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History: Philosophy of Education Is A Field of

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Philosophy of education is a field of applied philosophy, drawing from the traditional fields
of philosophy (ontology, ethics, epistemology, etc.) and its approaches (speculative
philosophy, prescriptive, and/or analytic) to address questions regarding education policy,
human development, and curriculum theory, to name a few. Put another way, philosophy of
education is the philosophical study of the purpose, process, nature and ideals of education.
For example, it might study what constitutes upbringing and education, the values and norms
revealed through upbringing and educational practices, the limits and legitimization of
education as an academic discipline, and the relation between educational theory and
practice.

Philosophy of education can be considered a branch of both philosophy and education. The
multiple ways of conceiving education coupled with the multiple fields and approaches of
philosophy make philosophy of education not only a very diverse field but also one that is not
easily defined. Although there is overlap, philosophy of education should not be conflated
with educational theory, which is not defined specifically by the application of philosophy to
questions in education.

Although philosophers around the world have asked questions regarding education for
millennia, as an academic discipline with its own place in the university it is relatively new.
Nonetheless, it is an internationally well-established field, with departments and programs
around the world.[citation needed]

History
A chronological summary of the work of some of the most important and influential
educational philosophers in Western culture follows.

Plato

Date: 424/423 BC - 348/347 BC

Plato is the earliest important educational thinker. He saw education as the key to creating
and sustaining his Republic. He advocated extreme methods: removing children from their
mothers' care and raising them as wards of the state, with great care being taken to
differentiate children suitable to the various castes, the highest receiving the most education,
so that they could act as guardians of the city and care for the less able. Education would be
holistic, including facts, skills, physical discipline, and music and art, which he considered
the highest form of endeavor.

For Plato the individual was best served by being subordinated to a just society. Plato
believed that talent was distributed non-genetically and thus must be found in children born
in any social class. His belief moves us away from aristocracy as a political system. He builds
on this by insisting that those suitably gifted are to be trained by the state so that they may be
qualified to assume the role of a ruling class. What this establishes is essentially a system of
selective public education premised on the assumption that an educated minority of the
population are, by virtue of their education (and inborn educability), sufficient for healthy
governance. Today's tracking systems[clarification needed] could be justified with Plato's ideas.
Plato should be considered foundational for democratic philosophies of education both
because later key thinkers treat him as such, and because, while Plato's methods are autocratic
and his motives leaned toward a meritocracy, he nonetheless prefigures much later
democratic philosophy of education. This is different in degree rather than kind from most
versions of, say, the American experiment with democratic education, which has usually
assumed that only some students should be educated to the fullest, while others may,
acceptably, fall by the wayside.

Plato's writings contain some of the following ideas: Elementary education would be
confined to the guardian class till the age of 18, followed by two years of compulsory
military training and then by higher education for those who qualified. While elementary
education made the soul responsive to the environment, higher education helped the soul to
search for truth which illuminated it. Both boys and girls got the same kind of education.
Elementary education consisted of music and gymnastics, designed to train and blend gentle
and fierce qualities in the individual and create a harmonious person.

At the age of 20, a selection was made. The best one would take an advanced course in
mathematics, geometry, astronomy and harmonics. The first course in the scheme of higher
education would last for ten years. It would be for those who had a flair for science. At the
age of 30 there would be another selection; those who qualified would study dialectics and
metaphysics, logic and philosophy for the next five years. They would study the idea of good
and first principles of being. After accepting junior positions in the army for 15 years, a man
would have completed his theoretical and practical education by the age of 50.

Aristotle

Date: 384 BC - 322 BC

Only fragments of Aristotle's treatise On Education are still in existence. We thus know of his
philosophy of education primarily through brief passages in other works. Aristotle considered
human nature, habit and reason to be equally important forces to be cultivated in education.
Thus, for example, he considered repetition to be a key tool to develop good habits. The
teacher was to lead the student systematically; this differs, for example, from Socrates'
emphasis on questioning his listeners to bring out their own ideas (though the comparison is
perhaps incongruous since Socrates was dealing with adults).

Aristotle placed great emphasis on balancing the theoretical and practical aspects of subjects
taught. Subjects he explicitly mentions as being important included reading, writing and
mathematics; music; physical education; literature and history; and a wide range of sciences.
He also mentioned the importance of play.

One of education's primary missions for Aristotle, perhaps its most important, was to produce
good and virtuous citizens for the polis. All who have meditated on the art of governing
mankind have been convinced that the fate of empires depends on the education of youth.

