What it means to know something
Traditional curricular domains are based on long-accepted
knowledge, and the "experts" in those domains are easily
identified by comparing their assertions with the canon of
accepted thought (Banks 1993); newer concepts, whether in
technology, physics, or modern culture, are not easily compared
against any canon. This lack of a center of measurement for
what is "true" or "right" makes the identification of key
pieces of knowledge in any of these fields a precarious task.
In less-traditional curricular domains then, knowledge creators
are not accurately epitomized as traditional, formal, verified
experts; rather, knowledge in these areas is created by a broad
collection of knowers sharing in the construction and ongoing
evolution of a given field. Knowledge becomes a negotiation
(Farrell 2001).
from Dave
Cormier