
or even commercialized projects - Public debates were taken over or even
monopolized by - compartmentalized intellectual minority,
professionals and specialists in cultural
industry and mass media - lobbyists of organized interests,
- think tank of political parties and the state,
- specialist in information management, public
relation and publicity, spin doctors
45Globalization and Its Cultural Consequences
- The constitution of culture of Information
Management and Publicity - Rational public debates relegated to administered
or even commercialized projects - Public debates were commercialized, standardized
and be consumption-ready, Cultural goods had to
be packaged into consumption items, e.g. - literary communications were pushed aside by
illustrative, pictorial, sensational
representations, the constitution of TV news and
then news in global network (CNN) - delay reward news (public affairs, social
problems, education, and health) were pushed into
the background by immediate reward news
(comics, corruption, accidents, disasters,
sports, recreation, social events, and human
interests). (Habermas, 1989, p. 170)
46Lecture 5 Understanding the Curriculum Content
of Liberal Studies I Society and Culture in
Informal-Global System End