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John Dewey John Dewey
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“Education is life itself.” - John Dewey
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Philosophy Mr. Dewey believed that the core curriculum should encompass the students’ interests. John Dewey approached education with a hands-on, cohesive philosophy, rather than teaching isolated topics which prevented learners from grasping the whole of knowledge.
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Pragmatism Pragmatism is the philosophy of considering practical consequences or real effects to be vital components of both meaning and truth. One important aspect is fallibilism Fallibilism is the philosophical doctrine that all claims of knowledge could, in principle, be mistaken. Some fallibilists go further, arguing that absolute certainty about knowledge is impossible. Wikipedia (2009)
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Pragmatism - Instrumentalism Dewey did not consider himself a pragmatist, but rather referred to his philosophy as Instrumentalism. Instrumentalism: concepts and theories are measured as useful, not by whether they are true or false, but by how effective they are in explaining and predicting phenomena Wikipedia (2009)
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Philosophy Students need to learn practical, pragmatic daily-life skills in order to build a better society. Dewey wanted students to learn through experience and to think and reflect critically on their experiences.
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Examples Math could be learned by cooking, traveling, building things History could be learned by experiencing field trips, museums, replicas Reading can be learned through independently-selected literature
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Current Day Evidence of this Theory Vocational Technical School Use of Scientific Method in classrooms Kinesthetic Learning (role playing, non- traditional learning techniques) Integrating Technology into lessons
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