EED 2013: Introduction to Teaching and Learning in a Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Society

Resources to help you with Prof. Herschell's class

Progressivism in Education

"Progressivists believe that education should focus on the whole child, rather than on the content or the teacher. This educational philosophy stresses that students should test ideas by active experimentation. Learning is rooted in the questions of learners that arise through experiencing the world. It is active, not passive. The learner is a problem solver and thinker who makes meaning through his or her individual experience in the physical and cultural context. Effective teachers provide experiences so that students can learn by doing. Curriculum content is derived from student interests and questions. The scientific method is used by progressivist educators so that students can study matter and events systematically and first hand. The emphasis is on process-how one comes to know. The Progressive education philosophy was established in America from the mid 1920s through the mid 1950s. John Dewey was its foremost proponent. One of his tenets was that the school should improve the way of life of our citizens through experiencing freedom and democracy in schools. Shared decision making, planning of teachers with students, student-selected topics are all aspects. Books are tools, rather than authority. "

 

Erickson, J. (n.d.). Educational philosophies definitions and comparison chart. "Progressivism."  https://web.augsburg.edu/~erickson/edc490/downloads/comparison_edu_philo.pdf