Phenomenology is the philosophical study of moment-by-moment lived experience, and expected lived experience. Simply put, it is the attempt to understand each moment of life experience as a phenomenon. (How can you live life if not in a constant state of awe?) Here’s the sad thing: we tend to get quite accustomed to the life we live. You know that tomorrow you will wake up, eat your Frosted Flakes, go to your cognates, look at espn.com or for new shoes on your laptop during class, sit next to the same person, go out for a beer at the same bar after class with the same people, go home and do the usual busy work and fight with imovie for an hour, then go to sleep after watching Letterman. I bet you can go through a day without even realizing it. Humans are creatures of habit; we tend to find a comfortable way to go through life and stick to it. However, there are moments when everything we know to be, everything we expect, gets disrupted. When this moment occurs our eyes are opened; the world and our experience of it recreates itself in a matter of seconds. I think these are moments of enlightenment, moments of true learning. These are phenomenological disruptions – instances when we truly realize that every second of existence is strange and beautiful; it is in only in our search for and perception of meaning that we are the phenomenal exception to the universe.
The best learning comes when a student's expected lived experience is disrupted. This can happen on a number of different scales – whether it be traveling to a foreign country (no dead body required) or sitting through an eye-opening lesson (though you will experience few of these in your life, yet hopefully teach many.) Here’s the thing though – I don’t think this can be done in a mediated environment. I don’t think that we can significantly alter a student’s perception of the world through the use of the Internet or other technology.
Today we are conditioned against letting media significantly affect our lives. First of all, we are brought up with media only being considered entertainment – from Sesame Street to Saved by the Bell, in our initial years media is only educational entertainment or amusing adventures. Then we grow to watch movies, to surf the Internet, to talk to those from far away places through media – but it barely registers.
There is no phenomenon in mediated experience. I like to look at the National Geographic Photo of The Day everyday; I see the sublime but there is little effect. Americans read about the genocide in Darfur, they see the images, they hear the testimonies. Do they do anything? Do you think we’d take action if we spent a day, a week, a year, with those who are suffering? This world ends the moment the laptop screen is closed.The more I use technology, the more I consider its vast possibilities, the more I see its limitations. It is a valuable tool, but I think that it should not be a priority. There are more important things, more meaningful interactions (see my last post.) Don’t get me wrong – I like emailing, I like instant messaging – but I go to these only when alone in my apartment (or other situations where speech is not permitted and my laptop screen isn’t facing Charlie or Deanna.) These are only sad alternatives for when sitting at a quiet table with a drink, taking a stroll under the Christmas lights of Ann Arbor, or hanging out and playing a game of pool is not an option. The realm of the real will always trump the mediated world. It is only in the real and physical world that we can truly experience the phenomena of life; that we can truly begin understand even a small bit of what there is to be understood.
So how can we use this idea as teachers? (Or oppose it, that’s fine. In fact, I thank you if you even read the whole thing. I doubt I’d read my own writing.) I myself don’t know how we can create these moments for students; I don’t even begin to claim that what I say here is something to be striven for. In fact, I doubt I had very few of these phenomenological disruptions, these moments in which the world became a very new place, a much more fantastic place to exist, during my high school experience. There were a few times this happened – reading Jack Kerouac, a great conversation in AP English or Philosophy, when a pretty girl actually talked to me – that the world I knew became a very different place from what I thought it to be, but they were seldom. Do they have to be seldom? How, or can, we create these experiences? I want to be able to open my students’ eyes to the phenomena that every moment of lived experience should be, that it is.

5 comments:
It should mean something that I'm reading your blog with the ungodly amounts of work I have to do...that is a compliment...Left me speechless once again..
Here's what I think...I think that the phenomenological (big word for me, I just had to sound it out) learning notion you brought up is first of all beautiful, and secondly very true, to me. I think the best learning true learning does happen in those instances, but this learning is learning about the self, and is distinct from academic learning (and perhaps that is why it is much more fulfilling?)
That said, I don't feel that this type of learning is something that another can foster for another individual, though we might look to. It is learning of the self, and thus is a matter of course and inward reflection, which is beyond our control, but that is the beauty of it.
That's what I think.
can you edit comments on other people's blogs? I should have proof-read better :(
Speaking as another person who's read your entire post, I agree with you entirely. Indeed, I'm wishing one of my philosophy major friends was around to give me some nice quote to sum it all up. Of course, I can't be trusted to do this myself, so instead I'll say this:
I definitely believe that school should be a place to shake kids out of their state of complacency. In college, you can go study abroad, and see how much things change/stay the same somewhere else. In middle/high school, we seem to focus on the familiar. Picking up on the discussion we had a week or two ago in English methods, there are arguments for and against selecting books that our kids will relate to. I tend to lean both ways (which looks very silly when done in public): struggling readers COULD find a familiar text useful as a way to get engaged in a story, if it makes them feel good that someone is writing about stuff important to them. At the same time, there's something to be said for escapism--for struggling readers and for the bored high-performers as well.
This is where technology comes in. The internet can let our kids chat with students on the other side of the world, play around with simulations, research strange and interesting things, and all manner of other things. In these cases, going for the unfamiliar is likely to be the way to go. Any kid with a chance to go online is likely to seek out what's familiar to him. Or, if the kid's male, porn, but that's why we have acceptable use policies.
Despite the fact that I stand next to computers quite a bit in my line of work ;-) I'm inclined to agree with you, Jon. I most certainly agree with you that if we as teachers aren't angling to facilitate a few such moments for some of our kids then we should probably be thinking about other ways of earning a living. I'm still thinking this through, but my experience has been that web access *can* be a complementary part of such moments of disruption...to offer a timely glimpse of a place about which the curiosity has been roused, or to provide a piece of information at an opportune moment. You posting puts me in mind of your pal John Dewey and his passionate advocacy for the power of experience. His vision offered a compelling, but deeply challenging vision (in terms of implementation) and this was only exacerbated by the trend towards larger schools (which came with the fundamentally positive movement towards schooling for all). An emphasis on experience, as you well understand, tends to be a bit slower, messier and harder to regulate than our test-driven, "efficient" system is (or appears to be, anyway). But this casts the important question you raise in the sort of big picture view that tends to make people thrown up their hands.
Right now, I'm inclined to think that places like the rap sessions at Clemente get us about as close to what I think you're advocating for (within schools) as anything that I can think of...but I'll keep thinking.
How do you see it?
Well, I do agree that technology can be eye opening and be somewhat of an aid in creating this moment (the one-to-one program just has me a bit technologically jaded right now,) I think that like Audry commented above, it is a very personal experience. I mean, there is one lecture I remember from college during which my communications professor went off on a tangent not even about anything really academic, and it definitely shook me... (ask me about cosmic bursts sometime.)
As far as this happening in schools - I think that rap sessions at clemente are a good example of what can lead to such a moment. The more I think about it, I think that one ingredient has to be some sort of brutal honesty... for it is a moment where you see an extreme truth of existence in one way or another. The hard part here is that technology has lost it's ability to communicate with brutal honesty... I think that can only happen in the realm of experience.
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