Huwebes, Hunyo 18, 2015

philosophers

Margienifie B. Canda
Direction: Select any three persons from three different time periods. Create a comparison considering the following:

Person 1
Person 2
Person 3
1. Name

Plato
St. Thomas Aquinas
Jan Amos Comenius
2. Time/Place

Ancient Era (ancient Greece)
Medieval Period
Renaissance Period
3. Characteristic of the Time Period

·    Men ran the government, and spent a great deal of their time away from home.
·    With the exception of ancient Sparta, Greek women had very limited freedom outside the home.
·    Most Greek cities did not have publicly-funded schools. Education was therefore a private affair.
·   The Medieval period represents a renewed flowering of Western philosophical thought after the intellectual drought of the Dark Ages.
·   Much of the period is marked by the influence of Christianity and many of the philosophers of the period were greatly concerned with proving the existence of God and reconciling Christianity with classical philosophy.
·   An important development in the Medieval period was the establishment of the first universities with professional full-time scholars. It should also be noted that there was also a strong resurgence in Islamic and Jewish philosophy at this time.
·   It was a general re-awakening, revival or rebirth of learning
·   The renaissance upheld the dignity of the human being, renewed the spirit of nationalism
·   It is also the time for increased trade among countries, and a period of exploration
·   This lead to scientific research which was used to solve problems
·   Books were printed and thus were made more widely available
4. Cultural beliefs about Education

·    Education was an essential component of a person’s identity in ancient Greece, and the type of education a person received was based strongly in one’s social class, the culture of one’s polis, and the opinion of one’s culture on what education should include.
·    The goal of education in the Greek city-states (Sparta) was to prepare the child for adult activities as a citizen. On the other hand, the goal of education in Athens, a democratic city-state, was to produce citizens trained in the arts of both peace and war.

·   The objective of medieval education was an overtly religious one, primarily concerned with uncovering transcendental truths that would lead a person back to God through a life of moral and religious choice.

      Education during the Renaissance was still very much tied to religious organizations. Luther and the Protestants continued to gain power during the Reformation and one of the ways they exercised it was in the realm of education. They believed that training people to read the bible would make truer believers and so they established schools with this goal in mind.
     The methods employed primarily involved memorization and passive mimicry of received “wisdom” and “truth”, and so were highly unlikely to promote critical thinking.
      Universities continued to evolve and grow and, with the influence of humanism, began to focus on worldly rather than otherworldly knowledge. Attention was placed on the ancient Greeks and Romans, particularly with regards to the questions they asked about human nature and the natural world. 

5. Who receives an education?

·    Formal Greek education was primarily for men, and was, in general, not offered to slaves, manual laborers, or women. In some poleis, laws were passed to prohibit the education of slaves. A young girl would receive an informal education from her mother and would be taught how to maintain a household to serve her father and, later in life, her husband.
·      Going to school and getting and education was not done by everyone in Medieval Europe. Only some could go to school and most of them were boys.
·      The education a peasant would get would only be to make a living.
·      Girls were sent to other households to learn sewing and weaving, skills needed to manage a household.
·       Boys who were the sons of lords would learn proper manners and to play chess2.
·      In Renaissance Europe, schooling was for those who could afford it. Some people were well educated, while others never attended school.
·      Education for Renaissance boys was of two sorts. There was classical education based on the Latin language for boys who planned to go on to a university. There was also education through apprenticeships for boys who planned to pursue a trade.
·      Girls received less education than boys during the Renaissance. Some girls did become well educated in the classics, and some also became apprentices. Many more were educated mainly in practical matters at home.
6. What were the prevailing attitudes towards children?

