learnification
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From learn + -ification. Coined by Dutch educational theorist Gert Biesta an article published in a 2009 journal volume.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]learnification (uncountable)
- (education, derogatory) The shift in discourses around and understandings of education to focus entirely or almost entirely on learning.
- 2009, Gert Biesta, “Good education in an age of measurement: on the need to reconnect with the question of purpose in education”, in Educational Assessment, Evaluation and Accountability, volume 21, number 1, , pages 33–46:
- In the next section I explore why we seem to have lost sight of questions about values, purpose and the goodness of education. I suggest that at least part of the explanation for this has to do with what I will refer to as the 'learnification' of education: the transformation of an educational vocabulary into a language of learning.
- 2016 July 30, Osvaldo Muñiz Solari, Michael Solem, Richard Boehm, Learning Progressions in Geography Education: International Perspectives, Springer, →ISBN, page 48:
- 'Learnification' appears to reduce teachers to facilitators of learning, competent practitioners or at worst 'deliverers' of the curriculum.
- 2017 October 20, Elisabeth Hultqvist, Sverker Lindblad, Thomas S. Popkewitz, Critical Analyses of Educational Reforms in an Era of Transnational Governance, Springer, →ISBN, page 53:
- Pearson's business motto is 'Always Learning', which plays well with the contemporary moment of learnification.
- 2021 December 15, Andy Hargreaves, Dennis Shirley, Well-Being in Schools: Three Forces That Will Uplift Your Students in a Volatile World, ASCD, →ISBN:
- The learnification in SEL is evident in its claimed benefits for cognitive outcomes and achievement gains rather than personal health or societal well-being.