Met 6 Ucsp PPT Week 4
Met 6 Ucsp PPT Week 4
Met 6 Ucsp PPT Week 4
CULTURAL,
SOCIAL AND
POLITICAL
INSTITUTIONS
LEARNING OBJECTIVES:
Examine the functions and importance of education
in the society
Educational
Institutions
EDUCATION
Education is the social institution that formally socializes
members of the society. It also refers to the process
through which skills, knowledge, and values are
transmitted from the teachers to the learners.
EDUCATION
Educational institutions are created to give young
people formal training in the skills that they will need
later in life. While the ancient Greeks coined the word
“school” to mean “leisure” in the cultivation of the mind
and the propagation of wisdom, pre-modern societies
equate education with its holistic and non-fragmentary
nature- learning as a life-long and continuous process.
EDUCATION
In the Philippines, by law, education is obligatory for 13
years (Kindergarten and Grades 1-12)
3 government agencies that handle education in the
Philippines: DepEd, CHED, TESDA
TYPES OF EDUCATION
Formal Education- in a classroom setting; well
trained teaching & non teaching staff
Elementary
Secondary
Tertiary
Vocational
Special Education
TYPES OF EDUCATION
Nonformal Education- is an organized educational
activity that takes place outside a formal set up. It
has no age-limit, even adults can take part in a
nonformal education program.
TYPES OF EDUCATION
Informal Education- is a lifelong process of
learning by which every person acquires and
accumulates knowledge, skills, attitude from daily
experiences at home, at work, at play, and from life
itself
FUNCTIONS OF EDUCATION
Give training in specific skills; or the basic general
education literacy
Prepare individuals for job
Preserving culture from generation to generation
Encouraging democratic participation through verbal
skills
FUNCTIONS OF EDUCATION
Develop the person’s ability to think logically and
critically
Enriching life by enabling the students to expand
his/her intellectual and aesthetic horizons
Improving personal adjustment through personal
counselling
FUNCTIONS OF EDUCATION
Improving the health of the nation’s youth
Producing nationalistic citizens
GOALS OF EDUCATION
2. Promote Self-actualization
Primary Education as a Basic Human
Right
Everyone has the right to education. (Universal
Declaration of Human Rights) Education has to be
free and compulsory at least in the primary level,
higher education and technical-vocational education
should be made generally available
Primary Education as a Basic Human
Right
Education is a fundamental human right and
essential for the exercise of all other human rights
(UNESCO). It promotes individual freedom and
empowerment and yields important development
benefits
Religion and Belief
Systems
RELIGION AND BELIEF
SYSTEMS
Considered as the oldest form of social institution,
religion is as old as human civilization. Religion is an
organized system of beliefs concerning supernatural
beings. This system of beliefs is exercised through
rituals that are meant to influence facets of the
universe which otherwise people can do nothing about.
FUNCTIONAL ROLES OF
RELIGION IN SOCIETY
Religion is a source of an orderly model of the universe.
It provides explanations of things and experiences that
cannot be grasped by human senses (e.g. death and
suffering). With a more organized understanding of the
world and the various forces around it, people are able
to move freely, more purposefully, and with less
anxiety.
FUNCTIONAL ROLES OF
RELIGION IN SOCIETY
Religions provide their believers with sets of
guidelines of what is right and what is wrong
Christians acknowledge the significance of the Ten
Commandments as a Decalogue of moral conduct.
Similarly, Buddhist believers in Japan recognize the
bushido as a code of ethics.
FUNCTIONAL ROLES OF
RELIGION IN SOCIETY
Religion also reminds individuals to reflect on their
thoughts and behaviors, which is helpful to the
maintenance of social order as the individual keeps
himself or herself in check.
RELIGION AND BELIEF
SYSTEMS
As an organic entity, religion developed through time based on
the following chronology:
Animism- The belief that spirits may dwell in nature, people, or
human-made objects. For example, the Yanomani tribes of
Venezuela believe that their ancestral spirits live on top of tress.
Pre-colonial Filipinos likewise believe that environmental spirits
inhabit shady trees like the famous balete or lunok (ficus).
RELIGION AND BELIEF
SYSTEMS
Polytheism- It is the belief in multiple gods. Ancient Greeks
and Roman are noted in the history of humanity as worshippers
of myriad of gods. Roman emperors like the blood-thirsty
Caligula had pantheon of Asian and Roman gods and deities in
his palaces. In the same way, pre-modern Philippine societies
worshipped numerous deities each associated with a particular
craft or work, such as farming, fishing, weaving and war.
RELIGION AND BELIEF
SYSTEMS
Monotheism- The belief in a single, all-powerful deity. Both
Christianity and Islam espouse monotheism though in varying
degrees of lesser denominations. For instance, Roman Catholics
believe in one God but in three divine persons: Father, Son, and
the Holy Spirit. The Hindus, although advocates of relative
monotheism, also worship the divine triad of Brahma, Vishnu
and Shiva. Absolute monotheism is the jargon of Islam as there
is no other God except Allah.
RELIGION AS A SOCIAL
INSTITUTION
Religion as a social institution is characterized by
the following features: