‘Why aren’t you taking any notes?’ On note-taking as a collective gesture

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dc.contributor.author Marin, Lavinia
dc.contributor.author Sturm, Sean
dc.date.accessioned 2022-05-17T03:44:47Z
dc.date.available 2022-05-17T03:44:47Z
dc.date.issued 2020-04-10
dc.identifier.citation (2020). Educational Philosophy and Theory, 53(13), 1-8.
dc.identifier.issn 0013-1857
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/2292/59296
dc.description.abstract The practice of taking hand-written notes in lectures has been rediscovered recently because of several studies on its learning efficacy in the mainstream media. Students are enjoined to ditch their laptops and return to pen and paper. Such arguments presuppose that notes are taken in order to be revisited after the lecture. Learning is seen to happen only after the event. We argue instead that student’s note-taking is an educational practice worthy in itself as a way to relate to the live event of the lecture. We adopt a phenomenological approach inspired by Vilém Flusser’s phenomenology of gestures, which assumes that a gesture like note-taking is always an event of thinking with media in which a certain freedom is expressed. But Flusser’s description of note-taking focusses on the individual note-taker. What about students’ note-taking in a lecture hall as a collective gesture? Nietzsche considered note-taking ‘mechanical,’ as if students were automatons who mindlessly transcribed a verbal flow, while Benjamin considered it an inaesthetic gesture: at best, boring; at worst, ‘painful to watch.’ In contrast, we argue that the educational potentiality of note-taking—or better, note-making—can be grasped only if we account for its mediaticity (as writing that displaces the voice), together with but distinct from its political potentiality as a collective mediality (as a ‘means without end’). Note-taking enables us to see how collective thinking emerges in the lecture, a kind of thinking that belongs neither to the lecturer nor the student, but emerges in the relation of attention established between the lecturer, students and their object of thought.
dc.language en
dc.publisher Informa UK Limited
dc.relation.ispartofseries Educational Philosophy and Theory
dc.rights Items in ResearchSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated. Previously published items are made available in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.
dc.rights.uri https://researchspace.auckland.ac.nz/docs/uoa-docs/rights.htm
dc.subject 1303 Specialist Studies in Education
dc.subject 1702 Cognitive Sciences
dc.subject 2202 History and Philosophy of Specific Fields
dc.title ‘Why aren’t you taking any notes?’ On note-taking as a collective gesture
dc.type Journal Article
dc.identifier.doi 10.1080/00131857.2020.1744131
pubs.issue 13
pubs.begin-page 1
pubs.volume 53
dc.date.updated 2022-04-28T05:02:34Z
dc.rights.holder Copyright: The author en
pubs.end-page 8
pubs.publication-status Published
dc.rights.accessrights http://purl.org/eprint/accessRights/RestrictedAccess en
pubs.subtype Journal Article
pubs.elements-id 796396
pubs.org-id Education and Social Work
pubs.org-id Critical Studies in Education
dc.identifier.eissn 1469-5812
pubs.record-created-at-source-date 2022-04-28
pubs.online-publication-date 2020-04-10


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