Recall this post and the one before linked therein. They remind me of the following, posted before but in need of refreshment, Mark Edwards' writing on altitude sickness at the beginning of this thread. An excerpt:
"As with all lenses the altitude lens is subject to different kinds
of truncations and reductionisms. I call these reductionisms the
varieties of altitude sickness and, in a spirit of playful
finger-pointing, I will briefly describe a few of these here:
1. Lens absolutism: This is the general problem of relying solely on one lens to explain vertical development.
2. Stagism: This is where all developmental capacity is thought to be
function of the whole-of-system movement from one stage to another. This
ignores the evidence that incremental learning and evolutionary process
can result in transformative development.
3. Developmentalism:
This is the view that transformative change is the result of changes in
an individual’s own structures rather than the structures that exist in
their social and material surrounds.
4. Immediatism: This is
the lack of awareness of the role of mediation in vertical development.
For example relying on Piagetian models of structural change to the
exclusion of Vygotskian ones.
5. Pigeon-hole(ism): This is the
tendency for stage-based theorists to assume that those who are critical
of stage-based models are relativists.
6. Vertical
co-dependency (student variety): This is the assumption that only those
at a higher stage can teach those from lower stages.
7.
Vertical co-dependency (teacher variety): This is the assumption that
those at a lower developmental stage need to be taught by those from a
higher developmental level.
8. Communal altitudism: This is the
assumption that a community of the adequate can only be constituted by
those of requisite altitudinal level.
9. Individual altitudism:
This is the view that you must know the altitude of your critic to
judge whether their criticism is valid or not.
10. Altitude
metricism: This is the seriously mistaken view that we need to be able
to measure the altitude of individuals to be able to help them develop.
11. Lack of oxygenism: This is the syndrome of delusional symptoms that
the human mind suffers from when it reaches a certain altitude.
12. Altitudinal fascism: This is the illness that besets a country when
those who wish to take or maintain political power view all of its
history in terms of the stage-based development of an elite group.
13. Altitudinal collectivism: This is the illness that besets a country
when those who wish to take or maintain political power rationalise any
action in terms of the stage-based development of the collective.
14. Altitudinal leaderism: This is the assumption that we need enlightened leaders to have enlightened communities."
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