Title: John Dewey (1859 - 1952)
1John Dewey (1859 - 1952)
- Presented by group 7
- Cinthia Rodriguez
- Nuvia Bautista
- Omar Rodas
2General Information
- John Dewey was born in the United States of
America on October 20, 1859. - American philosopher, psychologist and
educational reformer whose ideas have been
influential in education, philosophy, and
psychology. - known best for his publications about education,
but he also wrote about other topics such as
experience, nature, art, logic, inquiry,
democracy, and ethics. - Major representative of populist philosophies of
schooling during the first half of the 20th
century in the United States of America.
3Time Line
- On October 20, 1859 John Dewey was born in
Burlington, Vermont, from a modest family. He was
married twice and had six children. - In 1879 he graduated from the University of
Vermont (Phi Beta Kappa). Then, he worked as a
high-school teacher in Pennsylvania and as a
elementary school teacher in Vermont. So, after
studying philosophy independently, he entered the
graduate program in philosophy at Johns Hopkins
University to receive his Ph.D. - From 1884 to 1894 he had a faculty position at
the University of Michigan. - In 1894 Dewey joined the University of Chicago
where emerged his Pragmatic Philosophy.
4- In 1903 Dewey also set up the University of
Chicago Laboratory Schools to actualize the
pedagogical beliefs that provided material for
his first major work on education, The School
and Social Progress (1899). - In 1899, Dewey was elected president of the
American Psychological Association. - From 1904 until his retirement in 1930, he was
professor of philosophy at both Columbia
University and Columbia University's Teachers
College. - In 1905 he became president of the American
Philosophical Association. - Years later, the United States Postal Service
honored John Dewey with a Prominent Americans
series 30 postage stamp. - Nowadays, Dewey is considered one of the founders
of The New School.
5Writings
- Major Dewey's educational theories were presented
in these writings - My Pedagogic Creed (1897)
- The School and Society (1900)
- The Child and the Curriculum (1902)
- Democracy and Education (1916)
- Experience and Education (1938)
6Deweys Theories and Beliefs on Education
- Experiential education Dewey focused his concept
of instrumentalism in education on learning by
doing or hands-on learning, which means to learn
not only by the theory, but also by the practice.
Instrumentalism is a theory of knowledge
created by Dewey in which ideas are seen to exist
primarily as instruments for the solution of
problems encountered in the environment. - The schools role Dewey stressed the importance
of education in school not only as a place to
gain content knowledge, but also as a place to
learn how to live. The purpose of education
should be the realization of everybodys full
potential and the ability to use any skills for
the greater good.
7Deweys Theories and Beliefs on Education
- The educational process role Dewey advocated
for an educational structure that makes a balance
between the child and the curriculum, that is to
say, delivering knowledge while also taking into
account the interests and experiences of the
student. - The teachers role The teachers role should be
that of facilitator and guide since the teacher
becomes a partner in the learning process who
leads students to independently discover meaning
within the subject area.
8The Dewey School
- In January of 1896, Dewey opened the doors of the
Experimental University of Chicago with the idea
of setting up an Experimental School by his
own. - The program core of the studies of the Dewey
School figured what he denominated occupation,
in other words, a form of activity done by the
children that reproduce a type of work done in
social life or that is parallel to it.
9The Dewey Teaching Method
Age Activity
4-5 years old Cook, Carpentry, needlework
6 years old They built a farm of wood, planted wheat and cotton they sold their products in the market.
7 years old They studied pre-history in caves made by themselves
8 years old They studied navigation like Marco Polo, Colon, Magallanes and Robison Crusoe.
9 years old Local history and geography
10 years old They studied the Colonial History
11-12 years old Anatomic experiments, electromagnetism, political economy and photography
13 years old They built a building for their debate club.
10- Dewey wrote the child goes to school to make
things to cook, to sew, to work the wood, and to
make tools through acts of simple construction
and in this context, and like consequence of
those acts it articulates the studies reading,
writing, and calculus.
11- The Dewey pedagogical key consisted in providing
the children with experiences of first hand
about conflictive situations, most of the time
based on personal experiences. In his opinion,
the mind is not completely free until the right
conditions are created to make the children
participate actively in the personal analysis of
his/her own problems, and participate in the
methods to solve them, at the price of multiple
tries and mistakes.
12- Even though he didnt expect that the
Experimental School method were followed in a
strictly way in other places, he kept the hope
that his school served as a source of inspiration
to whom pretended to transformed the public
education.
13The End of the Dewey School
- The precursor community of Dewey lasted too
short. Its end was caused by the people who
worked with Dewey in the Experimental school.
They all wanted to have the control of the
school, since the school didnt belong to Dewey,
in fact, it belong to the Chicagos University. - The lost of the Experimental school left an
opened room to others to understand, apply, and
even deform Deweys pedagogical ideas.
14Quote
- Education is not preparation for life
education is life itself. Education, therefore,
is a process of living and not a preparation for
future living. - John Dewey
15Conclusions
- Dewey considered schools and civil society as two
fundamental elements and major topics that need
attention and reconstruction to encourage
experimental intelligence and plurality in order
to improve our life and environment. - Dewey strongly believed that students must be
active learning perceivers and critical thinkers
rather than passive believers and receivers of
information. - Deweys theories have been a great influence on
20th-century thought. His writings on educational
theory and practice have been widely read and
accepted because he showed that the disciplines
of philosophy, pedagogy, and psychology should be
understood as closely interrelated. For that
reason, Dewey's ideas have remained at the center
of much educational philosophy in the United
States and in many countries around the world.