Friday 19 October 2012

Educational philosophy

  • What do you see is the grander purpose of education in a society and community?
  • What, specifically, is the role of the teacher in the classroom?
  • How do you believe students learn best?
  • In general, what are you goals for your students?
  • What qualities do you believe an effective teacher should have?
  • Do you believe that all students can learn?
  • What do teachers owe their students?
Your educational philosophy can guide your discussions in job interviews, be placed in a teaching portfolio, and even be communicated to students and their parents.

Tuesday 16 October 2012


THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION IN SOUTH AFRICA


The Department has partnered with stakeholders to supply Grade 10 and 12 learners with user-friendly learning materials, for revision purposes, through radio programmes,newspaper supplements and DVD. We encourage you to get the weekly supplements and visit this website on a regular basis to download the materials...Read more




 


Wednesday 3 October 2012

The School Experience


Education is just a transfer to the student or discovery by the student of knowledge from the past. Dewey noted the issue was not in what education is, but in how it is done. Being a proponent of positive educative experience, he noted that progressive education and traditional education provide experiences. This makes the issue not whether experience is provided or not but what sort of experience the educator will use to have the student acquire knowledge. Dewey framed the question in his book as follows: "How shall the young become acquainted with the past in such a way that the acquaintance is a potent agent in appreciation of the living present?" (23). According to Dewey, traditional education would just funnel the knowledge accumulated through history into the student through books and instruction from a teacher without connecting the past to the reality of the student. Acquiring the knowledge became the end goal of the education process. Dewey expressed the view that the present should always remain in focus. By keeping the present at the core, the student and teacher would avoid the pitfalls of creating a disconnect between what is being taught to the reality of the student.