1 / 12

Humor in the philosophy classroom: When is it pedagogically useful and when is it destructive?

Humor in the philosophy classroom: When is it pedagogically useful and when is it destructive?. 2010 AAPT Workshop-Conference Coastal Carolina University July 31, 2010 Dennis Earl ( dearl@coastal.edu ) Nils Rauhut ( nrauhut@coastal.edu ). Our plan here. Presentation (15-20 min.)

tosca
Download Presentation

Humor in the philosophy classroom: When is it pedagogically useful and when is it destructive?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Humor in the philosophy classroom:When is it pedagogically useful and when is it destructive? 2010 AAPT Workshop-Conference Coastal Carolina University July 31, 2010 Dennis Earl (dearl@coastal.edu) Nils Rauhut (nrauhut@coastal.edu)

  2. Our plan here Presentation (15-20 min.) • Why are we interested in humor and teaching? • The use of humor in Plato (Rauhut) • Review of empirical studies of the use of humor in the classroom (Earl) Group work (30-35 min.) • What types or examples of humor have “worked” for you in philosophy classes? Why was that? • What hasn’t? Why was that? Debriefing/conclusions (5-10 min.) • What maxims can we take away from this, if any?

  3. The function of humor in Plato In Plato there seems to be a strong connection between philosophy and humor • Helping the interlocutor: the example of Hippias Major: “Beauty is a beautiful girl” Socrates response: “That’s a brilliant answer!” • Showing multiple levels of complexity: the example of the Myth of Er in  Republic X • Humanizing Philosophy: The example of Alcibiades in the Symposium.

  4. Review of empirical studies of the use of humor in the classroom • What kind of experiments and research are we talking about here? • Is humor connected with student learning? • Possible benefits of using humor • Kinds of humor to consider • Appropriate vs. inappropriate uses of humor

  5. Possible benefits of using humor in the classroom1 • reduced anxiety, tension, and stress • reduced boredom • increased comprehension • increased interest • increased motivation • increased/better communication • increased satisfaction with learning • promotion of cognitive activity • better performance on tests/exams 1. Berk 1996; 71, 73; also Garner 2006; Wanzer et al. 2006

  6. How can humor undermine student learning? One answer: By being perceived as inappropriate What is perceived as appropriate and what’s not? (Wanzer et al. 2006; categories generated from student responses): Categories of appropriate humor: • humor related to course material • humor unrelated to course material • self-disparaging humor • unintentional humor Categories of inappropriate humor: • disparaging humor: targeting students (as a group or individually) • disparaging humor: targeting others • offensive humor • self-disparaging humor

  7. Discussion • What counts as success in using humor in (philosophy) teaching? • What types or examples of humor have been successful for you in philosophy classes? Why was that? • What hasn’t? Why was that? • What maxims about using humor can we take away from all of this?

  8. Discussion • What counts as success in using humor in (philosophy) teaching? • What types or examples of humor have been successful for you in philosophy classes? Why was that? • What hasn’t? Why was that? • What maxims about using humor can we take away from all of this?

  9. Two principles for using humor effectively • If a humorous device is likely to improve student learning, consider using it. • If a humorous device is likely to undermine student learning, don’t use it. Question: How does (or might) humor improve student learning?

  10. “Debriefing”--What maxims can we take away from all of this? Two suggestions (which are sort of obvious by now) • If a humorous device is likely to improve student learning, consider using it. • If a humorous device is likely to undermine student learning, don’t use it.

More Related