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PRAGMATISM

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According to Popkin and Stroll;1981:265 taken from William James), pragmatism is a method for solving or evaluating intellectual problems, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PRAGMATISM


1
PRAGMATISM
  • BACKGROUND AND MEANING
  • BASIC ASSUMPTIONS
  • PRAGMATISM AND EDUCATION

2
Pragmatism
  • It emerged in 19th century in America out of
    empiricist view, that knowledge is acquired
    through experience.
  • Philosophers William James, Charles Pierce and
    J. Dewey
  • A movement against traditional philosophies
    realism and idealism based on too much
    speculation which is difficult to verify.

3
Background
  • Pragmatists concentrated more on epistemological
    issues.
  • Their emphasis was on daily practical experiences
    that produce testable and verifiable knowledge

4
Meaning
  • Pragmatism, borrowed from Greek language and was
    first used by Charles Pierce to mean to make
    things done.
  • According to Popkin and Stroll1981265 taken
    from William James), pragmatism is a method for
    solving or evaluating intellectual problems, and
    a theory about the kinds of knowledge that we are
    able to acquire

5
Meaning
  • Pragmatism is concerned with
  • Evaluating and solving practical problems through
    the process of thinking.
  • Doing, experiencing, practicing, experimenting
    and engaging in solving problems.
  • In relation to epistemology it assumes that
    knowledge is acquired through practice or action.

6
Basic assumptions
  • Belief in the process of change
  • The universe is always in the process of change,
    evolution and development.
  • Nothing remains the same, fixed, static or
    eternal.
  • Ideas and everything else are in the process of
    development.
  • Truth and values are the result of evolving human
    experience and knowledge

7
Assumptions
  • J. Dewey (1915)all aspects of universe can be
    properly understood in terms of a continuous
    state of evolution.
  • W. James in Kelly (1986)
  • Change is the essence of reality.
  • Truth is not static and unchangeable.
  • It grows and develops with time.
  • Human engagement in inquiries that lead to new
    discoveries is the only way to cope with the
    universe successfully.
  • Every one should be prepared for that.

8
Assumptions
  • Inherent or innate knowledge in human beings is a
    fallacy.
  • New born children are only privileged with the
    physical and mental ability to allow them to
    participate in the world around them and to
    obtain what is relevant and meaningful.
  • There is no universal truth since everyone
    experiences his own world and environment in his
    own way at his own time in a variety of situations

9
Assumptions
  • Truth and values are measured through
    consequences of actions/practice or
    experimentation.
  • Charles Sanders in Kelly (1986) believes that
    meaning is a matter of consequences, what is
    meaningful is what is useful productively.
  • Behavior is good if it yields good result. Our
    moral actions and behavior can be judged in that
    way.

10
Assumptions
  • Truth and meaning can be judged as tentative or
    hypothetical, subject to change until they are
    tested through practice, experiment or
    experience.
  • J. Dewey in Kneller, G. (1971) knowledge
    develops through framing and testing of
    hypotheses. In this way we can attain knowledge
    in any field science, moral, political,
    educational or aesthetical.

11
Assumptions
  • Interdependence of theory and practice. Ideas are
    developed through practice and experience.
  • Ideas are used for understanding practice, for
    testing or verifying theories.

12
Pragmatism and education
  • Goal of education adjustment to change by
    teaching democratic values, scientific ways of
    problem solving and encouraging curiosity and
    creativity.
  • Adaptation to the changing circumstances or
    conditions of learners environment

13
Pragmatism and education
  • Curriculum
  • More concerned with the process rather than the
    content, the means rather than the end of
    learning.
  • Built around pressing and current issues, needs
    and experiences of the learner, to be taught in
    the form of problem solving rather than through
    dry subject matter

14
Pragmatism and education
  • Activities chosen should focus on the learner
    needs, ability, interest, experience and
    background knowledge.
  • School activities should harmonize with learners
    experiences outside the school.
  • School programmes should focus on practice,
    working with problems common to the learners
    experiences for facilitating the development of
    problem solving skills.

15
Pragmatism and education
  • The teacher
  • Facilitator of learning or colleague
    acknowledging learners ideas and their unique
    experiences.
  • Since there is no absolute truth, learners and
    teachers both need to verify the truth.
  • A guide, a leader and advisor as he/she is more
    experienced.
  • Manager of change and a helper of learners to
    learn how to learn.

16
Pragmatism and education
  • Approach Learner-centred
  • Method
  • Give learners adequate freedom of choice,
    interact with their environment, discover, solve
    problems, use their intelligence, hypothesize,
    test and develop ideas.
  • Learners to practice democratic ideals
    cooperation, sharing and respecting ideas and
    opinions, share materials in learning.
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