·    In Athens, as in most Greek city-states, with the exception of Sparta, girls stayed at home until they were married. Like their mother, they could attend certain festivals, funerals, and visit neighbors for brief periods of time. Their job was to help their mother, and to help in the fields, if necessary.
·      Corporal punishment was in use throughout society and probably also in homes.
·      Children were given tasks in keeping with their ages. For younger children this meant looking after their smaller siblings, or running errands.
·      As they grew older they might be allocated lighter domestic or agricultural duties, but they were not capable of doing serious work until about the age of puberty when they began to acquire strength of an adult kind.
·      There was excessive and harsh discipline based upon the rod which literally turned the school into a place of terror on the part of students.
7. What was the person’s contribution to the field of education?

·    Plato improved on the Socratic method (use of dialogues) in his later years and developed a philosophy of education as outlined in The Republic that became the hallmark of a European liberal arts education.
·    He may have founded an institution of learning known as the Academy, from which we get the word academic.
·    Perhaps the best known aspect of Plato’s educational thought is his portrayal of the ideal society in The Republic.
·   He was the foremost classical proponent of natural theology at the the peak of Scholasticism in Europe, and the founder of the Thomistic school of philosophy and theology.
·   The philosophy of Aquinas has exerted enormous influence on subsequent Christian theology, especially that of the Roman Catholic Church, but also Western philosophy in general. His most important and enduring works are the "Summa Theologica", in which he expounds his systematic theology of the "quinquae viae" (the five proofs of the existence of God), and the "Summa Contra Gentiles".

·     Comenius is best known for his contributions to teaching techniques. Persuaded that education is not limited to the action of school and family but is part of general social life, he believed that teachers should understand how a child’s mind develops and learns. He was convinced that all children, without regard to gender or social class, should attend school and receive the same education so as to understand and accept the civilization in which they live.
·     Comenius was among the first to teach classical languages by use of parallel passages of ancient and modern texts; and his Visible world in pictures (1658) is believed to be the first illustrated textbook for children.
·     Comenius was one of the first educators to recommend a coherent and standard system of instruction. Indeed, Comenius suggested that the universality of nature dictated that all people shared common stages of intellectual development. As a result, he reasoned, teachers needed to identify their students' stages of development and match the level of instruction accordingly. Lessons should proceed from easy to complex at a slow and deliberate pace.


8. How was the person a reflection of his/her time?

·    He exerted a greater influence over human thought.
·      He was the “angelic doctor” (emulating a number of other scholars of his day) occupied himself with listing (giving the sum of) the body of Church in his greatest work,Summa Theologica.
·      Comenius was an advocate of universal education so that the souls of all people would be enlightened in this fashion. Through universal education and pedagogy, pansophy would eliminate human prejudice and lead to human perfection–a state of being that God had intended for man.


9. How did the person change education for future generation?
Plato’s relevance to modern day educators can be seen at a number of levels:
·    One of the principle benefits that the Socratic Method confers is to allow large bodies of students to engage in "active learning. Students learn better when they are actively involved in the learning process" rather than passively taking notes and the teacher dispenses information."
·    He believed, and demonstrated, that educators must have a deep care for the well-being and future of those they work with. Educating is a moral enterprise and it is the duty of educators to search for truth and virtue, and in so doing guide those they have a responsibility to teach.
·    There is his conceptualization of the differing educational requirements associated with various life stages.
·      The teacher and catechist today can learn much from Aquinas’ own pedagogy and teaching.
·      Aquinas saw the reality and dignity of being a human person in the fact that the individual is able to come to know the truth and choose the good. 
·      Responsibility for knowledge cannot be passed to some over-arching force: it belongs to each person individually. The enjoyment of knowledge and truth that each person attains is that individual person’s enjoyment of knowledge and truth. Here, Aquinas is concerned with safeguarding the experiential knowledge of the human person as a truly human and personal act. For Aquinas, the student really grows in knowledge through experience, and the knowledge in which he grows he can truly call his own.
·     He championed “Education for all”. His ideas on education for everyone and for all peoples, and on the international organization of public education will always be given importance.
·     Other principles will be considered in the educational system:
-Education should be in accordance with the child’s natural interest.
-The level of teaching should be suited to the child’s understanding.


