Educational progressivism
Encyclopedia : E : ED : EDU : Educational progressivism
| Part of the Politics series on Progressivism This article has some overlap with these other political positions |
| Schools |
| American Progressivism |
| New Deal liberalism |
| Economic progressivism |
| Educational progressivism |
| Social Progressivism |
| Techno-progressivism |
| Ideas |
| Conservation ethic |
| Efficiency Movement |
| Economic interventionism |
| Freedom |
| Worker rights |
| Mixed economy |
| Positive liberty |
| Social justice |
| Welfare of Society |
| Programs |
| The Square Deal |
| The New Nationalism |
| The New Freedom |
| The New Deal |
| The New Frontier |
| ยท |
- Become aware of the problem.
- Define the problem.
- Propose hypotheses to solve it.
- Evaluate the consequences of the hypotheses from one's past experience.
- Test the most likely solution.
In 1957, the orbiting of Sputnik caused a panic in educational establishments as Americans and Europeans felt they had fallen behind the Soviet Union technologically. A rethinking of education theory followed that caused progressivism to fall from favor.
However, today some schools use progressive education methods, such as hands on activities and science experiments in Junior High Schools.
See also
Schools that teach based on the Dewey model of Progressive Education
- [The Children's School of Oak Park] - A Progressive Education elementary school in Oak Park, Illinois
Goddard College - A progressive college founded on the ideals and work of John Dewey. Goddard offers BA, MA and MFA low residency programs in Writing, Education, Psychology, Health Arts, Interdisciplinary Arts and Individually designed programs for working adults. Eight day residencies in Plainfield, Vermont and Port Townsend, Washington
Sources
- World Book 2004
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