Pragmatism began in the United States in the 1870s. Charles Sanders Peirce is considered the father of pragmatism and developed the pragmatic maxim. Pragmatism focuses on practical consequences and real-world problem solving. It emphasizes experience and action over abstract theorizing. John Dewey further developed pragmatism and its applications to education.
Pragmatism began in the United States in the 1870s. Charles Sanders Peirce is considered the father of pragmatism and developed the pragmatic maxim. Pragmatism focuses on practical consequences and real-world problem solving. It emphasizes experience and action over abstract theorizing. John Dewey further developed pragmatism and its applications to education.
Pragmatism began in the United States in the 1870s. Charles Sanders Peirce is considered the father of pragmatism and developed the pragmatic maxim. Pragmatism focuses on practical consequences and real-world problem solving. It emphasizes experience and action over abstract theorizing. John Dewey further developed pragmatism and its applications to education.
Pragmatism began in the United States in the 1870s. Charles Sanders Peirce is considered the father of pragmatism and developed the pragmatic maxim. Pragmatism focuses on practical consequences and real-world problem solving. It emphasizes experience and action over abstract theorizing. John Dewey further developed pragmatism and its applications to education.
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PRAGMATISM
• Pragmatism as a philosophical movement began in the United
States around 1870.[2] Charles Sanders Peirce (and his pragmatic maxim) is given credit for its development,[3] along with later 20th-century contributors, • The first use in print of the name pragmatism was in 1898 by James, who credited Peirce with coining the term during the early 1870s.[5] James regarded Peirce's "Illustrations of the Logic of Science" series (including "The Fixation of Belief" (1877), and especially "How to Make Our Ideas Clear" (1878)) as the foundation of pragmatism William James and John Dewey. • Nicholas St. John Green is considered as grandfather of pragmatism. • The word is derived from greek word pragma means action. • Charles Sanders Peirce as father of pragmatism. • John Dewey as active profounder of pragmatism. • William james said that pragmatism and practicalism are same. He said pragmatism is temper of mind and an attitude. It is also nature of ideas and truth,. Finally it is theory of reality. • According Raid “ pragmatism activity, engagement, commitment and encounters as its central theme”. PRINCIPALS OF PRAGMATISM
• Human life is like experiment, every individual do their own
experiments in laboratory like life. • Past is dead and gone, so it works in present and immediate future. • Pragmatism makes human experiences as the centre of reality. • It has deep faith in social values and democracy. • It gives utmost importance to actions. Activity is more important than ideas. • Nothing is permanent in the world, everything changes, therefore this school believes in flexibility. AIMS OF EDUCATION • “Activity lies at the centre of all educative process. The basis of all teaching is the activity of the child” – Foster • To create new values: The Pragmatists do not believe in the theory of any fixed aim of education. In their opinion, the aim of education is to create new values and the act of teacher is to help himself develop new values. • To enable pupils to gather experience through activity: For the creation of new values, activity and experience are essential. Education should therefore, provide physical, intellectual, moral and aesthetic activities as the media for the creation of new values. • To help the pupil to adjust with him and the society: The other important aim of education according to pragmatism is to help the pupil to make adjustment with himself and the society. • To help the pupil to reconstruct his experience: Every individual has to solve different types of complex problems in his life. So the another important aim of education, according to Pragmatism is to enable the pupil to form such an outlook about life as can help to tackle successfully the different problems of his life in future • To make all round development of the pupil: All round development of the individual is also an important aim of education. The individual develops physically, mentally, socially and aesthetically. • According to pragmatism, the theory and practice of education is based on two main principles, namely (i) Education should have a social function and (ii) Education should provide real life experience to the child. Broadly, pragmatism and education can be discussed as follows: • Every continuous experience or activity is educative and all education in fact, resides in having such experience. But continuous growth in experience is not the whole education. Education is something more. It is constant reorganizing or reconstructing of experience. • Pragmatism provides definite aims of education. The student is prepared to live in a society and learn skills and attitude. • The teaching methods are based on learning by doing. The project method is the contribution of pragmatism to modern education. • Pragmatism encourages a democratic way to learning through purposeful and co-operative