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The School and Society / Being three lectures

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About This Book

The book presents three lectures and a supplemental account describing how schooling must align with social change and children's lives. It argues that education should transmit collective achievements to all citizens, reshape curricula around activity, manual training, and inquiry, and integrate subjects through projects rooted in pupils' experiences. It critiques fragmented, rote instruction as wasteful and calls for reorganization of school structures, schedules, and aims to promote economy, efficiency, and fuller growth. The supplemental statement recounts the formation and practices of an experimental elementary school that models these principles through organized activities, teacher collaboration, and curricular innovations.

About the Author

Dewey, John portrait

John Dewey

John Dewey (1859-1952) was an influential American philosopher, psychologist, and educational reformer associated with pragmatism and functional psychology. He is best known for his work in education, particularly his book "Democracy and Education: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Education," which emphasizes the importance of experiential learning and critical thinking in the educational process. Dewey's ideas have significantly shaped modern educational practices and theories, advocating for a more interactive and democratic approach to teaching. In addition to his contributions to education, he wrote extensively on ethics, logic, and social philosophy, making him a key figure in American intellectual history.

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