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Claxton, Professor
Guy
Art and Mind, Religion
http://www.guyclaxton.com/
I have been Visiting Professor of
the Learning Sciences at the University of Bristol Graduate
School of Education since 1993. I was involved in setting
up the first taught doctoral programme in education in the
UK, and, as Director of Research Development, helped build
the research culture that secured the Bristol Education School
the coveted 5* rating in the last Research Assessment Exercise.
My research leadership has borne fruit in the three well-respected
'Bristol books', which I co-edited, to which more than 90%
of the education staff have contributed:
o Liberating the Learner (Routledge
1996)
o The Intuitive Practitioner (Open
UP 2000)
o Learning and Teaching Where Worldviews
Meet (Trentham 2003)
I continue to teach on the Bristol
doctoral programme and supervise research students.
Before Bristol , I was one of the
Founding Faculty of the innovative Schumacher College at Dartington
in Devon . Schumacher College offers residential courses to
people from all over the world concerned about global environmental,
political, economic and spiritual issues. Guest teachers with
whom I worked included scientists James Lovelock and Fritjof
Capra, Nobel peace laureate Waangari Matthai, environmentalist
Jonathan Porritt, Zen Abbott Reb Anderson and archetypal psychologist
James Hillman. I still live in Dartington.
Earlier I taught psychology of education
at the University of London Institute of Education, and at
King's College London. I was educated at King's School Worcester;
was an undergraduate scholar at Cambridge University where
I took a 'double first' in Natural Sciences; and gained my
doctorate in experimental psychology from Oxford in 1974 for
studying how the mental dictionary is consulted as we understand
language.
I am trained in psychotherapy and
have studied Buddhist and other forms of mediation since the
mid-1970s.
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