The Role of Philosophy in Curriculum Development
The Role of Philosophy in Curriculum Development
The Role of Philosophy in Curriculum Development
curriculum development
By Craig A. Cunningham, Ph.D.
Center for School Improvement
University of Chicago
Agenda
Idealism: ideas are really real while material things are illusory or
fleeting; truth is absolute but perhaps unknowable to (ordinary)
humans (Plato)
Materialism: ideas are illusory while physical and economic
forces control the world; truth is irrelevant since power is
everything (Karl Marx)
Pragmatism: ideas are real things only insofar as they affect
action; ideas are true only insofar as they work in action (John
Dewey)
Formalism: ideas are interesting in themselves and need no
connection to things or actions to be the focus of inquiry; truth
can be derived from careful understanding of statements and
counter-statements (Bertrand Russell)
Ultimate goal
Nature of child
Definition of learning
Selection of texts for study
Relative importance of knowledges and skills
Value of student interest and choice
Whether truth/goodness/beauty are predefined or
indeterminate
Examples of Curriculum
To get us started:
Choose a partner
Think for a minute about the last time you were involved in
a dispute about curriculum in your school
Describe your disputes to each other
Choose one dispute to focus on
Think about the philosophical issues underlying the dispute
Did philosophy play a role in the resolution?
How might philosophy have helped to resolve the dispute?
Be prepared to share your discussion with the group
The end
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