Freshly Printed - allow 6 days lead
Deep Learning in a Disorienting World
Shows how deep learning is a way to address the toxicity of social polarization.
Jon F. Wergin (Author)
9781108727150, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 19 December 2019
210 pages, 11 b/w illus.
22.8 x 15.3 x 1.1 cm, 0.32 kg
'In a provocative and imaginative review of multiple traditions and paradigms, Jon F. Wergin builds a convincing case that deep learning - constantly challenging our existing ways of thinking and being - is a survival necessity of adult life. Through a skillful weaving of personal examples with theoretical analysis, he shows how this mindset can be practiced in a way that inspires others.' Stephen Brookfield, John Ireland Endowed Chair, University of St. Thomas, Minnesota
Much has been written about the escalating intolerance of worldviews other than one's own. Reasoned arguments based on facts and data seem to have little impact in our increasingly post-truth culture dominated by social media, fake news, tribalism, and identity politics. Recent advances in the study of human cognition, however, offer insights on how to counter these troubling social trends. In this book, psychologist Jon F. Wergin calls upon recent research in learning theory, social psychology, politics, and the arts to show how a deep learning mindset can be developed in both oneself and others. Deep learning is an acceptance that our understanding of the world around us is only temporary and is subject to constant scrutiny. Someone who is committed to learning deeply does not simply react to experiences, but engages fully with that experience, knowing that the inevitable disquietude is what leads to efficacy in the world.
1. Why deep learning is so important … and so hard
2. How we learn: a short primer
3. Mindful learning
4. Constructive disorientation
5. Critical reflection
6. The importance of others
7. The influence of politics on deep learning
8. Constructive disorientation through the arts
9. The art of maintaining essential tensions
10. Cultivating a deep learning mindset.
Subject Areas: Educational psychology [JNC], The self, ego, identity, personality [JMS], Cognition & cognitive psychology [JMR], Occupational & industrial psychology [JMJ], Social, group or collective psychology [JMH], Humanistic psychology [JMAN]