Miyerkules, Hunyo 17, 2015

24.mtb-mle

http://mothertongue-based.blogspot.com

    The philosophy behind this is realism. For a child to easily comprehend the lessons, it must be taught first in mother tonque. Students could easily understand lessons if the medium of instruction used is the language which they all have grown speaking with. Localization of teaching process is what the deped see as the solution to the lack of comprehension of students.

23. child labor


http://www.ucanews.com/news/not-enough-done-to-combat-child-labor-in-philippines-critics-say/73782

Realism

    This is a sad reality and this is really happening all over the world and not just in the Philippines. This is not just a task of the government to resolve this problem, it's a call for everyone to be a part of the solution to this problem. Any amount of help that we could give could change someone's life forever. Let us not be blind to this.

22. technology

http://www.rappler.com/business/features/96337-felta-ph-education-modernization

Progressivism

   The use of technology in teaching- learning process is really a must in our curriculum for our graduate to cope up the needs of time and to become globally competitive. Education must improve in all aspects. In a highly modernized world we are in today, we should not be alienated with the new trends. Let us not allow this technologies manipulate us, rather we should be the one manipulating all these technologies for our benefits.

21. gender equality


http://www.unicef.org/education/bege_70640.html

Progressivism

       Education should be for all regardless of gender. 

20. no collection policy


http://www.sunstar.com.ph/zamboanga/local-news/2015/05/28/deped-firm-no-collection-policy-410031

Idealism

      This policy is in accordance to Republic Act No 9155, section 2. It is clearly stated that free basic education must be of access to Filipino people.

19.ptca

http://www.teacherph.com/strengthening-ptca-quality-education/

Progressivism

       Teachers act as second parent to the students when they are in school, however their parents still play the vital role in shaping and forming the character and individuality of a child. Parents and teachers working hand in hand together with the community in molding the nation's future. Unlike before, that the responsibility is fully entrusted to the teacher, now,it has become a shared responsibility among stakeholders.

18. speed up release of teacher's bonus.


http://www.sunstar.com.ph/manila/local-news/2015/06/16/dbm-deped-urged-speed-release-teachers-bonuses-413461

Essentialism

      " What is due to Juan give it to Juan, what is due to Pedro, give it to Pedro." Teachers are working very hard in helping uplift the lives of their students. Taking the responsibility as second parent of 40 or more students is definitely not an easy task. It requires all of you, your heart and soul in molding the students of who they want to be in the future.

       

Martes, Hunyo 16, 2015

17. brigada eskwela


http://www.deped.gov.ph/press-releases/deped-educ-partners-kick-brigada-eskwela-nationwide

Reconstructionism
     Brigada eskwela shows the bayanihan spirit among Filipino people. Stakeholders are working together for the betterment of our school children. The spirit of bayanihan is a good start of reconstructing society. To work together for a common good in school and in the community.

16. guidance counselors

http://opinion.inquirer.net/85791/guidance-counselors-serve-a-higher-purpose

           Perennialism is the philosophy behind this article. For this will help develop students intellectual and moral qualities of students. This will also secure individual freedoms, human rights and responsibilities.

15. learning by doing

    The philosophy behind this picture is progressivism. The child's interest is more important than the subject. The use of technology in the teaching- learning process is also emphasized. The concept of learning by doing must also be applied.

14. k to 12 petition

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/698430/latest-sc-petition-vs-k-12-credited-to-student

     The philosophy behind this is idealism. The existence of the school and its curriculum is governed by the constitution. Any revision and reconstruction from the curriculum must abide the existing laws of the constitution.

13. mistake

      Philosophy behind this is existentialism. A person learn  through his experience, a sort of self-discovery. In that experiences he might be committing mistakes wherehe could learn from. As they say, "experience is the best teacher.

   

12. teacher



Philosophies behind this are progressivism and reconstructionism. One should be open to change for the world is constantly changing. There are things in the past that are no longer applicable in present times. We should be a catalyst for change and in making a difference in our nation. We should always be inspired in what we do and be a source of positivity to other people.

