philosophy of mathetics

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Page 1: Philosophy of Mathetics
Page 2: Philosophy of Mathetics

Hebrew Proverb

“Do not confine your children to your own learning for they were born in another time.”

Page 3: Philosophy of Mathetics

Mortimer Jerome Adler (1902-2001)

“The teacher's role in discussion is to keep it going along fruitful lines - be moderating, guiding, correcting and arguing like one more student.”

Page 4: Philosophy of Mathetics

My Mantra:

Guide by the Side…

…not Sage on the Stage

Page 5: Philosophy of Mathetics

Confucius (551 BC - 479 BC)

“I hear and I forget.

I see and I remember.

I do and I understand.”

Page 6: Philosophy of Mathetics

Lev Semenovich Vygotsky (1896-1934)

“What a child can do today with assistance, she will be able to do by herself tomorrow.”

Page 7: Philosophy of Mathetics

David Perkins

“The metaphor (coaching) with sports is meant quite seriously... the coach stands back, observes the performance, and provides guidance. The coach applauds strengths, identifies weaknesses, points up principles, offers guiding and often inspiring imagery, and decides what kind of practice to emphasize.”

Page 8: Philosophy of Mathetics

Mathetics vs. Didactics

Page 9: Philosophy of Mathetics

John Amos Comenius (1592-1670)

“Let the main object... to seek and to find a method of instruction, by which teachers may teach less, but learners learn more.”

Page 10: Philosophy of Mathetics

James Samuel Coleman (1926-1995)

“Education must develop in youth the capabilities for engaging in intense concentrated involvement in an activity.”

Page 11: Philosophy of Mathetics

Mark R. Lepper (born 1944)

“Expert tutors often do not help very much. They hang back letting the student manage as much as possible. And when things go awry, rather than help directly they raise questions: 'Could you explain this step again? How did you...?’”

Page 12: Philosophy of Mathetics

Jean Piaget(1896-1908)

“Children have real understanding only of that which they invent themselves, and each time that we try to teach them too quickly, we keep them from reinventing it themselves.”

Page 13: Philosophy of Mathetics

Jay Wright Forrester (born 1918)

“I believe babies are born as innovative personalities... But our social processes work to stamp out exploration and questioning.”

Page 14: Philosophy of Mathetics

How did we get here?

Educators are smart people, yet we still haven’t done enough to prepare students for the looming challenges they will surely face.

Why is that?

Page 15: Philosophy of Mathetics

Peter Michael Senge (born 1947)

“Many children struggle in schools... because the way they are being taught is incompatible with the way they learn.”

Page 16: Philosophy of Mathetics

Bring schools out of the 20th century

The NCEE report as reported by Time Magazine, featuring the CATWE curriculum model:

1.Creativity

2.Academics

3.Technology

4.World-view

5.Emotional intelligence

Page 17: Philosophy of Mathetics

International Herald Tribune August, 2008

Page 18: Philosophy of Mathetics

Gordon Stanley Brown (1907-1996)

“To be a teacher you must be a prophet - because you are trying to prepare people for a world thirty to fifty years into the future.”

Page 19: Philosophy of Mathetics
Page 20: Philosophy of Mathetics

Eduardo Chaves

The curriculum will not be a set of subject matters (academic disciplines) organized by grade: it will be a mosaic of competencies, in which each competency will be linked to the skills, to the attitudes, to the values and to the information to develop it

Page 21: Philosophy of Mathetics

Larry Rosenstock

We tend to structure our curriculum around projects. Through the process of project management students learn about how to define tasks, set target, find information and solve problems proactively on their own.

Page 22: Philosophy of Mathetics

Lorne McConachie

Working 20 years ago in designing schools, I have seen major movement in designing. 20 years ago, you had computer labs, but now computers are everywhere with wireless connections.

Page 23: Philosophy of Mathetics

Guillaume Apollinaire (1880-1918)

“Come to the edge”, he said. They said, “We are afraid.” “Come to the edge”, he said. They said, “We are afraid.” “Come to the edge”, he said. So they came. He pushed them... ….and they flew.