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editorial board     

Craig Howley


Appalachian Collaborative Center for Learning, Assessment, and Instruction in Mathematics
Co-Director, Research Initiative

Ohio University
Phone: 740-593-9869
Email: howleyc@ohio.edu
Homepage: http://oak.cats.ohiou.edu/~howleyc/howleyc.htm

I've written about, studied, and lived in rural places. We now farm 80 acres in Appalachian Ohio, where we raise a small variety of crops and animals. Culture, politics, economics, and history concern me. I wish schools were better at promoting “the life of the mind” (whatever that is; finding out is part of the adventure) among everyone. And I think there are reasons they don't, but these reasons constitute more than just inattention or foolishness. Culture, politics, economics, and history suggest reasons. Literature (fiction) may be a much better guide to true education in rural places than the sorts of poor studies we educationists sponsor. Check out Wallace Stegner's Second Growth (circa 1947) or Annie Proulx's The Shipping News (1993) and even E.M. Forster's Howards End (1910). These folks have preserved something we have tried desperately to abandon, but can't actually escape. The wonder is that, though these books (and many more) treat the dilemmas of rural life, they also deal with the idea of a true education more universally. Now, that's fun because it's not easy. In particular, novels don't lend themselves to translations as cookbooks.

Teaching well is the most difficult work in the world. We make a great mistake with attempts to make it easy or happy. Happiness is not a worthy aim for education, nor is getting and holding a good job.

 
 
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