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Collaborative Learning: Higher Education, Interdependence, and the Authority of Knowledge
  
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Collaborative Learning: Higher Education, Interdependence, and the Authority of Knowledge [Paperback]

Professor Kenneth A. Bruffee PhD (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Collaborative Learning: Higher Education, Interdependence, and the Authority of Knowledge Collaborative Learning: Higher Education, Interdependence, and the Authority of Knowledge 3.0 out of 5 stars (3)
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Book Description

0801852323 978-0801852329 August 1, 1995

In Collaborative Learning, Kenneth Bruffee advocates a far-reaching change in the relations we assume between college and university professors and their students, between the learned and the learning. He argues that the nature and source of the authority of college and university professors is the central issue in college and university education in our time, and that if college and university professors continue to teach exclusively in the stand-up-and-tell-'em way, their students will miss the opportunity to learn mature, effective interdependence--and this, Bruffee maintains, is the most important lesson we should expect students to learn. The book makes three related points. First, we should begin thinking about colleges and universities, and they should begin thinking about themselves, not as stores of information but as institutions of reacculturation. Second, we should think of college and university professors not as purveyors of information but as agents of cultural change who foster reacculturation by marshaling interdependence among student pers. And third, colleges and universities should revise longstanding assumptions about the nature and authority of knowledge and about classroom authority. To accomplish this, the author maintains, both college students and their professors must learn collaboratively.

Describing the practical value of the activities encouraged by a collaborative approach--students working in consensus groups and research teams, tutoring peers, and helping each other with editing and revision--Bruffee concludes that, in the short run, collaborative learning helps students learn better--more thoroughly, more deeply, more efficiently--than learning alone. In the long run, collaborative learning is the best possible preparation for the real world, as students look beyond the authority of teachers, practice the craft of interdependence, and construct knowledge in the very way that academic disciplines and the professions do. With no loss of respect for the value of expertise, students learn to depend on one another rather than depending exclusively on the authority of experts and teachers.

In the second edition of this widely respected work, the argument is sharply focused on the need to change college and university education top to bottom, and the need to understand knowledge differently in order to accomplish that change. Several chapters, including that on collaborative learning and computers, have been thoroughly revised, and three new chapters have been added: on differences between collaborative learning and cooperative learning; on literary study and teaching literature; and on postgraduate education.

From Collaborative Learning, second edition:

On the curriculum: Behind every public debate about college curriculum today lie comfortably unchallenged traditional assumptions. When we become fully aware of how deeply and irremediably these traditional assumptions have been challenged by twentieth-century thought, we see that a potentially more serious, and perhaps more rancorous and divisive, educational debate

On the social construction of knowledge: Remember the time Aunty Molly sat on the Thanksgiving turkey? Tell such a story at a family party and family members follow the story easily and get the point, because they are all members of the same small knowledge community. They know the people and the situation thoroughly, and they understand the family's private references.

But try to tell the same story to neighbors or colleagues. For them to follow the story and get the point, you have to explain a lot of obscure details about family events and personalities that they're not familiar with. That is, when a smaller community sets out to integrate itself into a larger one, the level of discourse has to change. The story changes and even its meaning changes as it becomes a constituting narrative of a larger and more complex community.

The main purpose of college or university education is to help older adolescents and adults renegotiate their membership in that encompassing common culture. The foundational knowledge that shapes us as children sooner or later circumscribes our lives. We never entirely outgrow the local, foundational knowledge communities into which we are born. But for most people, the need to cope to one degree or another with the diversity and complexity of human life beyond the local and familiar does outgrow knowledge that is familiar and (locally) foundational.

On postgraduate education: The problem is not that graduate professors do not know what they need to know. The problem is that most of them have learned what they know entirely under the traditional social conditions of academic alienation and aggression. Indeed, the problem is that members of current graduate school faculties were selected into the profession in part because they evidenced those traits. As a result, their fine education and superb reputations as scholars and critics may in some cases actually subvert their ability to understand knowledge as a social construct, learning as an adult social process, and teaching as a role of leadership among adults.



