Unifying Education as Problem Solving

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46328/ijonses.637

Keywords:

Education policy, business models of education, problem solving, medical model, self-regulated learning, child scientist, stereotype threat in education

Abstract

Public education in the United States is breaking down on two dimensions: its bureaucratic organization and its conceptualization of the learning process. These breakdowns result from attempts to deliver public education using business models and have failed to support the needs of both students and teachers. This breakdown has been further exacerbated by an old misconception about intelligence based on inherent, immutable aspects of biology. This view medicalizes learning problems, enabling schools to categorize already marginalized students producing a stigmatization that negatively impacts their development. To address these problems it is proposed that public education be reframed as a developmental specialization of problem-solving skills. This reframing would ground the conceptualization of learning in the most natural human learning process: problem-solving. Such an approach could directly support students in addressing problems that undermine their individual performance. This problem-solving-centered approach could form both a supportive and successful core educational routine that would model and support stronger collaborative structures between students, teachers, and administrators, building stronger institutions.

Author Biography

Philip Ralph Hulbig, Curry College Lesley University

I study metacognition, self-regulation and problem solving at Curry College's Program for the Advancment of Learning.

References

Hulbig, P.R. (2024). Unifying education as problem solving. International Journal on Social and Education Sciences (IJonSES), 6(1), 117-129. https://doi.org/10.46328/ijonses.637

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Published

2024-02-15

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Section

Articles