Hannah and Me: Understanding Politics in Dark Times
Contrary to the suggestion of my informal title, I did not study with Hannah Arendt, nor were we ever colleagues, although I missed both experiences only by a bit. I was a graduate student in the early 1970s in one of the universities where she last taught, the University of Chicago, and my first and only long term position, at the New School for Social Research, was her primary American academic home.
OOPS versus MOOCs
I first thought of writing this post over a year ago as a follow up to my piece “Against the Educational Uncertainty Principle.” I was struck by the way that recent interventions to address the various dimensions of higher educational crisis have made matters worse. MOOCs, Massive Open Online Courses, are a particular case in point. As I wrote then:
“I worry about magical solutions: MOOCs, substituting television for face to face inquiry, even though using the web to strengthen educational practices makes sense to me. …
How You Can Help Immigrant Children Separated From Their Families
We need to take action against the U.S. government's 'Zero Tolerance' Policy
It’s Happening Here and Now
Thoughts on the recent immigration detentions and William E. Connolly's 'Aspirational Fascism'
Summer Camps, Boarding Schools and the Ideology of Family Separation in the U.S.
Family separation is part of American history