Editorial Reviews

Review

"Collaborative Learning is an important book. One of my longstanding complaints has been that most of the theories so widely quoted by scholars today have not been examined in light of their pedagogical implications. Bruffee has done that; we all need to do that." -- Pat Belanoff, Journal of Higher Education

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

About the Author

Kenneth A. Bruffee is professor of English and director of The Scholars Program at Brooklyn College.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Press (August 1, 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0801852323
  • ISBN-13: 978-0801852329
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,211,362 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Neuroscience supports many of Brufee's claims, December 7, 2006
I read this book for a doctoral course on collaborative learning. I argued with it throughout the course and in the process, came around to Bruffee's way of thinking--that learning is indeed a social process.

Shortly after this course, I had a major life change that refocused my program away from corporate learning and toward brain-based learning. From all the cognitive psychology and neuroscience courses and reading, the consensus is that external and environmental factors strongly influence the function of the brain--to the cellular level and very possibly the intercellular, genetic level.

Keep in mind that Bruffee is an English professor and as such, is not trained as much in a quantitative empirical as an analytical qualitative tradition. Therefore, criticism based on anectdotal vs. empirical evidence doesn't hold much weight. He has thoroughly analyzed and logically argued his thesis, in accordance with rhetorical traditions. The introductory chapters that explain how he came to adopt the views he did are very telling. Recall, that he didn't work in isolation, but in conjunction with other scholars/academicians who applied scholarly traditions to their research.

Educators, in my opinion, would do well to learn more about the brain and how it functions related to learning. Yes, we can essentially brainwash students to comply with existing wisdom or we can encourage them to think critically in the course of exposure to the "wisdom of the ages" for the purpose of applying relevant knowledge to their own lives.

Almost intuitively, Bruffee echos many lessons learned from empirical study of the brain through careful observation. In other words, there is more than one way to peel a potato and Brufee convincingly argues for one way--a collaborative one in which the boundaries of knowledge groups are negotiated--to do it.

The subtraction of a star was due to the lack of "smoothness" in which he states his case. He does, at times, come across as rather preachy and pedantic, rather than warmly convincing. Therefore, I subtracted a "style" point but not for substance or validity of his arguments.
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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars CL under the Aegis of Nonfoundational Social Constructionism, July 28, 2001
By 
Phillip G Stephens (FPO, AE United States) - See all my reviews
Although I don't agree with the nonfoundationalist point of view, there is much to ponder and learn from Bruffee. If one delves into WHY they don't agree with his thesis, they'll probably come away from the exercise with a far better understanding about their position vis-a-vis education-perhaps they'll even develop their own philosophy of education.

However, believers beware: if you agree with the concepts outlined by Bruffee and the nonfoundationalist camp, check the other side of the coin (cognitive, essentialist, traditionalist) before committing.

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9 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A non-book on nonfoundationalism, March 3, 2001
By A Customer
A faculty symposium (Jan 2001) was given Ken Bruffee's book to read as the text for the symposium's subject of "interactivity" in distance education.

I'm afraid the book failed to convince. The moderator, Dr. Steve Eskow, of the Pangaea Network -- and the one who chose the text for the symposium -- admitted that the work needed "severe editing".

Others criticised its evangelical tone and referred to the "blessed St. Ken." Many were put off by the book's tone: Ken starts in his preface by referring to students as incapable of interacting with each other as human beings, and then goes on to put down his readers in the first sentence of the first chapter -- he was achieving wisdom while the rest of us were going through puberty, thereby neatly alluding to our sexual inadequacy in the face of his own whatever. Whatever.

Bruffee has a distinct agenda - he wants to restructure higher education and "reacculturate" students. Some wondered at the political undercurrent of the work, but I reckon the thrust is religious rather than political. St. Ken has Seen the Light, and all those who flock to him will be Saved from Darkness.

Never mind that the book's argument is entirely anecdotal; if one truly believes in nonfoundational social constructivism then the lack of hard facts doesn't matter: Ken is Right! Everyone else in Education is Wrong (and heading straight to Hell).

Hey Ho.

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