Blue-Collar Brilliance
(Page 6 of 6)
November-December 2009
by Mike Rose, from The American Scholar
Affirmation of diverse intelligence is not a retreat to a softhearted definition of the mind. To acknowledge a broader range of intellectual capacity is to take seriously the concept of cognitive variability, to appreciate in all the Rosies and Joes the thought that drives their accomplishments and defines who they are. This is a model of the mind that is worthy of a democratic society.
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The son of Italian immigrants, Mike Rose was born in Altoona, Pennsylvania, and raised in Los Angeles. Over the past 40 years, he has taught in a range of educational settings and is currently on the faculty of the UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies. “Blue-Collar Brilliance” evolved from the work he did for his book The Mind at Work: Valuing the Intelligence of the American Worker (Viking 2004).
Excerpted from The American Scholar (Summer 2009), the venerable but lively quarterly magazine of public affairs, literature, science, history, and culture published by the Phi Beta Kappa Society since 1932.
www.theamericanscholar.org
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