JOHN DEWEY AGED 3203 Life and Times. John Dewey 1859 Birth date Grammar school #3, Burlington, VT 1875, High School Grad 1879, A.B. degree - University.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Civic Engagement by Older Adults: Potential import of the social capital of an aging society Workshop on Measuring Social Activity and Civic Engagement:
Advertisements

An Introduction: Dewey’s Influences LUZ CARIME BERSH, Ph. D. National-Louis University.
John Dewey ED 530 Theorist Presentation Spring Semester 2010 Crystale Getz.
EDUCATION FOR DEMOCRACY Marcin Kilanowski Ph.D. (Nicolas Copernicus University in Torun)
© 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education All rights reserved.
Presented by group # 7: Cinthia Rodriguez Nuvia Bautista Omar Rodas
“The Need for a Philosophy of Education.”
John Dewey Group 1 Hannah Berni, Matt Jones, Troy James, Brandi, & Shayna ( ) American Philosopher and Education Reformist.
Sarah, Christa, Dylan, and Kelly “Education is not preparation for life; education is life itself.”
John Dewey: His Life, Philosophy, and Importance to Education
FERPA: Protect our Students by Protecting their Records Prepared by Rebekah D. Mathis-Stump, JD.
DED 101 Educational Psychology, Guidance And Counseling
S t a t i n g Y o u r T e a c h i n g P h i l o s o p h y C e n t e r f o r E x c e l l e n c e i n T e a c h i n g J a n u a r y 3 0, Stating.
Welcome to Social Studies for the Elementary School! Make a name tent with first and last name. Draw an image of social studies from your past to share.
William Chandler Bagley By Kelsey Deal, Terra Campbell, and Tamara Wikkerink.
Value/Character Education:Traditional or Liberational
+ Values/Character Education: Traditional or Liberational Brought to you by: Two Chicks and a Guy!
Dana Greek Cynthia Garcia Amanda Whitman Keely Shannon “Education is not a preparation for life; education is life itself.” –John Dewey.
JOHN DEWEY, ‘AMERICA’S PHILOSOPHER’
~Contributions to Education Deborah McCallum
Professional Life: Taught at: High school in Pennsylvania, University of Michigan; 1884 – 1894 University of Minnesota; 1888 Columbia University;
EPS 210/202 Timeline The Development of Public Schooling Special Announcement: Next Week’s Readings-Read Federal Policies and Berliner & Biddle article.
MORAL DEVELOPMENT Lawrence Kohlberg. _(1927–1987) _was a psychologist _Drew upon education, anthropology, and philosophy, to inform his work _ Kohlberg.
Counts is credited for influencing several theories, particularly, critical pedagogy. He also wrote dozens of important papers and 29 books.
Chapter 19: Moral Development
John Dewey and Charles Eliot
Some Emerging Characteristics of Sustainable Practices Ronnie Detrich Randy Keyworth Jack States Wing Institute.
Essentialism.
Fraser TEACH © 2011 McGraw- Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 Motivating, Managing, and Assessing: How Will I Teach?
 In Europe a woman was near death from cancer. One drug might save her, a form of radium that a druggist in the same town had recently discovered. The.
Evaluation of Principles and Practices Arielle Schoen.
10 Essential Elements of Education For Democracy By Sarah VanHook, Chad Beanblossom, Zakiya Tate, Angie Kessel, and Eric Hanks By Sarah VanHook, Chad Beanblossom,
Chapter 2 Families Today.
Project Based Learning Project (or how to manage teaching adults in a post modern world) by David Bryant Perkins.
PSYCHOLOGY AND NOTABLE DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGISTS Child Development.
What is Philosophy? The study of theories of knowledge, truth, existence, and morality.
Life Skills Development in the 4-H Youth Development Program San Luis Obispo County November 1, 2003 Richard P. Enfield, 4-H Youth Development Advisor.
Experiential Education John Dewey Emel Ozdora. John Dewey ( )  Born in 1859 in Burlington, Vermont.  Ph. D. at Johns Hopkins University in.
“School can be a place where children learn to be stupid! ” John Holt.
Theories and Theorists
Equity, Justice, and Perceptions of Fairness Novice Teachers’ Conceptions of Fairness in Inclusion Classrooms Ruth A. Wiebe Berry (2008) By Cynthia J.
Edtech Educational Psychology Foundations of Instructional Design.
Bailey McClelland and Haley Carter JOHN DEWEY.  Born in Burlington, Vermont on October and died in 1952  Graduated from the University of Vermont.
Session One Introduction. Website List Syllabus Assign Topics.
Journal Entry Answer the questions below based on your thoughts about cognitive development (yesterday’s notes): 1.If most children do not reach the formal.
Two Philosophies of Education. Historical Perspectives Plato – Education is aimed at the good of society Plato – Education is aimed at the good of society.
Elsevier items and derived items © 2009, 2005 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 1 Chapter 1 The Adult Learner and the Practical/Vocational.
Educational Psychology Chapter 2 By: Angela Vaughan, Katrinka Newman, Heide Alston, & Diariece Jones.
Philosophy of Education
1 Democracy and Education Fred Schultz Notable Selections In Education.
Introduction to Child Development
The Rules of Sociological Method, Durkheim (1895) Tamara Sole Clark Backus HOL 8100 Organizational Culture.
John Dewey The Man, The Thinker, The Teacher.
GENERAL METHODS AND TECHNIQUES OF TEACHING
Difference between Education, Knowledge and Learning
Theories of Development
JOHN DEWEY Father of the Progressive Education Theory By Cathy Carmack.
1 Educational Philosophy: The Intellectual Foundations of American Education.
We do not learn from experience… we learn from reflecting on experience. JOHN DEWEY.
March 12, 2016 Collette Gallegos & Evelyn Balestra.
Danielle Jones Ashley Johnson.  Essentialism  Perennialism  Progressivism  Existentialism  Social Reconstruction.
1 Teaching Teachers Mathematics May 30 - June 1, 2007 Mathematical Sciences Research Institute Workshop sponsored by Mathematical Sciences Research Institute,
Early Childhood Education Karen Campos TLS 318 The Universtiy of Arizona.
October 20 th, 1859-June 1 st, 1952 “Education is not preparation for life, education is life itself.”
John Dewey ( ) Title page: Name, Dates.
High School to College: Moving on & Moving up
GENERAL METHODS AND TECHNIQUES OF TEACHING
“Education is not a preparation for life; Education is life itself.”
CPD: The Coaching & Mentoring Model
How do our beliefs affect our math instruction and our student’s learning? October 11, :00pm – 5:15pm Please read through the norms for courageous.
Presentation transcript:

JOHN DEWEY AGED 3203 Life and Times

John Dewey 1859 Birth date Grammar school #3, Burlington, VT 1875, High School Grad 1879, A.B. degree - University of Vermont, delivers commencement address

John Dewey High school teacher, Oil City, PA, teaches science and algebra assistant principal Principal, Lake View Seminary, Charlotte, VT Graduate Student in Philosophy, John Hopkins University Ph.D

John Dewey Teaches philosophy University of Michigan University of Minnesota University of Chicago Columbia University (New York)

John Dewey Advocated practical learning Students should solve problems Schools should work to solve social problems Thought learning was like evolution First dues paying member of American Federation of Teachers

Experience and Education Traditional vs. Progressive Education The subject matter of today is bodies of information and skills worked out in the past -- the purpose of school is to transmit this information and skills to a new generation. Moral training in the schools is of forming habits by conforming to rules and standards.

Experience and Education Traditional vs. Progressive Education School is different from all other social institutions - School is like no other social institution. – schemes of classifications – its time schedule – its rules of order – examinations

Experience and Education Traditional vs. Progressive Education The traditional scheme is to impose information and rules from above, from outside. It imposes adult standards, subject matter and methods upon those who are only growing only slowly towards maturity.

Experience and Education The Need of a Theory of Experience All genuine education comes about through experience. – some experiences can be mis- educative – may be immediately enjoyable, yet form slack and careless attitude It is not that young people do not have experiences, but that these experiences are defective and of the wrong character.

Experience and Education Social Control School is like a game - the teacher is the referee or umpire; as long as all know the rules and the consequences of the rules, all is well. Students (athletes) become disenchanted and argumentative when they feel as though they have been unfairly treated (penalized).

Experience and Education The Nature of Freedom There cannot be complete quietude in a laboratory or workshop. But... there should be brief intervals of time for quiet reflection. They are periods of genuine reflection only when they follow after times of action and are used to organize what has been gained in periods of activity.

Experience and Education The Nature of Freedom The old phrase “stop and think” is sound psychology. For thinking is stoppage of the immediate manifestation of impulse until that impulse has been brought into connection with other possible tendencies to action.