The New Education: How to Revolutionize the University to Prepare Students for a World In Flux

The New Education: How to Revolutionize the University to Prepare Students for a World In Flux

by Cathy N. Davidson

Narrated by Carolyn Cook

Unabridged — 11 hours, 1 minutes

The New Education: How to Revolutionize the University to Prepare Students for a World In Flux

The New Education: How to Revolutionize the University to Prepare Students for a World In Flux

by Cathy N. Davidson

Narrated by Carolyn Cook

Unabridged — 11 hours, 1 minutes

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Overview

A leading educational thinker argues that the American university is stuck in the past -- and shows how we can revolutionize it for our era of constant change

Our current system of higher education dates to the period from 1865 to 1925. It was in those decades that the nation's new universities created grades and departments, majors and minors, all in an attempt to prepare young people for a world transformed by the telegraph and the Model T.

As Cathy N. Davidson argues in The New Education, this approach to education is wholly unsuited to the era of the gig economy. From the Ivy League to community colleges, she introduces us to innovators who are remaking college for our own time by emphasizing student-centered learning that values creativity in the face of change above all. The New Education ultimately shows how we can teach students not only to survive but to thrive amid the challenges to come.

Editorial Reviews

SEPTEMBER 2017 - AudioFile

Davidson starts this deep dive into higher education and where it should go by looking back at the last time higher education revolutionized itself—in second half of the late 1800s. Carolyn Cook deftly narrates this audiobook in a tone that captures Davidson's love of recent innovations in higher education—such as community colleges, MOOCs, and student-centered learning—and her frustration with what is seemingly unchanged—large lecture classes, multiple-choice testing, and pointless assignments. Cook knows where to dip her voice to hint at a joke or bemused point by Davidson and where to shift to a sincere tone to express Davidson’s concern about what's being discussed. Throughout, Cook balances Davidson’s conversational yet critical approach to discussing higher education. L.E. © AudioFile 2017, Portland, Maine

The New York Times Book Review - Craig Calhoun

Davidson argues persuasively that student-centered, active learning can transform classrooms and even online courses…Davidson's enthusiasm and her examples should inspire creativity from a lot more college teachers.

From the Publisher

"The New Education" is an inspiring, well-researched, and compellingly written manifesto for a revolution in learning and teaching. It is a book for everyone who wants to understand why and how universities need to be reimagined for the twenty-first century—those who have been 'educated' and those who aspire to be. It is the most important book I have read in many years."—Tony Wagner, Harvard University i-lab expert in residence and author of The Global Achievement Gap and Creating Innovators

"Davidson is one of the most thoughtful voices from within academia calling for a more student-centered university. The New Education is a welcome collection of stories detailing how professors, administrators and students are designing paths through higher education that are relevant to our changing culture and society... At her best, Davidson writes in the tradition of Du Bois and Dewey, a pragmatist tradition that puts inquiry first and sees learning through the potential of the full, complex human beings students can become."—Washington Post

"Davidson argues persuasively that student-centered, active learning can transform classrooms and even online courses... [her] enthusiasm and her examples should inspire creativity from a lot more college teachers."—New York Times Book Review

"The fact that Davidson is able to bridge her narrative on the history and future of higher education across a popular and academic audience is a testimony to her skills as a scholar, an educator, and a writer. Davidson knows her stuff, has something to say, and has clearly worked very hard in crafting a book that should be discussed by everyone who cares about higher education... Powerfully argued, beautifully written, and doggedly grounded in research and examples."—Technology & Learning, Inside Higher Education

“It’s Davidson who has a vision for what education could and should be that’s consistent with the traditional values of freedom, opportunity and progress we associate with education.”—John Warner, Chicago Tribune

“I am aware that I cannot do justice to the merits of this book, let alone capture the depths of Davidson’s insights, in a few thousand words, but I do think I can make enough points sufficiently to warrant why readers should commit themselves to examining this volume, sharing it with others, and most importantly help to enact changes in higher education offered in this work.”—Richard Leo Enos, Athenaeum

“I found the book to be a succinct (it isn’t long), interesting (particularly the historical perspectives on problems that plague us today), practical (so many references and case studies of success!) guide to the big problems in universities. The book is also written in a funny and light-hearted way, despite the gravity of some of the issues that are discussed. I’d strongly recommend it to all HE colleagues, and especially to staff in managerial positions. We’re the ones who need to make the change.”—Christopher Hassall, Katatrepsis

“Read it. And change the world! If you are an academic or a student or an administrator, begin with college.”
 —Susan D. Blum, Academography

