Experience & Education

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Simon and Schuster, Nov 1, 2007 - Education - 94 pages
The great education theorist’s most lucid and concise statement on the needs, problems, and possibilities of education.

Experience and Education is the most lucid and concise statement on education ever published by John Dewey, the man acknowledged to be the pre-eminent educational theorist of the twentieth century. Written more than twenty years after his comprehensive work, Democracy and Education, it demonstrates how Dewey reformulated his ideas in light of his experience with progressive schools.

Analyzing both “traditional” and “progressive” education, Dr. Dewey here insists that neither is adequate because they each fail to apply the principles of a carefully developed philosophy of experience. Dewey goes on to illustrate his ideas for a philosophy of experience and its vital relation to education. He particularly urges that all teachers and educators should consider the larger issues of education rather than thinking in terms of some divisive “ism” —even one as high-minded as “progressivism.”

Dewey’s philosophy, here expressed in its most essential form, predicates an American educational system that respects all sources of experience, offering a true learning situation that is both historical and social, both orderly and dynamic.
 

Contents

The Nature of Freedom
61
The Meaning of Purpose
67
Progressive Organization of SubjectMatter
73
ExperienceThe Means and Goal of Education
89
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Page 4 - ALL SOCIAL movements involve conflicts which are reflected intellectually in controversies. It would not be a sign of health if such an important social interest as education were not also an arena of struggles, practical and theoretical.

About the author (2007)

John Dewey, philosopher and social critic, was the author of more than twenty books. He was a professor at Columbia University and a writer for The New Republic. He died in 1952. 

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