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Bildung: History

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Title: Bildung: History


1
Bildung History Currency
  • Norm Friesen
  • July 24, 2009
  • nfriesen_at_tru.ca

2
Overview
  • What is Bildung?
  • What is its history?
  • The destruction and re-birth of Bildung in the
    20th Century
  • Exercise Think of something/someone that changed
    you, and is responsible for who you are today.
  • Bildung now Structural (Klafki) or
    Existential (Mollenhauer)
  • Bildung versus the facilitation of learning

3
Bildung
  • A German word translated as
  • Formation
  • Growth
  • Edification
  • Not the same as
  • Education
  • Development
  • Upbringing

4
Recent Definition (Biesta, 2002)
  • Bildung stands for an educational ideal that
    emerged in Greek society and that, through its
    adoption in Roman culture, humanism, neo-humanism
    and the Enlightenment, became one of the central
    notions of the modern Western educational
    tradition. Central in this tradition is the
    question of what constitutes an educated or
    cultivated human being. The answer to this
    question is not given in terms of discipline,
    socialisation or moral training, that is, as an
    adaptation to an existing external order. Bildung
    refers, rather, to the cultivation of the inner
    life, that is, of the human soul, the human mind.

5
Emphasis on self-other
  • The developmental opening up of a physical and
    mental reality for a person that is the
    objective or material aspect of Bildung
  • But at the same time, it also means the
    developmental opening up of this person for this,
    her reality and this is the subjective and
    formal aspect...
  • reciprocal interrelationship of world and
    individual (Klafki, 1997)
  • Bildung as an intergenerational social and
    political process (Klafki)

6
A Basic Definition
  • Understand Bildung in terms of a kind of
    fiction, story.
  • Bildungsroman The term Bildungsroman denotes
    a novel of all-around self-development
  • Huck Finn escapes from his aunt,and goes down
    the Mississippi with Jim, a black slave
  • This type of novel is at its roots a quest story,
    as both "an apprenticeship to life" and a "search
    for meaningful existence within society."

7
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9
Inclusive Term
  • Interconnected developments in education, growth,
    socialization, self-understanding, changes around
    one
  • Occurs through interaction with society, a given
    social order
  • End result is an autonomous individual, capable
    of meaningful self-determination in relationship
    to the world around him.

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11
Immanuel Kant (1724-1804)
  • Lived during the enlightenment the
    pedagogical century (Gudjons)
  • Critique of Pure Reason, an investigation into
    the limitations and structure of reason itself
    (1781)
  • Kant's "Copernican revolution places the human
    subject or knower at the center of inquiry into
    our knowledge, such that it is impossible to
    philosophize about things as they are
    independently of us
  • his invention of critical philosophy, that is of
    the notion of being able to discover and
    systematically explore possible inherent limits
    to our ability to know through philosophical
    reasoning

12
  • Answer to the Question What is Enlightenment?
  • Reply to the question posed an official in the
    Prussian government (1784)
  • Ending of church and state paternalism
  • People be given the freedom to use their own
    intellect.
  • Kant praised Frederick II of Prussia for creating
    these preconditions

13
Kant What is Enlightenment?
  • Task of Education as self-determination through
    the exercise of reason
  • Enlightenment is mans emergence from his
    self-imposed immaturity. Immaturity is the
    inability to use ones understanding without
    guidance from another. (An Answer to the
    Question What is Enlightenment? 1784)
  • Unmündigkeit Mündig able to speak for
    onesself.
  • Four questions from Critique of Pure Reason
  • The whole interest of reason, speculative as
    well as practical, is centered in the three
    following questions
  • What can I know? What should I do? What may I
    hope (for)?

14
Early 1800s in Germany
15
Neo-Humanism
  • Research into ancient Greek culture idealization
    of it
  • Emphasis on a general idea of Humanity as a
    paradigm, to be attained through Greek language
    and culture

16
W. von Humboldt (1767-1835)
  • Minister of Education in Prussian State
  • Responsible for aspects of university that are
    still important today (e.g. Academic
    freedom/independence from the state the idea of
    the unity of research and teaching)
  • Defined citizen of the world (Weltbürgertum)
    are those who, as autonomous individuals, are
    bound together in scholarly pursuit (not
    economic, professional).
  • Bound together in dealing with the largest
    questions of humanity Freedom, justice,
    exchange of cultures, relationship to nature.
  • transforming as much world as possible into
    the actual person that is life in the highest
    sense of the term.

17
Theory of Bildung
  • It is the ultimate task of our existence to
    achieve as much substance as possible for the
    concept of humanity in our person, both during
    the span of our life and beyond it, through the
    traces we leave by means of our vital activity.
    This can be fulfilled only by the linking of the
    self to the world to achieve the most general,
    most animated, and most unrestrained interplay
    freiesten Wechelswirkung (von Humboldt, 2000,
    p. 58)
  • The self contains the embryo of universal
    humanity, and its realization is the inner
    destiny of the individual.