Avicenna

Date: 980 AD - 1037 AD


In the medieval Islamic world, an elementary school was known as a maktab, which dates
back to at least the 10th century. Like madrasahs (which referred to higher education), a
maktab was often attached to a mosque. In the 11th century, Ibn Sina (known as Avicenna in
the West), wrote a chapter dealing with the maktab entitled "The Role of the Teacher in the
Training and Upbringing of Children", as a guide to teachers working at maktab schools. He
wrote that children can learn better if taught in classes instead of individual tuition from
private tutors, and he gave a number of reasons for why this is the case, citing the value of
competition and emulation among pupils as well as the usefulness of group discussions and
debates. Ibn Sina described the curriculum of a maktab school in some detail, describing the
curricula for two stages of education in a maktab school.[1]

Ibn Sina wrote that children should be sent to a maktab school from the age of 6 and be
taught primary education until they reach the age of 14. During which time, he wrote that
they should be taught the Qur'an, Islamic metaphysics, language, literature, Islamic ethics,
and manual skills (which could refer to a variety of practical skills).[1]

Ibn Sina refers to the secondary education stage of maktab schooling as the period of
specialization, when pupils should begin to acquire manual skills, regardless of their social
status. He writes that children after the age of 14 should be given a choice to choose and
specialize in subjects they have an interest in, whether it was reading, manual skills,
literature, preaching, medicine, geometry, trade and commerce, craftsmanship, or any other
subject or profession they would be interested in pursuing for a future career. He wrote that
this was a transitional stage and that there needs to be flexibility regarding the age in which
pupils graduate, as the student's emotional development and chosen subjects need to be taken
into account.[2]

The empiricist theory of 'tabula rasa' was also developed by Ibn Sina. He argued that the
"human intellect at birth is rather like a tabula rasa, a pure potentiality that is actualized
through education and comes to know" and that knowledge is attained through "empirical
familiarity with objects in this world from which one abstracts universal concepts" which is
developed through a "syllogistic method of reasoning; observations lead to prepositional
statements, which when compounded lead to further abstract concepts." He further argued
that the intellect itself "possesses levels of development from the material intellect (al-‘aql
al-hayulani), that potentiality that can acquire knowledge to the active intellect (al-‘aql al-
fa‘il), the state of the human intellect in conjunction with the perfect source of knowledge."[3]

Ibn Tufail

Date: c. 1105 - 1185

In the 12th century, the Andalusian-Arabian philosopher and novelist Ibn Tufail (known as
"Abubacer" or "Ebn Tophail" in the West) demonstrated the empiricist theory of 'tabula rasa'
as a thought experiment through his Arabic philosophical novel, Hayy ibn Yaqzan, in which
he depicted the development of the mind of a feral child "from a tabula rasa to that of an
adult, in complete isolation from society" on a desert island, through experience alone. The
Latin translation of his philosophical novel, Philosophus Autodidactus, published by Edward
Pococke the Younger in 1671, had an influence on John Locke's formulation of tabula rasa in
"An Essay Concerning Human Understanding".[4]

Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Date: 1712-1778

Rousseau, though he paid his respects to Plato's philosophy, rejected it as impractical due to
the decayed state of society. Rousseau also had a different theory of human development;
where Plato held that people are born with skills appropriate to different castes (though he did
not regard these skills as being inherited), Rousseau held that there was one developmental
process common to all humans. This was an intrinsic, natural process, of which the primary
behavioral manifestation was curiosity. This differed from Locke's 'tabula rasa' in that it was
an active process deriving from the child's nature, which drove the child to learn and adapt to
its surroundings.

Rousseau wrote in his book Emile that all children are perfectly designed organisms, ready to
learn from their surroundings so as to grow into virtuous adults, but due to the malign
influence of corrupt society, they often fail to do so. Rousseau advocated an educational
method which consisted of removing the child from society—for example, to a country home
—and alternately conditioning him through changes to environment and setting traps and
puzzles for him to solve or overcome.

Rousseau was unusual in that he recognized and addressed the potential of a problem of
legitimation for teaching. He advocated that adults always be truthful with children, and in
particular that they never hide the fact that the basis for their authority in teaching was purely
one of physical coercion: "I'm bigger than you." Once children reached the age of reason, at
about 12, they would be engaged as free individuals in the ongoing process of their own.

He once said that a child should grow up without adult interference and that the child must be
guided to suffer from the experience of the natural consequences of his own acts or
behaviour. When he experiences the consequences of his own acts, he advises himself.