projects and activities. • Utility in the educative process is the first criterion. The school is expected to provide learning experiences that are useful. • Education is not bound to tradition. Pragmatic philosophers advice us to test everything through our own experience. • The teacher has to play a very challenging role in the education process under pragmatism and he has to be very alert and watchful. PRAGMATISM AND CURRICULUM • In the field of curriculum development, the following principles have been prescribed by the pragmatists. • Principle of Utility: According to this principle only those subjects, activities and experiences should be included in the curriculum which are useful to the present needs of the child and also meet the future expectations of adult life as well. The subjects are such as Language, Physical well being, Physical training, Geography, History, Science, Agriculture and Home Science for girls. • Principle of Interest: According to this principle, only those activities and experiences where the child takes interest are of four varieties namely (i) Interest in conversation (ii) Interest in investigation (iii) Interest in construction and (iv) Interest in creative expression. Keeping these varieties of interest in view at the primary stage, the curriculum should include writing, counting, art, craft-work, natural science and other practical work of simple nature. • Principle of Experience: The third principle of pragmatics curriculum is the child’s activity, vocation and experience. All these three should be closely integrated. The curriculum should consist of such varieties of learning experiences which promote original thinking and freedom to develop social and purposeful attitudes. • Principle of Integration: Pragmatic curriculum deals with the integration of subjects and activities. Pragmatists want to construct flexible, dynamic and integrated curriculum which aids the developing child and the changing society more and more as he/she needs, demands and situation requires. PRAGMATISM AND METHOD OF TEACHING
• Teaching-learning process is social and bi-polar process.
Learning takes place as an interaction between the teacher and the taught. • Pragmatism gives priority to the taught. Similarly, between the thought and action, it gives priority to action. • They prefer practical over theory based teaching–learning process. • The pragmatists have completely discarded the conventional method of teaching and laid emphasis on the invention of new methods. • The whole emphasis of method of teaching in pragmatism is on child, not the book of the teacher or the subject. The dominant interest of the child is ‘to do’ and ‘to make’. • The method should be flexible and dynamic. • Pragmatists believe that minds of different children are different. Hence, we cannot have a fixed method of teaching which can be useful to all situations. • Learning by doing and the project methods have an important place in the methods of teaching proposed by the pragmatists. All learning must come as a product of action. Learning by doing makes a person creative, confident and co-operative. • They also put on emphasis on the discovery and enquiry method. The techniques which follow the principle of learning by doing can be used according to pragmatists view PRAGMATISM AND TEACHER
In the opinion of pragmatists the duty of the
teacher is to create such an environment in the school where pupils will have to face different problems relating to real life and will take interest in the solution of those problems. Pragmatism regards teacher as a helper, guide and philosopher. The chief function of a pragmatic teacher is to suggest problems to his pupil and to stimulate them to find by themselves the solution which will work. The teacher must provide opportunities for the natural development of innate qualities of the children. His main task is to suggest problem to his student/pupils and to guide them to find out he solutions PRAGMATISM AND DISCIPLINE
Pragmatists have opposed against the imposition of rules and
regulations to pupils. They believes in social and personal discipline, In their opinion if we give them opportunities to participate in different types of collective activities spontaneous discipline will grow in them. Pragmatists believe that play and work should be combined and this combination will perform a mental attitude and discipline. By taking part in such activities the qualities like tolerance, sympathy, mutual respect, attitude of service will be developed in them. Discipline cannot be maintained through force and domination. Children should be left free in order to develop freely and harmoniously. Discipline cannot be maintained through force and domination. Children should be left free in order to develop freely and harmoniously. According to pragmatists rewards and punishment are of no significance in the process of learning. They believed that no moral standard of values are already established. The philosophy believes in discipline, but the discipline should not be the outcome of external force it should be backed by freedom and joy. It advocates on discipline based on the principles of child’s activities and interests. It upholds discipline based on social and mutual understanding. It believes in engaging the children free and real activities of human life.