Dr Ryan Arthur
Dr Ryan Arthur
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Dr Ryan Arthur - Inclusive Assessment in Higher Education
มุมมอง 425 หลายเดือนก่อน
Dr Ryan Arthur - Inclusive Assessment in Higher Education
The Student as editor: Reimaging the student in the age of AI (short version)- Dr Ryan Arthur
มุมมอง 626 หลายเดือนก่อน
This nano-presentation will project a vision of the focus of assessment in the age of artificial intelligence (AI). More specifically, it will outline what assessors should focus on to evaluate the student’s critical engagement with AI. The use of AI in higher education (HE) has risen quickly in recent years with a parallel proliferation of new AI tools available (Chu et al., 2022). In seconds,...
The Student as editor: Reimaging the student in the age of artificial intelligence - Dr Ryan Arthur
มุมมอง 146 หลายเดือนก่อน
This nano-presentation will project a vision of the focus of assessment in the age of artificial intelligence (AI). More specifically, it will outline what assessors should focus on to evaluate the student’s critical engagement with AI. The use of AI in higher education (HE) has risen quickly in recent years with a parallel proliferation of new AI tools available (Chu et al., 2022). In seconds,...
Decolonising series - Episode 4: What is the Imperial Gaze? Dr Ryan Arthur
มุมมอง 1.4Kปีที่แล้ว
Decolonising series - Episode 4: What is the Imperial Gaze? Dr Ryan Arthur
Decolonising series - Episode 3: What is Epistemic Violence? Dr Ryan Arthur
มุมมอง 1.8Kปีที่แล้ว
Decolonising series - Episode 3: What is Epistemic Violence? Dr Ryan Arthur
Decolonising series - Episode 2: The dilemmas of decolonisation / decolonization - Dr Ryan Arthur
มุมมอง 1.5Kปีที่แล้ว
A literature review of Decolonisation
Decolonising series - Episode 1: What is decolonisation / decolonization?
มุมมอง 2.7Kปีที่แล้ว
Dr Ryan Arthur's gentle introduction to decolonisation
Reflections in HE - Episode 3: This will end in tears
มุมมอง 7ปีที่แล้ว
Reflections in HE - Episode 3: This will end in tears
Reflections in HE - Episode 2: Power grab
มุมมอง 17ปีที่แล้ว
Reflections in HE - Episode 2: Power grab
Reflections in HE - Episode 1: I'm done!
มุมมอง 31ปีที่แล้ว
Reflections in HE - Episode 1: I'm done!
Decolonising Series - What is Decolonisation? A better version is here https://youtu.be/3Cl2Mgci17o
มุมมอง 2.6K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Decolonising Series - What is Decolonisation? A better version is here th-cam.com/video/3Cl2Mgci17o/w-d-xo.html
ExchangeHE presents Spotlight: Theatre of the Oppressed - Gregory Ryan
มุมมอง 114 ปีที่แล้ว
ExchangeHE presents Spotlight: Theatre of the Oppressed - Gregory Ryan
ExchangeHE presents Spotlight: Interactive Learning with Lego Patrick Mulenran
มุมมอง 144 ปีที่แล้ว
Interactive Learning with Lego (Reconstructing Reality) - Patrick Mulenran sharing best practice (04.02.2020)
ExchangeHE presents Spotlight: Interactive Learning with Lego - Patrick Mulenran
มุมมอง 164 ปีที่แล้ว
Interactive Learning with Lego (Reconstructing Reality) Patrick Mulenran sharing best practice (04.02.2020)

ความคิดเห็น

  • @philipdawes2661
    @philipdawes2661 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

    'Is what you say persuasive, or does how you say it detract from, or even conceal the message you wish to convey'. Public speakers rarely have the charisma to persuade or educate when they do not tailor what they say to the audience listening. Comes back to 'why would I want to listen to what you have to say'. Obviously, the audience is 'not of one mind' either, with the perceptive pulling out the intended meaning regardless of how charismatic the speaker is.