"The New Education takes a good hard look at the old education, and finds it sorely wanting. Are colleges and universities failing an entire generation of young people? Yes, argues Cathy N. Davidson, a renowned literary scholar and a leader in higher education reform. This is an important and illuminating book whose argument is driven by a deep knowledge of the past and an even deeper commitment to the future."—Jill Lepore, David Woods Kemper '42 Professor of American History, Harvard University

"The New Education compels us to equip our students with creative new tactics for navigating the volatile present. Grounded in a deep understanding of both historical and current crises in education, Davidson challenges us to reinvigorate and reconsider our approach to reform."—Danah Boyd, author of It's Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens

"The New Education offers valuable reflections on ways educators can reexamine approaches to preparing young women and men for a rapidly evolving modern world. Grounded in decades of classroom experience and scholarly inquiry, Cathy N. Davidson makes a compelling case for educators to interrogate traditional structures in higher education, and help students seek, in her words, 'a sustained and productive life.'"—John J. DeGioia, president Georgetown University

"Cathy N. Davidson offers us an inspiring and lucid explanation of how we got the educational system we have and how to build the one our students and our country needs and deserves. A must-read for those interested in higher education."—Diana Taylor, president, Modern Language Association, and university professor, New York University

“She pulls no punches and writes in a style that challenges and encourages in equal measure. She is a doyen of the progressive education movement, and her ideas are far reaching and influential.”—Steve Wheeler, Associate Professor in Learning Technology, Plymouth, Devon, UK

“In her book The New Education, Davidson emphasizes the importance of higher education as a place of transformation for students, making the role of the teaching in the academy a critical one. Tracing the evolution of the university from the seventeenth century through today, Davidson … argues that our contemporary world has moved far beyond the nineteenth-century paradigms that the current university was designed for, and that it’s past time for colleges and universities to evolve as well.”—Cathy LeBlanc

"An engaging, anecdotal, wide-ranging look at educational innovation... a persuasive plea for creative learning."—Kirkus Reviews

SEPTEMBER 2017 - AudioFile

Davidson starts this deep dive into higher education and where it should go by looking back at the last time higher education revolutionized itself—in second half of the late 1800s. Carolyn Cook deftly narrates this audiobook in a tone that captures Davidson's love of recent innovations in higher education—such as community colleges, MOOCs, and student-centered learning—and her frustration with what is seemingly unchanged—large lecture classes, multiple-choice testing, and pointless assignments. Cook knows where to dip her voice to hint at a joke or bemused point by Davidson and where to shift to a sincere tone to express Davidson’s concern about what's being discussed. Throughout, Cook balances Davidson’s conversational yet critical approach to discussing higher education. L.E. © AudioFile 2017, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2017-06-05
An argument for why higher education requires radical change to prepare students for an unpredictable future.Distinguished educator Davidson (Now You See It: How the Brain Science of Attention Will Transform the Way We Live, Work, and Learn, 2011, etc.), who directs the Futures Initiative at the City University of New York Graduate Center, believes that colleges are mired in 19th-century pedagogy. In an engaging, anecdotal, wide-ranging look at educational innovation, she argues that students "need new ways of integrating knowledge, including through reflection on why and what they are learning." They must become active learners, not merely passive absorbers of lectures and rote memorizers. Davidson advocates dramatic pedagogical revisions, much like those instituted by Harvard's president Charles Eliot in the 1880s, when he proposed a university that would prepare students for careers in an industrial age. Today's students, writes the author, need skills to ready them for "intellectual space travel." Davidson praises the nimbleness and flexibility of community colleges, which pioneer learning methods and institute support services (Metro cards, attentive advisers) for nontraditional students. She criticizes both technophobes who bemoan the internet and technophiles who believe computers will transform teaching. Students need digital skills and web literacy, she reasonably contends, but in the context of awareness about how technology connects to "every aspect of our political, personal, and economic lives." Davidson cites Arizona State University as exemplary in curricular reform, where studies are connected "to community, to the cultural, physical, and socioeconomic conditions of Phoenix, Arizona, and the Southwest more generally." Among the many educators whose ideas the author highlights is Christine Ortiz, an MIT professor and graduate school dean engaged in creating a nonprofit residential research university featuring project-based learning. Davidson sees current emphasis on STEM fields to be too focused on testing rather than real-life applications. "Youth," she writes, "are still being graded into passivity and a state of fear by standardized classes." Advice for students and teachers rounds out a persuasive plea for creative learning.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940173724625
Publisher: Hachette Audio
Publication date: 09/05/2017
Edition description: Unabridged
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