11. Feeding Program


http://www.deped.gov.ph/orders/do-37-s-2014

  Realism is the  philosophy behind this DepEd Order. Hunger among school children is one of the sad realities that needs to be addressed. The conscious effort of the government to eradicate this problem through the school based feeding program of the DepEd is a great leap in improving the quality of our graduate that will eventually lead in making a difference in our country.

10. k to 12 curriculum

http://www.gov.ph/k-12/

      The philosophies behind this are progressivism and recontructionism. Society is changing thus  we need to reconstruct our curriculum to cater the needs of time. Dr. Jose Rizal once said, "Ang kabataan ang pag-asa ng bayan", they are prime mover of change. This curriculum will equip the students with the necessary skills they need to cope with the fast changing world. These students will then transform our society in order to create a better world.

9.hygiene practices

http://www.unicef.org/philippines/reallives_19770.html#.VYAZW4XFJoM

   The philosophy behind this is essentialism. Hygiene practices are basic and essential to life. Teachers must  teach these practices to the students for these are essential to good health. Healthy learners lead to successful participation in class discussion and a decrease rate of absenteeism among learners.

Lunes, Hunyo 15, 2015

8. anti bullying

http://co.chalkbeat.org/2013/01/16/voices-time-to-toughen-anti-bullying-laws/

Existentialism

   The philosophy behind this anti-bullying act is existentialism. This philosophy focuses on self- discovery and the value of experience in learning. How can a child learn in an environment where he/she feels not secured and not treated well. If all his/ her experiences in school are not meaningful because he is bullied by either his/her classmates or teachers. The aim of this act is to ensure that the students learn in supportive, caring and safe environment without fear of being bullied. By that, child will have meaningful experiences in school and learning will take place.

7.DepEd steps in on salutatorian speech controversy 

DepEd steps in on salutatorian speech controversy 



Perennialism



    To resolve this issue, the invetigating team shall look into both sides without letting media and social media interfere on it. Sometimes social media is dragging the the main issue to nowhere. They must go back into the regulations set by private schools in the selection of honors if they have committed any violations and if there is a proper way in raising complains that the student was not able to abide. We all have the right to express our ideas and opinions, however, i do believe that this right ends if it violates the right of other people, the class valedictorian for that matter. There are proper process in filing complains and definitely a right place to do it. If the student believes that the school has done something wrong on the selection of honors because there is no transparency on the calculation of grades, she could file a formal complain to proper authorities to contest the result of the said selection.

     The respect for authorities and other people's feelings must be considered amidst our intense desire to get ourselves the justice that we deserve.

Linggo, Hunyo 14, 2015

6.Poverty, hunger prevent Filipino kids from getting basic education

Poverty, hunger prevent Filipino kids from getting basic education

Realism



      This is the reality that the government is trying to cover up by bragging achievements about their constant combat against poverty.

       If only the government will acknowledge that this problem remains unresolved, it is only then that they could come up to a right solution.

        No matter how the government will try to augment the quality of our education if our students come to school with an empty stomach due to poverty, it will still be useless. They should target the root cause of this problem which is poverty and only then everything else will follow.

Sabado, Hunyo 13, 2015

5. Trillanes

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/207151/trillanes-blasts-deped%E2%80%99s-k12-program

Trillanes blasts DepEd’s K+12 program


Reconstructionism
Progressivism

            The only constant thing in this world is change. Nothing is permanent. Our ways and means in dealing life should also be changed to cope with the needs of time or else we will be left out. That's the reason why we have this reconstruction of our curriculum. 
              It's a human nature to oppose change. We constantly view change as something negative. Of course it never come easy, K to 12 has a way to to go, lots of revisions to its framework, constant dealing to its insufficiency and proving its efficiency. However, let us not focus on the hurdles we are to take on its implementation but to the long term benefits it could give. 