John Dewey

Main article: John Dewey

Date: 1859-1952

In Democracy and Education: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Education, New York:


Macmillan. (1916), Dewey stated that in its broadest sense education is the means of the
"social continuity of life" given the "primary ineluctable facts of the birth and death of each
one of the constituent members in a social group". Education is therefore a necessity, for "the
life of the group goes on."[5]

Dewey was a relentless campaigner for reform of education, pointing out that the
authoritarian, strict, pre-ordained knowledge approach of modern traditional education was
too concerned with delivering knowledge, and not enough with understanding students' actual
experiences.[6]

Rudolf Steiner

Date: 1861-1925
Steiner, a philosopher and writer, created a holistic educational impulse that has become
known as Waldorf Education. He emphasizes a balance of developing the intellect (or head),
feeling and artistic life (or heart), and practical skills (or hands). His theory of child
development, which divides education into three discrete developmental stages, predates but
has close similarities to Piaget's description of stages of development. In the first stage (birth
to 6 years), what Steiner considered the young child's natural impulse to imitate is met
through an emphasis on practical activities and a healthy environment; the young child
should meet only goodness. Steiner considered the foundation of elementary education to be
a child's longing to experience the inner authority of a teacher; the elementary school-age
child should meet beauty. From 12 years on, the young person's awakening powers of
judgment and intellect are met through a progressive emphasis on truth; secondary school-age
students should meet opportunities to practically fulfill their natural idealism.

Steiner based Waldorf education on his spiritual philosophy (anthroposophy). Throughout the
education, a great importance is placed upon giving freedom for teachers to be creative
agents; schools should be empowered to shape their own curriculum and teachers to form the
daily life of the classroom. Steiner expected that schools' internal governance structures to
provide necessary communication, training and development would be led by the teachers
themselves.

[edit] Jerome Bruner

Date: 1915-

Another important contributor to the inquiry method in education is Bruner. His books The
Process of Education and Toward a Theory of Instruction are landmarks in conceptualizing
learning and curriculum development. He argued that any subject can be taught in some
intellectually honest form to any child at any stage of development. This notion was an
underpinning for his concept of the spiral curriculum which posited the idea that a curriculum
should revisit basic ideas, building on them until the student had grasped the full formal
concept. He emphasized intuition as a neglected but essential feature of productive thinking.
He felt that interest in the material being learned was the best stimulus for learning rather
than external motivation such as grades. Bruner developed the concept of discovery learning
which promoted learning as a process of constructing new ideas based on current or past
knowledge. Students are encouraged to discover facts and relationships and continually build
on what they already know.

Paulo Freire

Date: 1921-97

A Brazilian committed to the cause of educating the impoverished peasants of his nation and
collaborating with them in the pursuit of their liberation from oppression, Freire is best-
known for his attack on what he called the "banking concept of education," in which the
student was viewed as an empty account to be filled by the teacher. Freire also suggests that a
deep reciprocity be inserted into our notions of teacher and student; close to suggesting that
the teacher-student dichotomy should be completely abolished, he describes the roles of the
participants in the classroom as the teacher-student (a teacher who learns) and the student-
teacher (a learner who teaches). In its early, strong form this kind of classroom has sometimes
been criticized on the grounds that it can mask rather than overcome the teacher's authority.
Aspects of the Freirian philosophy have been highly influential in academic debates over
'participatory development' and development more generally. Freire's emphasis on
emancipation through interactive participation has been used as a rationale for the
participatory focus of development, as it is held that 'participation' in any form can lead to
empowerment of poor or marginalised groups.

Nel Noddings

Date: 1929–

Noddings' first sole-authored book Caring: A Feminine Approach to Ethics and Moral
Education (1984) followed close on the 1982 publication of Carol Gilligan’s ground-breaking
work in the ethics of care In a Different Voice. While her work on ethics continued, with the
publication of Women and Evil (1989) and later works on moral education, most of her later
publications have been on the philosophy of education and educational theory. Her most
significant works in these areas have been Educating for Intelligent Belief or Unbelief (1993)
and Philosophy of Education (1995).

Allan Bloom

Date: 1930-1992

Bloom, a professor of political science at the University of Chicago, argued for a traditional
Great Books-based liberal education in his lengthy essay The Closing of the American Mind.

A. S. Neill

Founder of Summerhill School the oldest existing democratic school in Suffolk, England in
1921. A.S. Neill wrote a number of books that now define much of contemporary democratic
education philosophy. The first major writer to discuss a nascent philosophy of democratic
education was Leo Tolstoy who operated his own democratic school for peasant children in
Yasnaya Polyana, Russia in the late 19th century. The primary theorist, however, of what
developed into democratic education being John Dewey. His works on the relationship
between democracy and education became foundational literature for the broader progressive
education movement.

Neill believed that the happiness of the child should be the paramount consideration in
decisions about the child's upbringing, and that this happiness grew from a sense of personal
freedom. He felt that deprivation of this sense of freedom during childhood, and the
consequent unhappiness experienced by the repressed child, was responsible for many of the
psychological disorders of adulthood.

Neill's ideas tried to help children achieve self-determination and encouraged critical thinking
rather than blind obedience, were seen as backward, radical, or at best, controversial.