  • @philipdawes2661
    @philipdawes2661 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Thank you, that was a very useful and concise piece of education. A couple of questions based on interpretations, if I may. 1) Your first example: There is no example, in history, of a working, multicultural, national identity, only of attempted assimilation or segregation. If we all 'retreat' into our own cultural silo's, however granular you want to be in defining those, how will conflict and clashes be avoided, because humanity has proven itself to be seemingly incapable of tolerating 'difference'. 2) Second. Given the slow progress of humanity towards a future with better societal structures, if there are nuggets of something positive that can contribute to that progress mixed into a pile of dung, are they not worth plucking out, cleaning off and making use of? eg. most religious writing, can be used to justify both the best and worst of human behaviours. (As a more general point, for me, something that cannot be defined, or given shape to, needs clarity and purpose, without either of those it just becomes an excuse to indulge in whims, however intentioned, beneficial or not).

  • @keepmovingforward6423
    @keepmovingforward6423 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hi I sent an email or can you please share the best contact. Thanks!

  • @FlashdogFul28
    @FlashdogFul28 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Really interesting video. Recently the Nation trust along with many other British Charities said the British countryside was too white in a way that we would never accuse Nigeria or china as being too black or too Chineses or words to that effect, and that it needed to be decolonised from your video its not clear to me how you decolonised the British countryside which is mostly made up of the indigenous peoples of Britain, a term I know can be controversal when white people use it even though it is clearly appicable to the peoples of every other country give or take in the world. And just as many those cultures feel the history cultural imprealism of the west and try to protect their cultural history and idenity so the white people of Europe worry about the lost of cultural idenity in the wake of immigration. Perhaps a last comment; white people are told often that they can not know what it is like to be from another ethnic group (fair enough) and can not speak on it and yet everyone feels qualified to talk about the white expreance when they are not white I wondered what your thoughts where on that. There is losts more I would like to ask but I will leave it here. Thanks again for the video.

  • @PrinceHD-y8u
    @PrinceHD-y8u 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great ❤❤

  • @Signum7
    @Signum7 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This feels like a slippery slope to post-modernism... I'm a perennialist, so naturally my conception of truth is going to be imperial, but that doesn't mean that I "have nothing to learn, or nothing to take." That's wildly reductionist. Simply because someone brings up modernist ways to knowledge "they are being violent"???

    • @exchangehe7047
      @exchangehe7047 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      There has been a misunderstanding. Perhaps I was not clear enough. Bringing up modernist ways to knowledge (Can you define this?) is not considered 'violent'; violence is dismissing knowledge and believing that someone has nothing that they can teach you. I would never insinuate that I have nothing to learn from someone; this reeks of arrogance.

    • @exchangehe7047
      @exchangehe7047 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I was hoping that you had videos on perennialism on your channel. It would be good to understand about your reading of perennialism.

    • @Signum7
      @Signum7 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@exchangehe7047 Forgive me for not rewatching to adjust myself to the context of the video better, but if I could better explain my comment I'd like to try. I'd argue that in the context of decolonization, modernism is that rationalistic clash against the epistemic and metaphysical ideas of the culture being colonized. Perhaps that's a modern view, because colonist of old were of the fundamentalist-type, but I think that the argument still stands in regard to rationalist colonialization of cultures in current times. My issue, as someone who'd describe themselves as a metaphysical perennialist, is that there are things to be found in every philosophy, but that doesn't justify the entire system. A culture may function well and display a positive characteristic, or have a developed ideology, but it is a closed system if we don't allow it to be critiqued. To me, without the critique of reason on their pre-modernist conceptions, you might as well build walls around those people and call it an art exhibit. It's philosophical infantilization. Having them teach us, involves us teaching them as well. You wouldn't very well accept the native indigenous metaphysical myth that the earth is supported on the shell of a tortoise knowing modern astronomy and geology, unless you wanted to treat that person like a child and tell them "Sure, buddy, whatever grandma told you." You'd do some "violence" and explain the methodology of how we can deduce that we probably don't live on a turtle. IMO. And I'm only an armchair philosopher as of now, so no videos from me, lol!