18
But by the early 20th Century
  • He who has un
  • dergone Bildung is someone who does not work with
    his hands, who knows how to dress and behave
    properly, and who is conversant with what is
    being discussed in society. A further sign of
    Bildung is the correct use of foreign words
    whoever errs in meaning or pronounciation in this
    regard will cause his (level of) Bildung to be
    judged unfavourably. On the other hand, his
    Bildung will be as good as proven if he is able
    to speak a foreign language (Friedrich Paulsen
    1903)

19
Bildung a Cathedral lying in Ruins
  • The unholy marriage of property and Bildung was
    secured, and Bildung was plutocratically misused,
    valued only for individual gain, and finally
    reduced to a number of cannonical highschool
    subjects. (Gudjons, 2003)
  • In the 1960s Bildung was exchanged for
    psychological and sociological notions like
    qualification, socialization, integration
    learning. (Biesta, 2002)

20
Re-birth of Bildung in the 1980s
  • Klafki (1927 - ) the task of Bildung cannot be
    abrogatedit is required bythe way that
    democratic societies are constituted
    (inalienability of the concept)
  • Re-read theories of Bildung in terms of the
    abdication of the metaphysical absolute.
  • Mollenhauer (1928-1989) We are called to
    Bildung by the need to passon to children that
    which is good in our lives

21
Klafki Key problems typical for our age
  • Question of peace problem of self-destruction
  • Question of the environment controlling
    technology
  • Social inequality as it is produced by society
  • Dangers and possibilities of control, information
    and communications media and technologies
  • The subjectivity of the individual or self, and
    his/her relation to the other.

22
  • Capacity for self-determination encompasses
    ones own, personal life relationships and their
    value/meaning in interpersonal, professional and
    religious spheres.
  • Capacity for collective self-determination
    (Mitbestimmungsfähigkeit) each individual should
    have the capacity to participate in
    socio-political relationships, and to engage with
    them responsibly.
  • Capacity for Solidarity the claim to individual
    and self-determination can only be justified if
    one attempts to work to give the same rights to
    others who are not yet in possession of them.

23
Klaus Mollenhauer
  • Attempted to remember the old questions, to
    find out if there is something like the basic
    constituents of enlightenment pedagogy, a
    minimal cannon of questions, that no one today
    could ignore, if they want to be educators
  • What about your own significant experiences?

24
5 Questions Keywords
  • Why do we want to have children? (Bildung and
    Erziehung)
  • What way of life do I present to children by
    living with them? (Presentation)
  • What way of life ought to be systematically
    represented to children? (Representation)
  • How can I help children to become self-starters
    and support their growth? (Developmental
    Preparedness Self-starting)
  • Who am I? Who do I want to be, and how do I help
    others with their identity problems? (Identity)

25
Films (fiction and theory text also used)
  • Why do we want to have children? (Bildung and
    Erziehung) My Life as a Dog
  • What way of life do I present to children by
    living with them? (Presentation) Kolya
  • What way of life ought to be represented to
    children? (Representation) To Be and to Have
  • How can I help children to become self-starters
    and support their growth? (Developmental
    Preparedness Self-starting) Good Will Hunting
    The Wild Child
  • Who am I? Who do I want to be, and how do I help
    others with their identity problems? (Identity)
    Wit

26
Bildung vs Learning
  • Process that is biological, developmental
  • Occurs naturally, and formally in school leads
    to pressure to de-structure school
  • Sees the education of man as a derivative form
    of education of nature and things
  • Process that is social cultural
  • Does not occur through nature
  • Is structured socially, and school emerges from
    this
  • Is a process of Ãœberlieferung
  • Includes education of things and men
  • Ed. of nature seen insufficient

27
Nature of Pedagogy
  • Pedagogy is aporetic or paradoxical for
    Mollenhauer in that it tries to describe and
    strengthen that part of the child which is most
    fundamentally open and indefinite and about which
    nothing final or definitive can be said.

28
Pedagogy as Aporetical
  • The child would essentially remain something more
    than that which is immediately accessible to us
    through understanding and explanation. Whoever
    would want to be an educator, especially in view
    of a future that cannot be reliably reckoned,
    must attempt to enter into a relationship with
    this part of children's lives which can only be
    intimated. (p. 89)

29
Conclusion
  • It pedagogy is not a subject for scholarly
    specialization. Specialized or scientific
    scholarship can easily describe triumphs of human
    development but it can only gesture towards its
    aporetic character.... And the more finely the
    net of pedagogical strategies and institutions is
    woven, the greater a contribution that is
    expected from pedagogy towards social progress,
    the more difficult it becomes to express this
    aporetic character. (Mollenhauer, 1983, p.
    88)1

30
Conclusion
  • In this context, pedagogy is not a question of
    solving practical problems and optimizing
    learning processes, it is part of the ongoing
    mystery and frailty of human existence.
  • Upbringing and pedagogy are not a collection of
    means or a set of techniques that can be reduced
    to processes of optimization and standardization.
    It remains a profoundly personal relation, with
    the intention of contributing to the childs
    life, experience, and supporting the child's
    growth in the direction of humanity and selfhood.

31
Bibliography
  • Foreignness and Otherness in Pedagogical Contexts
    http//www.phandpr.org/index.php/pandp/article/vie
    w/4/49
  • Friesen, N. Sævi, T. (in press). Reviving
    Forgotten Connections Klaus Mollenhauer and
    Human Science Pedagogy in Canadian Teacher
    Education. Journal of Curriculum Studies.
    http//learningspaces.org/n/papers/Reviving_Forgot
    ten_Connections.pdf
  • Biesta, G. (2002). How General Can Bildung Be?
    Reflections on the Future of a Modern Educational
    Ideal. Journal of Philosophy of Education, 36, 3.
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