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Higher Education at a Crossroads

by Paul R. Geisler (Author)
©2006 Textbook VIII, 256 Pages
Series: Higher Ed, Volume 16

Summary

The central argument of this book posits that today’s American university is dysfunctional or, perhaps, «Dysacademic.» This affective disorder is traced to the increasingly corporate and performative utilities of many contemporary institutions of higher education. Today’s commodified and closed university doesn’t transform the self as it once did, when the pedagogy of Bildung emphasized the development of character and culture by teaching «the rules of thought.» Rather, the dysfunctional American university controls, constricts, and normalizes its subjects according to hyper-structured, accreditation-happy, economically driven disciplinary specialization, and a priori established standards and outcomes that work to define and transform the effective utility of higher education. After deconstructing the discourse of Dysacademia, the author outlines his vision for a third curriculum, one wrought with complexity, self-organization, and critical, open spaces.

Details

Pages
VIII, 256
Publication Year
2006
ISBN (Softcover)
9780820479149
Language
English
Keywords
Accreditation Performativity USA Hochschule Sozialer Wandel Higher Education Corporatization Open Spaces
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2006. VIII, 256 pp.

Biographical notes

Paul R. Geisler (Author)

The Author: Paul R. Geisler is Assistant Professor and Director of Athletic Training Education at Ithaca College. He received a B.S. in sports medicine from Marietta College; an M.A. in exercise physiology from UNC-Chapel Hill; and an Ed.D. in curriculum studies from Georgia Southern University. Geisler has twenty years experience as a certified athletic trainer and ten years as a university/college educator.

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Title: Higher Education at a Crossroads