Abstract

Taking up the theme of this year’s Congress – Bridging communities: Making public knowledge, making knowledge public – our panel’s three essays each examines from three different locations how knowledge and knowledge-making function in the contemporary market/knowledge economy: international education, autobiographical inquiry, and teacher education. The educational vision and commitment that these three distinct pieces share is ethics of care. Problematizing commodification of knowledge and its notion of having knowledge, we make the case for the centrality of being in human and societal living. We then make suggestions for how the being-dimension can be conceptualized and lived. In particular, we argue that caring, being present, self-knowing and human agency are central.

Highlights

  • Article abstractTaking up the theme of this year’s Congress – Bridging communities: Making public knowledge, making knowledge public – our panel’s three essays each examines from three different locations how knowledge and knowledge-making function in the contemporary market/knowledge economy: international education, autobiographical inquiry, and teacher education

  • The theme of this year’s Congress2, Bridging communities: Making public knowledge, making knowledge public, suggests that there is bridging required between those who are in the knowledge making business and those outside

  • Incountering the phenomenon of commodification of knowledge, we suggest an alternative conception of knowledge: knowing as a way of being in the world

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Summary

Article abstract

Taking up the theme of this year’s Congress – Bridging communities: Making public knowledge, making knowledge public – our panel’s three essays each examines from three different locations how knowledge and knowledge-making function in the contemporary market/knowledge economy: international education, autobiographical inquiry, and teacher education. The educational vision and commitment that these three distinct pieces share is ethics of care. Problematizing commodification of knowledge and its notion of having knowledge, we make the case for the centrality of being in human and societal living. We make suggestions for how the being-dimension can be conceptualized and lived. We argue that caring, being present, self-knowing and human agency are central

Cite this article
University of Manitoba Canada
Introduction
Kumari Beck
Avraham Cohen
Full Text
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