Social Dimensions of Education
Social Dimensions of Education
Social Dimensions of Education
DIMENSIONS IN
EDUCATION/
DEVELOPMENT
S IN
EDUCATION
COMPETENCIES
1. Determine the roles of the
teachers as active members
of the community and as
global citizens responsible for
outcomes of their actions and
for developing other citizens.
(Intercultural Communication,
Gender and Development,
Globalization and Education)
2. Apply the Four Pillars of
Learning/Education in
understanding the relation
between or among the
individual, school and society
I. GLOBAL AND NATIONAL
CONTEXTS OF EDUCATION-
SOCIO-CULTURAL,
POLITICAL, ECONOMIC AND
ENVIRONMENTAL
A. Global Contexts of
Education
1. Different Conceptions of
Globalization
Globalization as a process (or set
of processes) which embodies a
transformation in the spatial
organization of social relations
and transactions, expressed in
transcontinental or interregional
flows and networks of activity,
interaction and power (Held and
McGrew et al, 1999)
Globalization are
processes of change which
underpin a transformation
in the organization of
human affairs by linking
together and expanding
human activity across
regions and continents”
(Held, McGrew, Goldblatt,
Perraton, 1999:15)
Globalization is evident in the
following situations/conditions
a.) the evolution of global systems of
communication and transportation
b.) the technological advancement of
internet and telecommunications
c.) the incorporation of local, regional,
and national economies into a
worldwide global economy
d.) an increase in interaction between
societies, resulting in global culture,
which exists along with an array of
distinctive local, national, and
regional cultures;
e.) the emergence of a world-wide
international system that is eroding
the traditional boundaries between
domestic and international politics;
f.) the increasing impact of human
activity upon the planet’s ecosystem,
and the increasing constraints on
human activity imposed by the limits
of the system; and
g.) an expanding global consciousness
that enhances/expands our awareness
of being members of the global
human species, with the world as our
community.
Impact of Globalization on
Education
Economic Impact
Increasing commercialization/commodification
and the corporate takeover of education
Branding, globalization and learning to be
consumers
Movement of higher education toward
supporting the nations’ wealth (growth) as
opposed to focusing on the liberal education of
undergraduates.
Changing role of education in terms of
preparing students for the world of work
Political Impact
The threat to the autonomy of the national
educational systems by globalization.
Reduction of the state and government support
and subsidy for education
The Complete
The Application of development fulfillment of
what learners of such man, in all the
mastering have learned qualities as: richness of his
of the of known into knowledge/ personality,
instrument practices; understanding the complexity
s of Closely linked of self and of his forms of
knowledge to vocational- others; expression and
technical his various
themselves Appreciation
education and commitments
of the diversity
work skills as individual,
of the human
training member
race
Learning to Know – implies ‘the
mastering of the instruments of
knowledge themselves’. It includes the
development of the faculties of
memory, imagination, reasoning,
problem-solving, and the ability to think
in a coherent and critical way. It is a
‘process of discovery’, which takes time
and involves going more deeply into the
information/knowledge delivered
through subject teaching.
Learning to know involves mastering the
instrument of knowing and
understanding:
to learn to learn and to discover
to understand about his/her
environment
to think in a coherent and critical
way
to acquire a knowledge of the
specific method and instruments
to develop a scientific spirit and an
inquiring mind
to acquire independence of
judgment
Learning to do – implies application
of what learners have learned or known
into practices; it is closely linked to
vocational-technical education and
work skills training. The function of
learning is no longer limited to work but
responds to participation in
development; a matter of social as well
as of occupational skills.
It calls for new types of skills which is
more behavioral than intellectual.
Learning to do thus implies a shift
from skill to competence, or a mix of
higher-order skills specific to each
individual. Thus ‘learning to do’
means, among other things:
ability to communicate effectively with
others
aptitude toward team work
social skills in building meaningful
interpersonal relations
adaptability to change in the world of
work and in social life
competency in transforming knowledge
into innovations and job-creation
readiness to take risks and resolve or
Learning to live together – implies an
education that emphasizes discovery
of others and experience of shared
purposes throughout life, specifically,
it implies the development of such
qualities as:
knowledge and understanding of self
and others
appreciation of the diversity of the
human race and an awareness of the
similarities between, and the
interdependence of all humans
empathy and cooperative social
behavior in caring and sharing
respect of other people and their
cultures and value systems
capability of encountering others and
• Learning to be - is based on the
principle that ’the aim of
development is the complete
fulfillment of man, in all the
richness of his personality, the
complexity of his forms of
expression and his various
commitments – as individual,
member of a family and of a
community, citizen and producer,
inventor of techniques and creative
dreamer’. ‘learning to be’ may be
interpreted in one way as learning
to be human, through acquisition of
knowledge, skills and values
conducive to personality
development in its intellectual,
Its purpose includes:
to be human, for development of mind
and body, intelligence, sensitivity,
aesthetic sense, personal
responsibility and spiritual values
to develop the qualites of imagination
and creativity
the complete fulfillment of man, in all
the richness of his personality
the full flowering of human potential,
the tapping of the hidden treasure
within each individual
a very individualized process and at
the same time one of constructing
social interactions.
B. The Four Pillars
of Education and
their Implications
to Teaching-
Learning and the
Curriculum
The four pillars of learning relate to all
phases and areas of education. They
support and interpenetrate one
another and should therefore be
applied as basic principles, cross-
cutting themes and generic
competencies for integration in and
Pillars of Learning for Reorienting
Curriculum Objectives
1.) Learning to be
-reflects a shift from an instrumental
view of education, as a process one
submits to achieve specific aims (e.g.
economic productivity) to a humanistic
view of education that emphasizes the
development of the complete person’
(Delors, p.86).
rounded development and full
flowering of the human potential of
individual learners. Thus school
curriculum should be more balanced,
taking into account not only the
cognitive –intellectual dimension of
personality but its spiritual, moral,
social skills and values aspects.
-implies development of a curriculum
which aims at cultivating qualities of
imagination and creativity; acquiring
universally shared human values;
developing aspects of a person’s
potential: memory, reasoning,
aesthetic sense, physical capacity
and communication/social skills;
developing critical thinking and
exercising independent judgment;
2.) Learning to Live Together
-stresses an important educational
goal of contributing to social
cohesion, inter-cultural and inter-
national understanding, peaceful
interchange, and harmony. It implies
a radically new curriculum domain, in
which relevant knowledge and a
range of skills and values should be
taught and caught to resolve and
manage conflicts for peace in family,
at school, in community and in the
world at large.
3.) Learning to Learn
-implies shift from ‘schooling’ to
learning throughout life and that
school education is only part or a
phase of the learning continuum;
curriculum should therefore not
attempt to ‘teach’ or cram the young
minds with discipline-based details,
apart from the fundamental
knowledge, basic skills and universal
values which will prepare the pupils
for further learning.
4.) Learning to do
-Emphasizes closer linkage between
education and the world of work. One
central function of education is to
prepare young learners to be
successful workers and responsible
citizens in their adulthood.
School curriculum can no longer be
purely academic and college-bound; it
has to impart employable sills, and
positive attitudes toward work