Do We Even Need a Solution?

There is a lot of anxiety today about the failings of our democracy—the polarization, the inability to solve national problems.   Shouldn’t we do something about it?

But two assumptions are often made which work against any action:

All that we as citizens can do is choose political leaders. Specialists in government are responsible for taking action and making decisions for which citizens have no expertise.  That’s democracy.

Things aren’t really as dire as the media presents. Sure, we can and should make improvements.  But we’ve got a good system, and we’re the most prosperous nation on earth.  The media is incentivized to be alarming because it sells.

Applying the Concept of Learner Empathy to National Issues

A review of The Sense of Style:
The Thinking Person’s Guide to Writing in the 21st Century
(Authors: Steven Pinker)

There are two ideas in cognitive scientist Steven Pinker’s Sense of Style that I believe are toweringly critical:

1) close empathy with the mental strivings of your audience, and
2) viewing explanation as building an image.

You might wonder why I am reviewing a book about better writing when our educational vision eschews text in favor of audiovisual. There are good books about designing multimedia for learning (an obvious one is Clark and Mayer’s [link] e-Learning and the Science of Instruction: Proven Guidelines for Consumers and Designers of Multimedia Learning.) I’ll say more about this later, but it’s partly inspired by my pleasure at seeing that the same aspects of cognition are central for both text and multimedia. And because Professor Pinker explains those cognitive aspects so well.