This document discusses Christian philosophy of education and reconstructionism. It outlines that Christian philosophy strives for a coherent biblical worldview through integrating Scripture into all subjects. Reconstructionism sees the goal of education as reconstructing society through social action to address problems. The teacher's role is to model Christ-like character and facilitate learning through community involvement and addressing controversial issues.
This document discusses Christian philosophy of education and reconstructionism. It outlines that Christian philosophy strives for a coherent biblical worldview through integrating Scripture into all subjects. Reconstructionism sees the goal of education as reconstructing society through social action to address problems. The teacher's role is to model Christ-like character and facilitate learning through community involvement and addressing controversial issues.
This document discusses Christian philosophy of education and reconstructionism. It outlines that Christian philosophy strives for a coherent biblical worldview through integrating Scripture into all subjects. Reconstructionism sees the goal of education as reconstructing society through social action to address problems. The teacher's role is to model Christ-like character and facilitate learning through community involvement and addressing controversial issues.
This document discusses Christian philosophy of education and reconstructionism. It outlines that Christian philosophy strives for a coherent biblical worldview through integrating Scripture into all subjects. Reconstructionism sees the goal of education as reconstructing society through social action to address problems. The teacher's role is to model Christ-like character and facilitate learning through community involvement and addressing controversial issues.
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Christian Philosophy and
Reconstructionism
Marticio, Excel Joy C.
Simon, Queeny C. Christian Philosophy
• It relates knowledge systematically
• It strives for coherence, the
formulation of a worldview
• Its method is to consult information
from the total experience. The Biblical Base Bible
•The primary source for all learning
•Must be the vital part of the content
of the curriculum and integrated with all subject matter. Purpose of Christian Philosophy of Education
•to develop biblical character in the
lives of the students (virtue).
•to secure for students the
appropriate wealth of knowledge of Christ The Curriculum •should be lively and appropriate to the needs of the learner, as well as to the needs of the community as a whole. •must be academically sound and based upon truth, not on prejudiced or biased points of view. •attain mastery of the subject within the context of a biblical world view. Why teach? • to love the Lord God with all their hearts. • to become an effective believer. • Disciple students to develop Christian lifestyle characteristics. • Help the students to articulate the hope that lies within him/her What to teach? •Virtue or moral maturity •Knowledge or intellectual maturity •Self-control or physical maturity •Fortitude or emotional maturity •Piety or spiritual maturity •Kindness or social maturity How to teach? • all procedures and processes must be based on a definite theory of knowledge. The Implications for the Teaching-Learning Process •process of guided learning where the teacher and the Holy Spirit combine efforts to help the leaner to spiritually grow and mature, to more and more conform to the image of Christ. •seeks to develop the learner a worldview, a perspective that enables him to understand, appreciate, and live a Christian life in the world in which God has placed him. Who is Responsible for the Education of an Individual?
•According to Deuteronomy 6:6-7,
the parents are the primary educators of the student. •People in Bible times recognized the value of placing students under instructors. Who is Responsible for the Education of an Individual?
• Today, parents should see the
church as being a coop in religious education of their children The Role of the Teacher
• The teacher is a model of a
Christian lifestyle (2 Tim. 3:14-17). • The teacher is an instructor of truth (1 Tim. 1:3-4) • The teacher is one who guides, facilitates, and shapes learning Focus On The Learner
•A learner is a real person. Teachers
do not teach lessons They teach people!
•“Train up a child in the way he
should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it.” Proverbs 22:6 Reconstructionism
Also known as “SOCIAL
RECONSTRUCTIONISM”, this theory claims to be the true successor of progressivism and declares that the chief purpose of education is to “RECONSTRUCT” society to meet the cultural crisis brought about by social, political, and economic problems. Theodore Brameld (1904-1987) was the founder of social reconstructionism, he recognized the potential for either human annihilation through technology and human cruelty or the capacity to create a beneficent society using technology and human compassion. For example:
• Young students should be
encouraged to act in a more limited setting than older students, such as the classroom or school, rather than the larger community. • Teachers should work with students to get them to accept the consequences (good or bad) of their actions, once they have taken place, without complaining or expecting to be let off the hook. This is important if a sense of commitment and responsibility is to be nurtured. Why Teach?
The educational aims of
reconstructionism is that people act as change agents. They do not think that schools should be separate from society, and educators should be more involved in the social cause. How to Teach?
• Focuses on student experience and
taking social action on real problems, such as violence, hunger, international terrorism, inflation, and inequality. • Strategies for dealing with controversial issues (particularly in social studies and literature), inquiry, dialogue, and multiple perspectives are the focus.
• Community-based learning and
bringing the world into the classroom are also strategies Role of the Teacher • Reconstructionist want teachers to be social activist. They believe the improvement in society results from continuous thoughtful change and the best change agent is the educational process. Teachers need to focus on critical issues and allow students to have a active say in education.
Learning To Do, Learning To Live Together and Learning To Be. Learning To Know by Combing A Sufficiently Broad Genera. Knowledge With The Opportunity To Work in Depth On Small Number of Subjects