Fórum de Discussão: o retorno a uma utopia realizável - a Universidade do Minho como projecto aberto, participado, ao serviço do engrandecimento dos seus agentes e do desenvolvimento da sua região

segunda-feira, fevereiro 26, 2007

Notícias de Harvard, a começar a semana - I

Reproduzo de seguida a 1ª parte - porque é algo longa - de uma mensagem que me caiu na caixa de correio electrónico esta manhã. Parece-me valer a pena a respectiva leitura, se bem que possa provocar algumas cócegas.
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«Notícias da melhor universidade do mundo:
Thursday, Feb. 22, 2007
As Harvard Goes ...
By Jeremy Caplan
The easiest way to start an academic brawl is to ask what an educated person should know. The last time Harvard University tackled that question was in 1978, when it established its Core Curriculum, which focused less on content than on mastering ways of thinking. Like Harvard's so-called Red Book standards of 1945, which helped inspire a generation of distribution requirements, the core had broad resonance at other major universities. Now, after a four-year process initiated under controversial former president Lawrence Summers, the nation's most famous university has come up with a whole new set of guidelines that proponents say will help clarify how liberal-arts subjects like philosophy and art history shed light on the hurly-burly of more quotidian topics. "Students will be more motivated to learn if they see a connection with the kinds of problems, issues and questions they will encounter in later life," says interim president Derek Bok. Harvard isn't the only institution rethinking what and how to teach its students. Yale, Rutgers and the universities of Pennsylvania and Texas have recently made similar changes, and now that Harvard has joined the club, others are likely to follow.
Harvard's new curriculum establishes eight primary subject areas that all students will have to take. The categories include Societies of the World, encompassing subjects like anthropology and international relations; Ethical Reasoning, a practical approach to philosophy; and the United States in the World, which will likely span multiple departments, including sociology and economics. The plan, which is expected to be formally approved by the faculty in May, won't go into effect before September 2009 at the earliest.
But the school is already preemptively dismissing charges that it is embracing purely practical knowledge. "We do not propose that we teach the headlines," said a report published on Feb. 7 by the curriculum committee, comprising professors, students and a dean. "Only that the headlines, along with much else in our students' lives, are among the things that a liberal education can help students make better sense of."
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(extracto de mensagem electrónica proveniente de jcrmendes@ilch.uminho.pt)

1 comentário:

J. Cadima Ribeiro disse...

Podendo quase parecer um comentário a esta "entrada", recomendo igualmente a leitura da mensagem "Modelos", de hoje, de JVC (cf. JVC-ApontamEntoS/Reformar a Educação Superior).