29 research outputs found

    Dewey and the issue of change

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    Exploring a Vygotskian theory of education and its evolutionary foundations

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    Despite his popularity in educational discourses, Lev S. Vygotsky tends to be read mainly as an educational psychologist or learning theorist. His potential contribution to a theory of education remains largely undiscussed. The Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) is often misunderstood as a sort of “educational tool,” which severely reduces the richness of the concept emerging from Vygotsky's works. In this essay, Aline Nardo argues that acknowledging the evolutionary underpinnings in Vygotsky's thinking would enrich an educational discussion of Vygotsky. This substrate in Vygotsky's educational works, she argues, has been strikingly underappreciated, and her analysis seeks to address this gap by building upon the analogy between Vygotsky's Marxist negation of a Darwinian adaptation paradigm and his conceptual differentiation between learning and development in order to draw out the pedagogical dimension of the ZPD. Pedagogical interaction, in an evolutionary reading of Vygotsky, is qualitatively different from peer interactions, as it is connected to development rather than learning. This perspective, Nardo concludes, has important implications for the role of the teacher and a definition of “the pedagogical.”ISSN:1741-5446ISSN:0013-200

    A case for transformative learning in medical ethics education

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    In this article, we discuss the current state of medical ethics education. In Higher Education, ethics is taught predominantly through discussion and case study–based teaching formats. At present, however, only little can be said about the adequacy of these teaching methods in attaining complex educational objectives as ethics education poses challenges regarding meaningful student assessment and evaluation of educational methods. Output-oriented evaluation and assessment paradigms that centre quantified student performance fail to meaningfully capture the learning of ethics. Currently, we argue that comparatively small efforts are being devoted to the advancement of innovative and adequate approaches to teaching and assessment in ethics education. In response to these shortcomings, drawing from educational traditions that focus on preparatory activities, we work towards a new approach to evaluate teaching methods and assessing the learning in ethics

    Write or wrong:A transformational game for ethics education

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    Evolution and education: a hermeneutical study of the genealogy and nature of evolutionary theorising in education based on the works of Spencer, Dewey and Vygotsky

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    This thesis looks at the relationship between evolutionary theory and educational theory. The core objectives are, firstly, to contribute to the gap in knowledge regarding evolutionary underpinnings in influential educational theories, and, secondly, to enhance our broader understanding of the core concepts constituting different evolutionary paradigms and approaches in education. This is relevant because even though evolutionary ideas, terms, and concepts are circulating in educational discourses today, there exists little knowledge as to the nature of those arguments, thus limiting critical discussion. Through the hermeneutical analysis of the evolutionary underpinnings of the educational theories of Herbert Spencer, John Dewey, and Lev Vygotsky, this thesis not only provides a novel reading of these thinkers, but also sheds some light on the nature of evolutionary educational theory as an intellectual tradition with relevancy for educational theory, practice and policy today. The genealogy of evolutionary educational theorising presented in this study spanning from Spencer to Dewey and Vygotsky sheds some light on the versatile nature of the concept of adaptation in the context of educational theorising, while also underlining its potency in informing core educational concepts. While all three thinkers apply an evolutionary lens to their educational concepts and theories, they each present highly different understandings of the process and aims of education, learning, and teaching. In particular their diverging concepts of adaptation, as this research shows, inform those profound differences. Spencer’s passive and unidirectional conception of adaptation based primarily on biological inheritance engenders and understanding of education as a process of the subject adjusting to her/his environment. Dewey’s idea of adaptation as a process of simultaneous growth of individual and environment in experience, in contrast to Spencer, fosters an understanding of education as a never-ending, contingent reciprocal interaction between the learner and her/his environment. Finally, Vygotsky’s post-adaptation paradigm opens a perspective for thinking about education not in adaptive, but primarily transformative terms. In closing, the thesis critically analyses the global educational discourse surrounding the OECD’s Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) In the context of PISA, the notion of ‘adaptation’ is a highly frequented and yet largely undefined concept. Based on the study of Spencer, Dewey and Vygotsky, the thesis contributes to a gap in knowledge by offering a conceptual apparatus for analysing current educational discourse such as PISA, in a way that provides insight for future educational research, policy and practice

    PrĂĄticas seguras na assistĂȘncia cirĂșrgica: uma reflexĂŁo teĂłrica

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    Objective: Carry out a theoretical reflection on safe practices related to surgical care.Objetivo: Realizar uma reflexĂŁo teĂłrica sobre as prĂĄticas seguras relacionadas Ă  assistĂȘncia cirĂșrgica
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