Did you know that Dewy headed up the commission that investigated
Trotsky in Mexico? John Dewey, like Socrates, was a philosopher first and
educational theorist second, and like Socrates, his progressive educational
theory has been simplified to the level of caricature. It is often assumed that
he favoured an extreme version of discovery learning. This was not in fact the
case. As a philosopher he was what is called a ‘pragmatist’, a school of
philosophy that emerged from Pierce and James in the 19th century. As befits an
American with strong democratic beliefs he saw education as leading towards
authentic participation in a democratic nation.
His reflections on the nature of knowledge, experience and
communication, combined with his views of democracy and community, led to an
educational theory that started with a broad based vision of what education
should be, an identification of educational methods and a practical view of its
implementation. He practised what he preached through his own ‘Laboratory
School’.
Problem
based learning
He is best known for his problem-solving approach to learning. In
line with his view that science and experimentation lay at the heart of
learning for both a person and society, he encouraged innovation and abhorred
dogmatic principles and practices. For Dewey, exposure to certain types of
learning experiences are more important than others. Schools should create
learning opportunities by engaging in occupational activities, as practised by
the rest of society. He was keen on ‘occupational’ learning and practical
skills that produced independent, self-directing, autonomous adults. That
schools had become divorced from society was one of his basic claims. In his
model school, the students planted wheat and cotton, processed and transported
it for sale to market.
Schools
– divorced from society
Dewey spoke out against communism as well as the right-wing threat
in US politics, including what he saw as reactionary Catholicism. A recent
reappraisal sees him as a typical American liberal believing in a secular
approach and reform in education, moving it beyond the limitations of
traditional ‘schooling’. He was refreshingly honest about their limitations and
saw schools as only one means of learning, ‘and
compared with other agencies, a relatively superficial means’. In fact, he
was keen to break down the boundaries of school, seeing them as a community
within a community or an ‘embryonic society’. Schools are necessary but must
not get obsessed with streaming, testing and not be overly academic in the
curriculum. They must reflect the real world, not sit above and apart from
society.
Learning
However, Dewey was not a full-on progressive and had little time
for Rousseau’s free approach to the acquisition of knowledge and skills.
Structure and teaching were important. Perhaps his most important contribution
to education is his constant attempts to break down the traditional dualities
in education between theory and practice, academic and vocational, public and
private, individual and group. This mode of thinking, he thought, led education
astray. The educational establishment, in his view, seemed determined to keep
themselves, and their institutions, apart from the real world by holding on to
abstract and often ill-defined definitions about the purpose of education.
Conclusion
Dewey is a child of the Enlightenment, a progressive thinker, not
a traditionalist. More importantly for our purposes, experiential learning
through Kolb and others had its origins in Dewey. His views on schools and how
they relate to a modern, democratic society are also of lasting interest. Those
involved in the modern debate about a more active role for schools in their
community can benefit from a re-reading of Dewey as he raises important issues
about the relevance of education, the destructive institutional practices and
the lack of practical, pragmatic, vocational and life-skills teaching.
Bibliography
Dewey, J. (1916) Democracy and Education. An introduction to
the philosophy of education (1966 edn.), New York: Free Press.
Dewey, J. (1933) How We Think. A restatement of the relation of
reflective thinking to the educative process (Revised edn.), Boston: D. C.
Heath.
Dewey, J. (1938) Experience and Education, New York:
Collier Books. (Collier edition first published 1963).
Dewey, J. (1929) Experience and Nature, New York: Dover.
(Dover edition first published in 1958).
Campbell, J. (1995) Understanding John Dewey. Nature and
co-operative intelligence, Chicago: Open Court.
Ryan, A. (1995) John Dewey and the High Tide of American
Liberalism, New York: W. W. Norton.
4 comments:
Donald,
I'm enjoying your series and good to reflect on each .
Interested to know what criteria you used to select the fifty ?
Thanks Paul. Not a scientific choice. mainly the people I've read and been influenced by. However, I've added a few after reader suggestions.
Hi Donald,
I am also enjoying your recollection.
While doing some research on how Dewey has influenced Kolb's experiential-based learning theory, I found this great resource that you may find useful as well.
It contains thousands of classics(including many of Dewey's books) fully accessible online.
http://www.forgottenbooks.org
Cheers,
Mariano
There are also a number of Dewey's works available at archive.org.
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