4. Philosophy
Aims
Proponents
Implications to Education
Teacher’s Role
Methods of Teaching
Disciplined Content
5. REALISM
-Is derived from a Greek word , “ Res”
which means real.
-It is an attempt to portray life as it is.
-The world is real and material.
6. “ Realism is the reinforcement of our common
acceptance of this world as it appears to us.”-
Butler
“ The doctrine of realism asserts that there
is a real world of things behind and
corresponding to the objects of perception.”-
Ross
10. 1. Preparing the Child for a Happy and Successful
Life.
2. Preparing the Child for a Real Life
3. Developing the physical and mental
powers of child.
4. Acquainting the Child with Nature and
Social Environment.
5. Imparting Vocational Education
6. Developing and Training of Senses
11. Educational aims are viewed from two perspectives:
Religious realism and Secular realism
Religious perspective : The religious realist believes
that matter is not important unless it leads to
something else.
Secular perspective : The secular realist believes in
understanding the material world through methods of
rigorous inquiry. Self-preservation is the aim of
education.
13. ARISTOTLE
Everything has a purpose or
function.
Golden Mean – there should
be no lack or excess.
( 382-322 BC )
“ Form or ideas can exist
even without matter, but
there can be no matter
without form.”
14. Aristotle’s syllogism moves from specific to
generalizations:
A falling tree makes sound
Sound comes from things that exist
16. THOMAS AQUINAS
( 384-322 BC )
“ God created matter out of
nothing and God is the
Unmoved Mover who gives
meaning and purpose to the
universe.”
Primary agencies of education
are family, God, and state,
respectively.
17. SIR FRANCIS BACON
( 1561-1626 )
The Father of Inductive
Method
Knowledge is power
18. JOHN LOCKE
( 1632-1704)
His major contribution was
the development of an acute
awareness of experience.
We are born tabula rasa
(as a blank slate).
19. JOHN R. SEARLE
The external world exists
independent of human
thought.
Consciousness is as much an
ordinary biological
phenomenon as is digestion
21. JOHN FRIEDRICH HERBART
The formal step of Methodology
1. Prepare the students to
receive new information.
2. Present the new
knowledge.
3. Association of new
knowledge
4. Generalization
5. Application
22.
23.
24. • Focuses on the basics of reading, writing and
arithmetic.
• Classroom environment is highly structured and
organized.
• Education should be fun and interesting for the
student.
• Education should prepare students for life in the
real world.
25. • The teacher according to realist, is expected to have a full
knowledge of the content and needs of the students.
• Should have a knowledge of child psychology & should
have undergone training.
• Prepares the students to receive new information
• Organizes and presents content systematically within a
discipline, demonstrating use of criteria in making decisions
• Imparts knowledge of this reality to students or display
such reality for observation and study
• Inspires and encourages the student sympathetically
26. • Problem-centered (subject-centered curriculum)
• Practical and useful
• Physical activity has educational value
• Attention to the complete person
• Extensive use of pictures
• Use of objects in education
• Most effective way to find out reality is to study it through
organized, separate, and systematically arranged matter
27. • The realist stresses a curriculum consisting of
organized topics and subject matter
• Locates the most general and abstract subject at the
top of the curriculum hierarchy and gives particular
transitory subjects a lower order of priority
• The three “R’s” (reading, writing, and arithmetic) are
also necessary in a person’s basic education
28. • Emphasis on critical reasoning
through observation
• Demonstration
• Precision and order: ringing
bells, time periods, daily
lesson plans, pre-packaged
curriculum materials
• Supports accountability and
performance-based teaching
• Recitation, experimentation,
demonstration (Education
should proceed from simple
to complex and from concrete
to abstract)
29. • Tutorial system
• Travel
• Observation and social contracts
• Things before rules and words
30. Herbart developed a five-step method as follows:
1. Preparation
2. Presentation
3. Association
4. Generalization
5. Application
31. • Knowledge based; subject based; arts and sciences; hierarchy of
subjects: humanistic and scientific subject
• Realist emphasizes prime importance to nature, science and vocational
subjects whereas secondary place to arts, literature, and languages.
• Subjects should have a sense of utility
• Stress on objects than words
• Stress on previous knowledge of students
• Subjects: Inclusion of daily life subjects in the curriculum, modern
language, physics, chemistry, biology, botany, hygiene, tours,
mathematics, astronomy, science
• Realist advocates self discipline to affect smooth adjustment of the
child with the external environment
32. 1 John 2:27
As for you, the anointing you received from him
remains in you, and you do not need anyone to teach
you. But as his anointing teaches you about all things
and as that anointing is real, not counterfeit– just as
it has taught you, remain in him.