Andrew Abbott

Andrew Delano Abbott (born ca November, 1948) is an American sociologist and Gustavus F. and Ann M. Swift Distinguished Service Professor of Sociology at the University of Chicago.

Quotes

 * The reason for getting an education here—or anywhere else—is that it is better to be educated than not to be. It is better in and of itself. Not because it gets you something. Not because it is a means to some other end. It is better because it is better. Note that this statement implies that the phrase “aims of education” is nonsensical; education is not a thing of which aims can be predicated. It has no aim other than itself.
 * Abott (2002) “Welcome to the University of Chicago" Aims of Education Address. 2002


 * Education doesn’t have aims. It is the aim of other things.
 * Abott (2002) “Welcome to the University of Chicago" Aims of Education Address. 2002


 * You can think of the curriculum as the shadows cast on a wall by the light of education itself as it shines over, under, around, and through the myriad phases of our experience. It is a mistake to be sure to take these shadows for the reality, but they are something that helps us find or grasp or intuit that reality. The false notions that there is a fixed curriculum, that there is a list of things that an educated person ought to know, and that the shadow-exercises on the wall themselves are the content of education—these false notions all come from taking too seriously what was originally a wise recognition—the recognition that the shadows do in fact provide a starting point in our attempt to fully envision reality.
 * Abott (2002) “Welcome to the University of Chicago" Aims of Education Address. 2002