Education, Part 1c
Use Your Head
The fourth item in the first
part of the ten-week Communist University “Education” course is our own
“conspectus” (overview or synopsis) of Tony Buzan’s book, “Use Your Head” (attached;
download linked below).
We have sometimes in the past been defensive about the inclusion of this
book in a Communist course. The author Buzan does not propose, or proceed from,
any overt political premises. If anything he appears at first sight to resemble
a utilitarian bourgeois “management guru” or “motivational speaker”. What makes
his work stand out, at first, from others of that kind, is its great practical
effectiveness, and not any obvious political aspect.
Yet, after all the years of forcing Buzan’s work to cohabit with Marxist
texts, it becomes clearer to this VC why it fits in so well: It is dialectical!
And it is intentional! Therefore it is Freirean, whether consciously or
unconsciously so.
From a practical point of view, Buzan’s appeal is that he offers
assistance with faster, more purposeful reading; with memorising; and with
note-taking, particularly using his invention, the “mind-map” technique, of
which an example is given above.
These techniques are just what students need to help them get through
their studies – and just what conventional education often failed to give them.
Students used to be obliged to try to learn, before having learned how to learn. Buzan filled this gap very
well.
But what underlies Buzan’s approach? It is not that he was lucky to
stumble upon three techniques, like a prospector discovering diamonds. No. What
distinguishes the mind-map, in particular, from other forms of note-taking
characterised by lists and bullet-points, is that it begins and ends as a
“unity and struggle of opposites”. It is a representation, in one glance, of
the way in which any phenomenon is the product, or resultant, of many abstract
dynamic forces, or vectors, pulling in different directions.
The mind-map is a very good illustration of exactly what is meant by
“dialectics”.
The other main characteristic of Buzan’s approach is its
“intentionality”, to borrow a term from Paulo Freire’s vocabulary. Towards the
end of Chapter 1 of Freire’s “The Pedagogy of the Oppressed”, Freire quotes Alvaro
Vieira Pinto saying that intentionality is “the
fundamental property of consciousness”, remarking that this concept is “of great importance for the understanding
of a problem-posing pedagogy”.
Buzan’s approach is full of intentionality. There is no question, for
Buzan, of wandering about, learning for learning’s sake, in a random, eclectic
way. Buzan says that you must be looking for a result.
Karl Marx, in the 11th Thesis on Feuerbach, said that while
the philosophers have interpreted it, the point is to change the world.
Thus intentionality, as well as dialectics and dialogue, are common and
basic themes in Freire, Buzan and Marx.
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The above is to
introduce the original reading-text:
Tony Buzan, Use Your Head, 1974, Conspectus by D Tweedie.
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A PDF file of the reading text is attached
·
To download any of the CU courses in PDF files please click here.
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