Many of Neill's ideas are widely accepted today, although there are still many more
"traditional" thinkers within the educational establishment who regard Neill's ideas as
threatening the existing social order, and therefore controversial.
Neill founded Summerhill School to demonstrate his educational theories in practice. These
included a belief that children learn better when they are not compelled to attend lessons. The
school is also managed democratically, with regular meetings to determine school rules.
Pupils have equal voting rights with school staff.

Neill's Summerhill School experience demonstrated that, free from the coercion of traditional
schools, students tended to respond by developing self-motivation, rather than self-
indulgence. Externally imposed discipline, Neill felt, actually prevented internal, self-
discipline from developing. He therefore considered that children who attended Summerhill
were likely to emerge with better-developed critical thinking skills and greater self-discipline
than children educated in compulsion-based schools.

These tendencies were perhaps all the more remarkable considering that the children accepted
by Summerhill were often from problematic backgrounds, where parental conflict or neglect
had resulted in children arriving in a particularly unhappy state of mind. The therapeutic
value of Summerhill's environment was demonstrated by the improvement of many children
who had been rejected by conventional schools, yet flourished at Summerhill.

Strongly influenced by the contemporary work of Sigmund Freud and Wilhelm Reich, Neill
was opposed to sexual repression and the imposition of the strict Victorian values of his
childhood era. He stated clearly that to be anti-sex was to be anti-life. Naturally, these views
made him unpopular with many establishment figures of the time.

Professional organizations and associations

Organisation Nationality Comment


International INPE is dedicated to fostering dialogue
Network of amongst philosophers of education around the
Worldwide
Philosophers of world. It sponsors an international conference
Education every other year.[citation needed]
PES is the national society for philosophy of
education in the United States of America.
Philosophy of This site provides information about PES, its
USA
Education Society services, history, and publications, and links
to online resources relevant to the philosophy
of education.[citation needed]
PESGB promotes the study, teaching and
application of philosophy of education. It has
Philosophy of
an international membership. The site
Education Society UK
provides: a guide to the Society's activities
of Great Britain
and details about the Journal of Philosophy of
Education and IMPACT.[citation needed]
Philosophy of
Education Society Australasia
of Australasia
Canadian Canada CPES is devoted to philosophical inquiry into
Philosophy of educational issues and their relevance for
Education Society developing educative, caring, and just
teachers, schools, and communities. The
society welcomes inquiries about membership
from professionals and graduate students who
share these interests.[citation needed]
The Nordic Society for Philosophy of
The Nordic Education is a society consisting of Nordic
The Nordic countries: philosophers of education with the purpose of
Society for Denmark, fostering dialogue among philosophers of
Philosophy of Finland, Iceland, education within and beyond the Nordic
Education Norway, and countries, and to coordinate, facilitate and
Sweden support exchange of ideas, information and
experiences.[citation needed]
This Society is a professional association of
philosophers of education which holds annual
Society for the
meetings in the Midwest region of the United
Philosophical
USA States of America and sponsors a discussion
Study of
forum and a Graduate Student Competition.
Education
Affiliate of the American Philosophical
Association.[citation needed]
OVPES is a professional association of
philosophers of education. We host an annual
Ohio Valley
conference in the Ohio Valley region of the
Philosophy of USA, Ohio Valley
United States of America and sponsor a
Education Society
refereed journal: Philosophical Studies in
Education.[citation needed]
The John Dewey Society exists to keep alive
John Dewey's commitment to the use of
John Dewey
USA critical and reflective intelligence in the
Society
search for solutions to crucial problems in
education and culture.
This study place exists for persons who wish
to engage in philosophy and education
because both have value for them, quite apart
from their professional responsibilities. We
Study Space for
USA, Columbia think networked digital information resources
Philosophy and
University will enable people to reverse this ever-
Education
narrowing professionalism.[citation needed] This site
is maintained at the Institute for Learning
Technologies, Teachers College, Columbia
University.[citation needed]
The Center for Dewey Studies at Southern
Illinois University at Carbondale was
established in 1961 as the "Dewey Project."
Center for Dewey USA, Southern
By virtue of its publications and research, the
Studies Illinois University
Center has become the international focal
point for research on John Dewey's life and
work.
The Spencer USA The Spencer Foundation provides funding for
Foundation investigations that promise to yield new
knowledge about education in the United
States or abroad. The Foundation funds
research grants that range in size from smaller
grants that can be completed within a year, to
larger, multi-year endeavours.
The Humanities Research Network is
designed to encourage new ways of thinking
about the overlapping domains of knowledge
Humanities
New Zealand which are represented by the arts, humanities,
Research Network
social sciences, other related fields like law,
and matauranga Māori, and new relationships
among their practitioners.[citation needed]

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