4. DepEd Initiatives


http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/498026/news/nation/deped-initiative-to-ensure-jobs-for-college-professors-displaced-by-k-to-12-program?utm_source=GMANews&utm_medium=Facebook&utm_campaign=GMANewsFacebook

DepEd initiative to ensure jobs for college professors displaced by K to 12 program

Idealism
Progressivism

       It is a good thing that they were able to foresee the effect of the implementation of the K to 12 program and solutions have been drafted already. The idea has been acknowledge before it happens. This K to 12 program has been posing a threat among college professors and it is such a relief for them that the government has already prepared jobs for them when Senior High School will reach to its full bloom.
         Reconstruction of the curriculum is good but it is much better if everything that  will be affected will also be taken cared of. 

3. DepEd Hiring Guidelines

http://www.teacherph.com/deped-hiring-guidelines-for-the-remaining-teaching-positions-sy-2015-2016/


DepEd Hiring Guidelines for the Remaining Teaching Positions SY 2015-2016


          Our curriculum has been reconstructed for so many times, so this new guidelines for hiring teachers is only right and fitting. Our guidelines must suit to the needs of time and thus it should also be reconstructed. Teachers are very important in the teaching- learning process. They act as facilitator for learning to take place. Students look up to them, thus teachers must possess the necessary qualities needed in his/her profession. 
          This guidelines will also serve as guide for those who aspire to become an educator. So that they will know on what aspects they should focus and give their attention to. This is also a way to end issues regarding hiring of teachers.

2. Educational Issue (from ABS- CBN News)


         In this video, it is very clear that what the teacher did was very unethical, it violates human rights and there is child abused. In this case, as a teacher, we should always remember why are we called a teacher in the first place. We are the second parent of every child that come to school. We should give the love and respect that they deserve. We should not traumatized the child for us to impose learning, for learning should be a fun experience and not a traumatizing one            
            A child must learn through his/her own experience, thus, it is our prime responsibility to provide meaningful experiences to the students. We should guide them in finding lessons to learn in their own experiences. Let us be there to guide them, but let the child be, as Paulo Coelho quoted, “People never learn anything by being told, they have to find out for themselves.”

1. Educational Issue ( from GMA News and Current Affairs)

       Along with our intense desire to reconstruct the curriculum to better serve and provide quality education  to Filipino people that could cope up to the needs of time, let us not overlook things which are essential. The basic things such as spelling and correct grammar which the child needs in carrying out complex English lessons. How could a child learn correctly if the students are using textbooks that contain some wrong information? Hoping that this problem will immediately be resolved so that we could truly give what a child deserves, a quality form of education. 

Philosophies of Education


Main Concepts
Aim of Education
Role of Teachers
Methodology/ Strategy in Education
Contemporary Philosophy
Reconstructionism

  •  Redesign to prepare society for the future.
  • It advocates that schools should take lead to reconstruct society in order to create a better world.


·  Education is based on the quest for better society
· Education that enlivens student’s awareness of different societal problems
·   Lead the learners in designing programs for social, educational, practical and economic change.
·   Primary agent of social change.
·   Initiates lively discussion on controversial political and educational issues.
·    
·   Community- based projects
·   Problem- solving oriented method
·   Case study that involve students for social responsibility.

  • Inquiry approach
  • Question-asking
Progressivism
·      Progressive education programs often include the use of community resources and encourage service- learning projects.
·      Stresses that students should test ideas by active experimentation

