Reflection - John Dewey
Reflection - John Dewey
Balmori EDUC 27
Reflection:
For me, the principle that I would like to apply in teaching is the John Dewey educational
philosophy. According to Dewey's educational philosophy, teachers should provide their
students the chance to suspend judgment, contemplate possibilities in a playful way, and
investigate unlikely alternatives. Imagination is crucial for advancing thinking and learning.
According to Dewey, instruction should be applicable to students' daily life. He believed that
practical life skills development and hands-on learning were essential components of children's
education. Some Dewey critics believed that under his system, students wouldn't learn the
fundamentals of academics. Others thought that the teacher's authority and the sense of order
in the classroom would vanish. Dewey believed that democracy was the main ethical
requirement in education. According to him, every school should develop into "an embryonic
community life, active with types of occupations that reflect the life of the larger society and
permeated throughout with the spirit of art, history, and science. When the school exposes and
trains each child of society into participating in such a small community, engulfing him with love
and service, and giving him tools of effective self-direction, we shall have the future we desire.