"I Love Learning; I Hate School"

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A01=Susan D. Blum
academic performance
anthropological insights
anthropology
anthropology of education
Author_Susan D. Blum
Category=JHMC
Category=JNC
Category=JNM
classroom
classroom critique
colleges
critique of higher education
curriculum design
educational experience
educational mismatch
educational psychology
educational reform
educational structures
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
experiential learning
experimentation
higher education
human learning inclinations
institutional goals
learning
learning vs. schooling
meaningful learning
real-world skills
reintegration of learning
retention
schooling
student dissatisfaction
student engagement
student participation
student success
system of education
teaching
teaching and learning
teaching methods
top-tier institution
transformative research
university critique

Product details

  • ISBN 9781501713484
  • Weight: 907g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Apr 2017
  • Publisher: Cornell University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Frustrated by her students' performance, her relationships with them, and her own daughter's problems in school, Susan D. Blum, a professor of anthropology, set out to understand why her students found their educational experience at a top-tier institution so profoundly difficult and unsatisfying. Through her research and in conversations with her students, she discovered a troubling mismatch between the goals of the university and the needs of students.

In I Love Learning; I Hate School, Blum tells two intertwined but inseparable stories: the results of her research into how students learn contrasted with the way conventional education works, and the personal narrative of how she herself was transformed by this understanding. Blum concludes that the dominant forms of higher education do not match the myriad forms of learning that help students-people in general-master meaningful and worthwhile skills and knowledge. Students are capable of learning huge amounts, but the ways higher education is structured often leads them to fail to learn. More than that, it leads to ill effects.

In this critique of higher education, infused with anthropological insights, Blum explains why so much is going wrong and offers suggestions for how to bring classroom learning more in line with appropriate forms of engagement. She challenges our system of education and argues for a "reintegration of learning with life."

Susan D. Blum is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Notre Dame. She is the author of My Word! Plagiarism and College Culture, also from Cornell, Lies That Bind: Chinese Truth, Other Truths, Portraits of "Primitives": Ordering Human Kinds in the Chinese Nation, the editor of Making Sense of Language: Readings in Culture and Communication (three editions), and coeditor of China Off Center: Mapping the Margins of the Middle Kingdom.

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