  • Focuses on the child rather than the subject matter.
·   To provide democratic and social living.
·   To guide students
·   Adviser
·   Teachers are facilitators of learning who encourage students to use a wide variety of activities to learn.
·   Problem- solving method
·   Scientific Inquiry
Existentialism
·         Focused on the experience of an individual person, and the way he/she understands the world.
·         Emphasis on self discovery.
·         Learning by doing.
·      To help students understand and appreciate themselves as unique individuals who accept complete responsibility for their thoughts, feelings, and actions.
·      To educate the whole person, not just the mind, since feeling is not divorced from reason in decision making.
·      To help the learner become fully his authentic self.
·   To help students define their own essence by exposing them to various paths they take in life.
·   To create environment in which they freely choose their own preferred way.
·   To relate with each student openly and honestly.
·   Effective questioner
·   Mental disciplinarian
·   Good provider of experiences
·   Inquiry Approach
·   Question- Answer Method
·   Experimentation
·   Self- expressive activities
·   Problem- solving method
Original Philosophy
Realism
·         Reality, knowledge and values exist independent of the human mind.
·         Education should be based on essential and practical knowledge that exist independent of the knower.
·         Education is the process of developing rational powers to their fullest so that the good life can be achieved
·      Preparing the child for a happy and successful life.
·      Preparing the child for a real life.
·      Emphasis on training of sense.
·      Equal importance to individuality and sociability.
·      Developing scientific attitude.
·      Developing vocational efficiency.
·      Acquainting a child with nature and social environment.
·      Emphasizing integration of cultural and vocational education.
·   The teacher is expected to have full knowledge of the content and needs of the children.
·   The teacher must be capable to present before the children in a clear and intelligible way by employing psychological and scientific methods.
·   A teacher should know whom to teach, why to teach, when to teach, how much to teach.
·   The teacher himself should also be engaged in some research work and experimentation and be able to inspire students to do the same.

·   Stress on scientific and problem solving method.
·   They use observation, demonstration, inductive method under scientific methods.
·   Deductive reasoning
·   Synthetic methods
·   Correlation methods

Idealism
·      Idealist believes that ideas are the only true reality.
·      Concerned primarily with the search for truth.
·      Emphasizes the importance of mind, soul and spirit.
·      Education is the process of developing rational powers to their fullest so that the good life can be achieved.
·      True education is concerned with ideas rather than matter.
·      The idealist wants to give students a broad understanding of the world in which they live.
·      To develop the individual spiritually, mentally and morally.
·      Self- realization
·      Character development
·      Search for true ideas
·   Chief source of information
·   Creator of educational environment

·   Lecture- discussion Method
·   Excursion
·   Question Method
·   Project Method
Pragmatism
Experimentalism or Empiricism
·         Truth is what  works in the real world
·         Education should be action oriented
·         Education should be a preparation for life

·      Are emergent and subject to change from time to time
1.      Social Efficiency
2.      More and more education and continued growth.
3.      Adaptation to environment
4.      Harmonious development
·   Facilitator that encourages, offers suggestions, questions and helps plan and implement courses of study.
·   Teaching method should be varied and flexible
·   Project approach to teaching is desirable
·   Problem- solving method

Traditional/ Conservative Philosophy

Essentialism       
·         Focuses on intellectual discipline.
·         Education properly involves the learning of the basic skills, arts and sciences.
·         Sees the primary function of the school to be the preservation and transmission of the basic elements of human culture.
·         Emphasis on academics
·      To prepare students to be productive, contributing members of the society.
·      To teach the young, the essentials they need to live well in the modern world.
·   Help students keep their non- productive instincts in check, such as aggression and mindlessness.
·   Should embed traditional moral values and virtues.
·   As an expert
·   Impart essential knowledge
·   Direct focused tasks
·   Should serve as an intellectual and moral role model for the students.
·   Deductive Method
·   Recitation
·   Analysis and Synthesis
·   “Race and Social Heritage” over experiences
Perennialism
·         Started with religion
·         Focus on enduring themes and questions that span the ages.
·         Focus on concepts rather than facts
·         Teacher centered
·      Emphasis on learning for learning’s sake
·      To ensure that students acquire understanding about the great ideas of Western Civilization
·      These ideas have the potential for solving problems in any era
·   Teachers should allow learner to learn through reading the great books.
·   Teachers focus on the importance of reading.
·   Teachers instill to learners respect for authority, duty, consideration and practicality
·   Teachers act as the director and coach of intellect.
·   Teachers deliver clear lectures.
·   Teachers coaches critical thinking.
·   Socratic Method
·   Oral Exposition (lecture)
·   Explicit teaching of traditional values