This document summarizes the biography and educational philosophy of a Spanish educator. It states that she studied in Barcelona, Madrid, and Geneva, and became the first director of the Escola del Bosc school in Barcelona. Her philosophy emphasized student-centered and active learning, freedom in education, and relating pedagogy to the real world. She believed education should be social and not just teach subjects theoretically.
4. She undertook education studies in Barcelona and in
Madrid's Escuela Central de Magisterio (Central
Education Studies School). Afterwards she studied at
Geneva's Institut Rousseau and other European schools,
where she learnt about new educational trends.
Her great organizing ability led her to become the first
director of the ‘Escola del Bosc’.
In 1930, she became the director of Barcelona's Grup
Escolar Milà i Fontanals. Severely affected by the
Spanish Civil War and its aftermath, she got retired in
1939.
In 1921 she was commissioned to design the
curriculum of the Institute of Culture and Popular
Library of Women
6. She gave conferences around Catalunya, Spain and the
rest of Europe, mainly in France.
7. •
Education has to be based on the activity of the student,
and the student has to discover what he/she can do, rather
than giving him/her the results.
Students should have more freedom in their education.
Pedagogy should be adapted to the world around them.
Social education has to be proposed, the student should
learn more than just the theory of a subject.
HER PHILOSOPHY
8. What needs to be done…
•Limiting the number of students in class, depending on their age.
•Cooperative work among the different teachers/subjects at school.
•Mutual cooperation parents /school
..
9. Marta Mata i Garriga
founded the School Rosa
Sensat for Teachers in 1965.
10.
11. JOSÉ ORTEGA Y GASSET
• He was born in Madrid. Since childhood he
was surrounded by culture. He was linked with
politics and journalism all his life.
12. • Ortega y Gasset, studied in Germany and was
influenced by other German philosophers like
Hermann Cohen and Paul Natorp.
13. • When he returned to Spain after finishing his
studies, he became a professor at the university
of Madrid.
14. • After that he started to write in newspapers
like “The Sun” (El Sol) and also became a
politician.
15. • He was the leader of a parliamentary group of
intellectuals known as Al Servicio de la
República.
16. Leaving Spain at the outbreak of the Civil War, he spent years of
exile in Buenos Aires, Argentina until moving back to Europe in
1942. He settled in Portugal by mid-1945 and slowly began to make
short visits to Spain. In 1948 he returned to Madrid, where he
founded the Institute of Humanities, at which he lectured
17. "Yo soy yo y mi circunstancia“ "I am I and my circumstance"
• Ortega y Gasset proposes that philosophy must
overcome the limitations of both idealism (in which
reality is centered around the ego) and ancient-medieval
realism (in which reality is located outside the
subject) in order to focus on the only truthful reality
(i.e., "my life" — the life of each individual).
“Beauty that attracts you at first
sight is not normally the same one
you fall in love with.”
18. • He thought that life was a radical reality;
because of that his books were based on those
thoughts:
– Living is self-knowledge and self-understanding.
– Living is finding oneself in the world.
– Life is fatality and freedom.
19. • Ortega y Gasset influenced other Spanish
philosophers, some psychologists and some
writers.
LA GENERACIÓN DEL 27
20. • Nowadays we have the University Research
Institute Ortega y Gasset as part of his legacy .
21.
22. In 2011 there were Spanish protests, also referred to as
the 15-M Movement, the Indignants Movement, and Take
the Square #spanishrevolution, as a series of ongoing
demonstrations in Spain whose origin can be traced
to social networks.