Abstract
This article sketches the implications of Gergen’s relational approach for educational research and practice. Gergen suggests
that we envision education as a set of processes intended to enhance relationships. This is a radical departure from most
mainstream educational research and practice, which is designed to enhance the individual’s mind. We first examine three key
assumptions about individuals and about knowledge that undergird mainstream educational research and practice—an emphasis
on the individual as separate from the world, an account of knowledge as decontextualized and a tendency towards hierarchies
which favor purified knowledge over lesser forms. We then describe three alternative assumptions from Gergen’s relational
account of education—an emphasis on individuals as woven into contexts and knowledge as produced in relations, a view of knowledge
as contextualized, and a view of knowledge and action as heterogeneous, not pure. We provide examples from current educational
research and practice that illustrate these three assumptions about relational education.
that we envision education as a set of processes intended to enhance relationships. This is a radical departure from most
mainstream educational research and practice, which is designed to enhance the individual’s mind. We first examine three key
assumptions about individuals and about knowledge that undergird mainstream educational research and practice—an emphasis
on the individual as separate from the world, an account of knowledge as decontextualized and a tendency towards hierarchies
which favor purified knowledge over lesser forms. We then describe three alternative assumptions from Gergen’s relational
account of education—an emphasis on individuals as woven into contexts and knowledge as produced in relations, a view of knowledge
as contextualized, and a view of knowledge and action as heterogeneous, not pure. We provide examples from current educational
research and practice that illustrate these three assumptions about relational education.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Category Original Article
- Pages 1-8
- DOI 10.1007/s12646-011-0120-z
- Authors
- Stanton Wortham, Graduate School of Education, University of Pennsylvania, 3700 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6216, USA
- Kara Jackson, Faculty of Education, Department of Integrated Studies in Education, McGill University, 3700 McTavish Street, Montreal, QC H3A 1Y2, Canada
- Journal Psychological Studies
- Online ISSN 0974-9861
- Print ISSN 0033-2968