Improving teaching by fostering educational judgment: Roles for dialogue and imagination
An interactive talk by Dr. David Coulter, Associate Professor, UBC
For most of the last fifty years efforts to improve teaching have emphasized direct links between various forms of knowledge and improved practice. In contrast, I contend that understanding teaching practice as the exercise of educational judgment is a better way to understand teaching. Ironically, for a profession concerned with making decisions affecting the lives of others, judgment is an under-theorized topic in education. The study of human judgment, however, has a 2400-year history in Western scholarship, beginning with Plato and Aristotle, through Kant, to the relatively recent work of Arendt (1978), Gadamer (1960/1996) and Habermas (1992/1996). I report on my efforts to develop and use an Arendtian framework--with its concern for particular forms of dialogue and imagination--to understand teaching as the exercise of educational judgment.