Foundations of Education PDF
Foundations of Education PDF
Foundations of Education PDF
•Moral
ANTHROPOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS
Anthropology is the
science of people and
culture. It covers
physical anthropology
which studies people as
biological organisms and
cultural anthropology or
social anthropology
which is devoted to the
behavior of people and
the products of that
behavior.
This aspect of
the foundation of
education
specifically covers,
culture, language
and writing,
kinship, descent
and marriage, arts,
religion and the
supernatural.
IMPLICATION:
Our curriculum includes
all aspects that are covered
by anthropology. Even
teaching strategies should be
adopted to the nature of the
learner, his beliefs, practices
and even tradition. K to 12
curriculum gives prominence
to the use of mother tongue.
Poverty is addressed
because of 4Ps.
What is Philosophy?
– formulated standardized
psychological test for
measuring personality and
other behavioral traits.
American psychologist, was the
first professor of psychology in
the United States at the
University of Pennsylvania and
long-time editor and publisher
of scientific journals and
publications, most notably the
journal Science.
5. Edward Lee Thorndike
•Constructed various
intelligence and aptitude
tests for children.
6. Lewis Madison Terman
- was an American
psychologist, noted as a
pioneer in educational
psychology in the early 20th
century at the Stanford
Graduate School of Education.
- devised Intelligence
Quotient (I.Q.)
7. Jean Piaget
Theories of Motivation
•Instinct Theory. Instincts are inborn and
unlearned inclinations that determine behavior. In
classroom setting, the theory is indentified with
students who enthusiastically do their best in any
manner to maintain grades and win recognition.
•Drive-Reduction Theory. Drive is a powerful impulse
that motivates human behavior to reduce his tension.
When a hungry person for an instance, eats food to
satisfy his hunger, his strong impulse to crave for food is
reduced and lessened until his feeling returns to normal
condition.
1. Pythagoras.
Founder of Buddhism;
human actions lead to
rebirth, wherein good
deeds are inevitably
rewarded and evil deeds
punished.
4. Socrates
Considered great
teacher of ethics who
argued that virtue is
knowledge; virtue is good
both for the individual and
for the society; education
can make people moral.
5. Antisthenes
Emphasized on
moral sincerity rather
than strict adherence to
religious ritual and
memorization of the law;
condemned hypocrisy,
social injustices and
defilement of God’s
temple
10. St. Augustine of Tagaste
Traditional values
represented a slave
morality which is created
by weak and resentful
individuals who
encourage such behavior
as gentleness and
kindness because the
behavior served their
interest.
II – Freedom and Responsibility