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John Dewey & Ralph Tyler
Human development encompasses various dimensions, including educational approaches and curriculum design. Theories by educators such as Dewey and Tyler emphasize the importance of deriving educational objectives from thorough studies of students, societal contexts, and subject matter.
References
Nayak, P. (2008). Human Development: Concept and Measurement. Growth and Human Development in North-East India, Nayak, P., ed., pp.19-23, Oxford University Press. Available at: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1081274
Reggio, E., Montessori, M. & Dewey, J. (2011). Dispelling Teachers’ Misconceptions and Understanding Theoretical Foundations. Early Childhood Education Journal vol. 39, pages 235–237. Available at: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10643-011-0451-3
Richards, J. (2013). Curriculum Approaches in Language Teaching: Forward, Central, and Backward Design. RELC Journal 44. 5-33. Available at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/258183234_Curriculum_Approaches_in_Language_Teaching_Forward_Central_ and_Backward_Design
He intended to formulate new pedagogical proposals in opposition to the traditional school.
The word" student " itself has arrived almost to mean someone who is not dedicated to having beneficial experiences, but to absorb knowledge directly.
Dewey remarked that the learner must always be active, an actor or participant in an ever-changing world.
Dewey emphasized that humans are social beings and wrote: "I believe that the individual who is educated is a social individual, and that society is an organic union of individuals.
The practice itself Dewey's methodological proposal consists of 5 phases:
1. Consideration of some actual and real experience of the child.
2. Identification of a problem or difficulty raised from that experience.
3. Inspection of available data, as well as search for viable solutions.
4. Formulation of the solution hypothesis.
5. Verification of the hypothesis by the action.
John Dewey & Ralph Tyler
In Democracy and Education, Dewey wrote: "In schools, you look at those under teaching, as if they were acquiring knowledge as theoretical spectators, minds that appropriate knowledge through direct energy of the intellect.
He was against of what he called "the viewer's knowledge theory."
For Dewey, as for James, the human ability to think had evolved. The mind was an adaptable faculty and had a functional role to play in the life of each individual, which would guide intelligent action in a changing world.
In no way should the objectives be written reaching goals other than the institution's philosophy.
Every institution is under a philosophy and learning and the objectives must be well impregnated with the entire system in which that institution is immersed.
The educational objectives must be derived from systematic studies about students, from studies of contemporary life in society and from analysis of the study subjects carried out by specialists.
Having in mind these elements four basic questions must be answered to develop a successful curriculum.
Tyler says that everyone who has to design a curriculum will have to go first to three sources: the students, the society, the content requirements.