This document summarizes John Dewey's perspective on the role of ideals and emotion in teaching. It discusses three main points:
1. Dewey believed that the goal of education should be growth, both intellectual and moral, for students and teachers. Exemplary teachers are committed to their own growth and model this for students.
2. Teachers can foster growth in students through both direct instruction about ideals and indirectly by serving as models of ideal-driven growth themselves. Their passion and commitment to ideals has a profound, if subtle, influence on students.
3. According to Dewey, much of a teacher's influence occurs through "collateral learning" - indirect lessons conveyed by their character and qualities they bring
Applications of Educational Psychology in Teaching and LearningDr. Amjad Ali Arain
Topic: Applications of Educational Psychology in Teaching and Learning
Student Name: Zainab Jawaid Arain
Class: B.Ed. Hons Elementary Part (III)
Project Name: “Young Teachers' Professional Development (TPD)"
"Project Founder: Prof. Dr. Amjad Ali Arain
Faculty of Education, University of Sindh, Pakistan
Applications of Educational Psychology in Teaching and LearningDr. Amjad Ali Arain
Topic: Applications of Educational Psychology in Teaching and Learning
Student Name: Zainab Jawaid Arain
Class: B.Ed. Hons Elementary Part (III)
Project Name: “Young Teachers' Professional Development (TPD)"
"Project Founder: Prof. Dr. Amjad Ali Arain
Faculty of Education, University of Sindh, Pakistan
Psychological Foundations of Education
*Behavioral Psychology and Learning
*Effective Teaching and Evaluation of Learning
*Foundations of Bilingual Education
Spiritual Intelligence: The ability to behave with wisdom and compassion, while maintaining inner and outer peace regardless of the situation.
Spiritual Intelligence must show up in our actions an our behaviors.
Using an interdisciplinary approach and a phenomenological, hermeneutic, mystagogical methodology, this paper explores how children describe the deep fruits of meditation in their lives. Seventy children, aged 7 to 11, from four Irish primary schools were interviewed; all had engaged in meditation as a whole-school practice for at least two-years beforehand. The study sought to elicit from children their experience, if any, of the transcendent in meditation. It concludes that children can and do enjoy deep states of consciousness and that meditation has the capacity to nourish the innate spirituality of the child. It highlights the importance of personal spiritual experience for children and supports the introduction of meditation in primary schools.
Intended Outcomes:
identify the PALSI scheme's intended outcomes and adjust their expectation
identify the demand and expectation of university learning
explain the importance of active and reflective learning
describe how learning skills, will and self regulation interplay with each other and affect learning outcomes
develop appropriate expectation and attitude for peer assisted learning
Activities:
Lecture
Past PALSI Students & Leaders experience sharing
Psychological Foundations of Education
*Behavioral Psychology and Learning
*Effective Teaching and Evaluation of Learning
*Foundations of Bilingual Education
Spiritual Intelligence: The ability to behave with wisdom and compassion, while maintaining inner and outer peace regardless of the situation.
Spiritual Intelligence must show up in our actions an our behaviors.
Using an interdisciplinary approach and a phenomenological, hermeneutic, mystagogical methodology, this paper explores how children describe the deep fruits of meditation in their lives. Seventy children, aged 7 to 11, from four Irish primary schools were interviewed; all had engaged in meditation as a whole-school practice for at least two-years beforehand. The study sought to elicit from children their experience, if any, of the transcendent in meditation. It concludes that children can and do enjoy deep states of consciousness and that meditation has the capacity to nourish the innate spirituality of the child. It highlights the importance of personal spiritual experience for children and supports the introduction of meditation in primary schools.
Intended Outcomes:
identify the PALSI scheme's intended outcomes and adjust their expectation
identify the demand and expectation of university learning
explain the importance of active and reflective learning
describe how learning skills, will and self regulation interplay with each other and affect learning outcomes
develop appropriate expectation and attitude for peer assisted learning
Activities:
Lecture
Past PALSI Students & Leaders experience sharing
1187Philosophical Foundations of the CurriculumTheresa M. T.docxaulasnilda
118
7
Philosophical Foundations of the Curriculum
Theresa M. “Terry” Valiga, EdD, RN, CNE, ANEF, FAAN
Beautiful words. Admirable values. Published prominently on websites and in catalogues, student handbooks and accreditation reports. The philosophical statement of a school of nursing is accepted by faculty as a document that must be crafted to please external reviewers, but for many it remains little more than that. Far too often the school’s philosophy remains safely tucked inside a report but is rarely seen as a living document that guides the day-to-day workings of the school.
