Sunday, February 5, 2017

Philosophy of John Dewey


                                                                                                                                                                   John Dewey
Born: October 20, 1859 
Burlington, Vermont, United States 
 Died:June 1, 1952 (aged 92) 
New York City, United States
 Alma mater: University of Vermont 
Johns Hopkins University 
Era: 20th-century philosophy 
School: Pragmatism 
Institutions: University of Michigan 
University of Chicago 
University of Chicago Laboratory Schools 
Columbia University 
Main interests: Philosophy of education, 
epistemology, 
journalism, ethics 
Notable: ideas Reflective thinking
American Association of University
 Professors Immediate empiricism 
Inquiry into Moscow show trials about 
Trotsky Educational progressivism  
 Influences:     • Plato
                        • Locke 
                           • Rousseau
                     • Kant
                        • Hegel 
                          • Darwin 
                         • Peirce 
                                     • William James 
                       • Ladd
                        • Mead 
                          • George
                        • Ward 
                         • Wundt
                          • Parker 
         Influenced: Veblen 
                                    • B.R. Ambedkar
                              • Santayana 
                        • Kaplan
                           • Hu Shih 
                       • Hook
                          • Greene
                                       • Richard McKeon 
                         • Putnam 
                          • Chomsky
                           • Habermas
                      • Rorty 
                     • West
                     • Park 
                             • Durkheim 
                                         • Herbert Schneider

*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.
*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 futher, 
arguing that absolute certainly about knowledge is impossible.
*Dewey did not consider himself a pragmatist,

 but rather referred to his philosophy as Instumentalism.
*Instrumentalism:concepts and theories are measured as useful, 

not by whether they are true or false,
 but by explaining and predicting phenomena.
*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.

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.

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





In my opinion as a Future educator I will choose 
the philosophy of John Dewey because in his theory 
he believed that human beings learn through a 'hands-on' 
approach that reality must be experienced because in reality, 
we only give attention to those things that is interesting for us.
 And I also believed that we learn through our different experiences.