Can we use the collocation “hear the invitation”?Please pay attention to the words in red:Different folks are ready for different discussions at different times. Goldberger’s Women’s Ways of Knowing, while a bit vague at the boundaries and succession of the categories, represent stages of ways of thinking through which many of us move over time. One kind of conversation might help me now, and quite another two years from now; or tomorrow, in a different setting.
WWK offers a vivid account of the professor who, in trying to make students more self-conscious of how they learn (similar to what I’m trying to do in parts of these essays), merely succeeded in making them distrust their own knowledge and turn that distrust against the professor.
‘You have just learned an important lesson about science. Never trust the evidence of your own senses.’ . . . He
saw himself, perhaps, as inviting his students to embark upon an exciting voyage into the mysterious underworld invisible to the naked eye, accessible only through scientific method and scientific instruments. But the seventeen-year-old girl could not accept or even
hear the invitation. Her sense of herself as a knower was shaky, and it was based on the belief that she could use her own firsthand experience as a source of truth. This man was saying that this belief was fallacious. He was taking away her only tool for knowing and providing her with no substitute. ‘I remember feeling small and scared,’ the woman says, ‘and I did the only thing I could do. I dropped the course that afternoon, and I haven’t gone near science since’ (191ff.)
Here the educator totally misread what this student needed, and blocked her way to getting it.
http://storiesforpoliticaled.blogspot.com/2009/07/2e-political-talk-on-go-turning-our.html Questions:1. What does WWK refer to?2. Why does the author use “saw”? Can we find a better word to replace it?3. I can’t understand, or even have never heard the phrase“hear the invitation”? Can we find a better word to replace it?