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Experimentation in Institutions: Ethics, Creativity, and Existential Competence

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Abstract

The existential, experiential, ethical, pathic and pre-pathic dimensions of education are essential for the creative composition of subjectivities in institutional spaces, yet educational research and policy tend increasingly to privilege technical discourses and prescriptive approaches both when evaluating ‘what is effective in education’ and when determining educational policy. This essay explores those aspects of the educational experience and educational institutions that are often felt and sensed pre-cognitively by students, parents and teachers, but are seldom given further elaboration or articulation in educational research. We will reflect on what is meant by the experience of education and experience in education, including the struggles to make sense of or understand something, the surprises that strike pre-reflectively, and the ways in which such moments are noticed, pursued, and explored rather than reflexively ‘evaluated’. We then explore the idea of experimentation in institutions, in particular in relation to the range of concepts that Jean Oury introduces in order to move our attention and awareness to questions of experience, existence, atmosphere, and the pathic—the way in which we undergo, sense and participate in the world prior to cognition and the desire for mastery and control of our encounters. Finally, we address the question of the ethics of institutions.

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Correspondence to Aislinn O’Donnell.

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O’Donnell, A. Experimentation in Institutions: Ethics, Creativity, and Existential Competence. Stud Philos Educ 37, 31–46 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11217-017-9572-5

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11217-017-9572-5

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