MY EDUCATIONAL PHILOSOPHY
OUTLINE:
Where rubber meets road, I believe in these philosophical elements:
PHILOSOPHY
|
YES
|
NO
|
Essentialism
|
o
Need to acquire
cultural literacy—common knowledge.
|
o
Standard
curriculum for all; American focus.
|
Behaviorism
|
o
Teachers design
class environments that set stage for effective, efficient learning.
|
o
Regimented
instruction; conditioned responses.
|
Idealism
|
o
Learn about universal
truths; introduce fundamental ideas and discuss with students.
|
o
Reality is
unchanging, fixed; teacher-centered.
|
Realism
|
o
Observe
reality; test and verify knowledge via skill demonstration.
|
o
Disregard
for human awareness.
|
Progressivism
|
o
Student
needs drive curriculum decisions; collaborative discussion, debate,
demonstration.
|
o
Students
establish own curriculum/schedules.
|
Social Reconstructivism
|
o
Work for
social justice w/problem-solving approach; inspire critical thinking and action.
Teacher-guided inquiry and research; cooperative group work.
|
o
|
Existentialism
|
o
Students
exercise freedom of choice & accountability, set goals, become
independent by self-discipline; teachers guide development via
problem-solving strategies w/self-analysis of choices in dialogue.
|
o
|
A
chart like this should mostly make my educational philosophical position clear
for any reasonably literate individuals, partly by presenting affirmation of
belief and partly by defining through negation. In the latter respect, those
philosophies listed in the chart which show no negatives do so only because
their elements with which I have reservations were not listed on Table 2.1 in
Grace C. Huerta’s text Educational
Foundations: Diverse Histories, Diverse Perspectives. From previous reading
of these educational philosophies, I would say that the negative aspects they share
with others either include either a lack of respect for students’ unique
origins and need for self-determination or a devaluation of the teacher’s vital
role as a motivator, mediator and guide between subject and learner through
process. To positively, succinctly identify definite, central elements of my educational philosophy:
ü I believe that humanity needs some common knowledge to
function well in harmony, including an understanding of some universal Truths,
best learned in common settings.
ü I believe that both truths and Truths are best identified
through collaborative effort and cooperative meaning-making, with the
scientific method as a standard of measurement.
ü I believe teachers should be highly trained specialists
responsible for preparing a place, direction and process of inquiry most
conducive to efficient, effective learning.
ü I believe that best teacher decisions begin with
consideration of student needs, including individual and cultural learning
differences, and strive to guide student achievement via progressive
democratic, high-order thought processes rather than rote transmission.
ü I believe the ultimate aim of excellent education is betterment
of the human condition, by forming free thinkers who are able, cooperative
problem-solvers capable of further guiding self-development with
self-discipline and self–analysis, for social equity.
If this sounds like a strange brew of
conservative revolution, like a love-child of Plato’s Republic and Paolo Freire’s Pedagogy
of the Oppressed, then I have communicated my beliefs effectively, except
for one thing. None of the historical educational philosophies surveyed by
Huerta refers to explicitly—much less emphasizes—the importance of strong,
positive, reciprocal connections between teacher and parent, classroom and
community, culture of institutionalized education and the institutions of diverse
cultures.
ü I believe that students learn as much outside of a
classroom as within one, and that the teacher/classroom setting can only be
educationally effective to the degree it is informed by and responsive to
student and community funds of knowledge and needs for action.
APPLICATION: What does this belief look like in practice,
however?
To
begin: since students are the seed from which all educational decisions spring,
the teacher must know more about their individual and cultural backgrounds,
personal aptitudes and collected knowledge and skills. I have honored this need
in the past first, before school starts, with thorough surveys of my ESL
students’ test scores—IPT, UALPA, CRT and more—followed by home visits to establish
and strengthen home/school connection, especially for students whom I have not
served before. When school begins, I continue to actively develop connection
between home and school and student with curriculum by frequent parent
contact—providing and requesting information—and developing a deeper perception
of each student’s unique character, abilities and desires, in order to tailor
daily instruction as a reflection of what they really need to cope with the
world well. For example, at the start of each school year, I survey students
about their origins, experience of the journey to the present situation,
parents’ position and function in the community, what they like/dislike and
do/don’t do well in school as well as what they know how to do well and want to
do someday outside of school, and more. I use this information to expose
elements of disciplines which, say, they claim not to like but do well with
outside of school and need to fulfill their wishes for the future, e.g. reading
standard forms for classes and jobs, yet interpreting government forms for
parents and planning to be a pediatric doctor. Then I try to help them connect
obtaining or improving the skill to realization of personal visions
Next,
because ESL students often need special support with academic skills and
developing the ability to apply knowledge and skills across the curriculum, as
well as to real life, I try to keep our language arts/literacy study from
becoming too detached or abstract. For example, I have supported objectives of
math and science teachers by incorporating students’ interest in sports
performance cars into a thematic unit addressing the necessary vocabulary,
basic physics concepts, pros and cons of cars by economics and wider
cost-benefit analysis, also addressing needs for literary development by
reading short stories on the glories and burdens of car culture, the mass
manufacturing/consumption social mechanism and our environmental
legacy/responsibility, reading classified ads and car loan
applications/contracts to better understand informational text, and writing to
describe and argue about cars, all as means to develop problem-solving skills
and self-directed development of academic connection to real needs.
Finally,
because education should not only change in response to the needs of the times,
the society in which it occurs, and students background and needs, but also
should change the times, society and students with which it interacts for the
better, I commonly include lessons or an aspect of lessons addressed to the big
question, “So what?” For example, whenever we talk about a social expectation,
about author perspective and purpose, we break it down by origin and intention.
Who wants us to do what? Why? Is it good for us? Do we agree? Why? What can we
do to comply or resist? How could we call it into question? And so on. The most
concrete and dramatic example I can think is a thematic unit we did last year
on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day’s origins and modern legacy, with the history
department (at the middle school, anyway): viewing documentary footage,
student-directed vocabulary collection (boycott, civil rights, etc.,)
explanation of the context, discussion of how legal rights for blacks affect
immigrant and Native minority student rights, writing pro/con arguments for
passive, non-violent resistance versus active, possibly violent protest,
writing apostrophic “Thank You” letters to Dr. King., and so on, paired with listening
to old-school hip-hop and reggae songs (“What’s the Meaning of Life”; “I Have
Education”; “Equal Rights.”) This lead to a unit with a similar approach on the
right to educational access including reading and viewing documentary
perspectives of the Little Rock school desegregation; choosing quotes from Dr.
King to post on class walls; viewing “Stand and Deliver” and writing about
students’ worst experiences and greatest triumphs in education; viewing “Freedom
Writers,” and reading exemplars from the book written by Erin Gruwell’s classes;
students requested that they be assigned more journal-type writing, chose to write
emails to students from the film (since Miep Gies—whom they wished to contact
as Gruwell’s students had, because the 8th graders were reading
about Nazis and Anne Frank—had died,) and selected one to start planning fundraisers
for that person to come to the Moab secondary schools as an inspirational
speaker. We (including me) also wrote our cultural perspectives on education
for the high school newspaper.
CONCLUSION:
Please provide me with constructive criticism.