    • @exchangehe7047
      @exchangehe7047 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@Signum7 Brilliant stuff! I know you refer to yourself as an armchair scholar, but I was captivated by your argument. I would love to see this fleshed out more; if you do decide to expand this argument into a video, please consider four points. First, you talk about reason as neutral, objective and detached from this world. Isn't reason largely informed by culture and context? So it seems that you advocate that we judge culture by another culture. There is a brilliant discussion on the objectivity of reason in this clip th-cam.com/video/FY_g8HBTs5E/w-d-xo.html . Second, could it be that this indigenous genesis story is informed by what they know, they are working with what is concrete to them, so for instance, minus numbers were used in the Indian subcontinent hundreds of years prior because Europeans had a hard time conceiving of minus numbers because they were not 'concrete' to them. If we were truly interested in the education of the indigenous peoples, we would start with what they know, and build from there. Likewise, I disagreed with your comment, but I haven't dismissed it, and I haven't done 'violence' to it; I see so much value in what you discussed; I want to start with your comment and build together from there, and I will learn something along the way. I have not seen this approach to knowledge with the English or French colonial forces. Third, the real issue is not disregarding that one genesis story; it is disregarding all their indigenous knowledge and using that genesis story as an excuse to demean everything they have; this is the issue. We only discover how indigenous knowledge led to scientific breakthroughs many decades/centuries later. Rarely do Indigenous people receive praise for what they get right, but they are always stigmatised for what they get wrong. Fourth, this point is the most controversial and problematic, are they happier for believing our scientific explanations or their own myths? Have their lives exponentially improved? Are they more content? I personally struggle with this. Most of us in the West will say that truth will set you free; ignorance about science is dark and depressing; happiness lies with scientific discoveries. I have travelled the world a fair bit, and I can't say that I agree. Life is short, Sigma. I am beginning to see the importance of contentment. Nonetheless, this is a good discussion, it is good to have a 'critical friend' who is not a 'friend', I am working on some stuff in the summer, I would love to hear some critique from you. Even if you agree, that is not the point; it is good to hash these things out because it helps me clarify my points.

  • @mariahsmallaxe311
    @mariahsmallaxe311 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hi Dr Arthur, thank you so much for this work!! just a kind request: would you/ could you maybe state your source(s) somewhere - e.g., which of Fanon's works were you referring to? thank you in advance!!

    • @mariahsmallaxe311
      @mariahsmallaxe311 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      and who was the first of the speakers? the second I recognised as Edward Said, but here also, a source would be incredibly helpful. <3

    • @exchangehe7047
      @exchangehe7047 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hi Mariah, if I am not mistaken, you will find the references in this article: www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09502380601162548

    • @exchangehe7047
      @exchangehe7047 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@mariahsmallaxe311 Stuart Hall

    • @mariahsmallaxe311
      @mariahsmallaxe311 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@exchangehe7047 thank you so much for engaging!! I'll have a look soon

  • @Sonilinda888
    @Sonilinda888 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Sir pls make videos on most important key term in international relations

  • @Sonilinda888
    @Sonilinda888 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you sir for this very esay to understand video this really helps me a lot 🙏 from India

  • @hanand7231
    @hanand7231 ปีที่แล้ว

    Please can you tell me what thinker came up with this term or concept? Because I have a paper to write and I need a name please

    • @exchangehe7047
      @exchangehe7047 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Kaplan in www.routledge.com/Looking-for-the-Other-Feminism-Film-and-the-Imperial-Gaze/Kaplan/p/book/9780415910170 and www.amazon.co.uk/Post-Colonial-Studies-Concepts-Routledge-Guides/dp/0415243602/ref=sr_1_1?dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.yT4IBzGbimK3JrEbg8pRYg.-cheddNxSKon94EkILxEjyYUYIfCI0_QYD1rDYNgcdw&dib_tag=se&keywords=9780415243605&linkCode=qs&qid=1710890931&s=books&sr=1-1

  • @3rdstageproductions569
    @3rdstageproductions569 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thankyou. Loved this clip and will share it with my white identifying family and friends who are requiring further understanding of what it means to decolonise.