Thursday, September 8, 2016

Davidson Assignment

The most significant thing that I got out of reading this text is that I understand what reasonable arguments there are against today’s American education system. I know that many people are dissatisfied with the American education system, for example, the fact that many people resent the number of standardized tests that students have to take and are only increasing in number per year. But I never really heard a logical reasoning behind why the education system came to be like this, and why so many people are dissatisfied with it when it has been basically the same format for so long. This essay really clarifies the difference between credentialing and crowdsource thinking, although the author does give unclear examples (especially when talking about crowdsource thinking examples). The two are simply different methods for finding a solution to a problem, where crowdsourcing gets the group to work together, sort of like an assembly line where everybody’s role is equally important. Credentialing is the ideology that the expert should be the leader and the expert’s opinion is most important, thus the expert can provide more to the group in terms of finding a solution.

The author then goes on to give statistics, numbers, and facts that support and endorse the method of crowdsourcing, even listing it as a reason as to why the US rankings in education is declining and we are not a strong forerunner anymore. Then, she gives two anecdotes, one about her mother-in-law and the other about a struggling student who, thanks to crowdsourcing is now no longer perceived as “that struggling student” but a creative artist who still struggles with standardized tests, but is much happier and is doing better in class.


I found it interesting (off topic) that Thomas Jefferson was one of the advocates for the education system to be this way, to conform young people because he was very democratic and I thought one of the ideals of democracy was to accept the wide and varying opinions of the people! But if people are evaluated only in a specific way when everybody has unique strengths and weaknesses, fewer opinions from different perspectives will come out. But, just my opinion, though.

1 comment:

  1. Truly, from a democratic viewpoint that embraces a wider range of public base, a standardized education system can be demoralizing. Yet, I have to highlight the distant time period when the system was establish. As Davidson emphasizes, the standardized system was provided for children of the rural area to gain a basic knowledge base, but not to advance and specialize in their respective attributes. After all, the industrial revolution hasn't urbanized the country and a standardized education system seems to be the most efficient way of delivering fundamental knowledges. And that is why Davidson proposed a new teaching style: the general public needs to work together to create a multi-directional learning. But I noticed that you refer to "crowdsourcing" as "an assembly line", which is associated to uniformity, the contrary of Davidson's proposal. Does this imply that crowdsourcing can potentially aid the specialization through the process similar to an assembly line? Consequentially, the two terms shouldn't be so distinctively placed in two opposing ends.

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