In reality, the philosophy of a school of nursing should be referenced and reflected upon often. It should be reviewed seriously with candidates for faculty positions and with those individuals who join the community as new members. It should be discussed in a deliberate way with potential students and with students as they progress throughout the program. And it should be a strong guiding force as the school revises or sharpens its goals, outlines action steps to implement its strategic plan, and makes decisions about the allocation of resources.
This chapter explores the significance of reflecting on, articulating, and being guided by a philosophy, examines the essential components of a philosophy for a school of nursing, and points out how philosophical statements guide the design and implementation of the curriculum and the evaluation of its effectiveness. The role of faculty, administrators, and students in crafting and “living” the philosophy is discussed, and the issues and debates surrounding the “doing of philosophy” (Greene, 1973) are examined. Finally, suggestions are offered regarding how faculty might go about writing or revising the school’s philosophy.
What Is Philosophy?
The educational philosopher Maxine Greene (1973) challenged educators to “do philosophy.” By this she meant that we need to take the risk of thinking about what we do when we teach and what we mean when we talk of enabling others to learn. It also means we need to become progressively more conscious of the choices and commitments we make in our professional lives. Greene also challenged educators to look at our presuppositions, to examine critically the principles underlying what we think and what we say as educators, and to confront the individual within us. She acknowledged that we often have to ask and answer painful questions when we “do philosophy.”
In his seminal book, The Courage to Teach, Parker Palmer (2007) asserted that “though the academy claims to value multiple modes of knowing, it honors only one—an ‘objective’ way of knowing that takes us into the ‘real’ world by taking us ‘out of ourselves’” (p. 18). He encouraged educators to challenge this culture by bringing a more human, personal perspective to the teaching–learning experience. Like Greene, Palmer suggested that, to do this, educators must look inside so that we can understand that “we teach who we are” (p. xi) a ...
1187Philosophical Foundations of the CurriculumTheresa M. T.docxjesusamckone
118
7
Philosophical Foundations of the Curriculum
Theresa M. “Terry” Valiga, EdD, RN, CNE, ANEF, FAAN
Beautiful words. Admirable values. Published prominently on websites and in catalogues, student handbooks and accreditation reports. The philosophical statement of a school of nursing is accepted by faculty as a document that must be crafted to please external reviewers, but for many it remains little more than that. Far too often the school’s philosophy remains safely tucked inside a report but is rarely seen as a living document that guides the day-to-day workings of the school.
In reality, the philosophy of a school of nursing should be referenced and reflected upon often. It should be reviewed seriously with candidates for faculty positions and with those individuals who join the community as new members. It should be discussed in a deliberate way with potential students and with students as they progress throughout the program. And it should be a strong guiding force as the school revises or sharpens its goals, outlines action steps to implement its strategic plan, and makes decisions about the allocation of resources.
This chapter explores the significance of reflecting on, articulating, and being guided by a philosophy, examines the essential components of a philosophy for a school of nursing, and points out how philosophical statements guide the design and implementation of the curriculum and the evaluation of its effectiveness. The role of faculty, administrators, and students in crafting and “living” the philosophy is discussed, and the issues and debates surrounding the “doing of philosophy” (Greene, 1973) are examined. Finally, suggestions are offered regarding how faculty might go about writing or revising the school’s philosophy.
What Is Philosophy?
The educational philosopher Maxine Greene (1973) challenged educators to “do philosophy.” By this she meant that we need to take the risk of thinking about what we do when we teach and what we mean when we talk of enabling others to learn. It also means we need to become progressively more conscious of the choices and commitments we make in our professional lives. Greene also challenged educators to look at our presuppositions, to examine critically the principles underlying what we think and what we say as educators, and to confront the individual within us. She acknowledged that we often have to ask and answer painful questions when we “do philosophy.”
In his seminal book, The Courage to Teach, Parker Palmer (2007) asserted that “though the academy claims to value multiple modes of knowing, it honors only one—an ‘objective’ way of knowing that takes us into the ‘real’ world by taking us ‘out of ourselves’” (p. 18). He encouraged educators to challenge this culture by bringing a more human, personal perspective to the teaching–learning experience. Like Greene, Palmer suggested that, to do this, educators must look inside so that we can understand that “we teach who we are” (p. xi) a.
Concept and aims of education by jaynal sir | what is education.notes b.edJAYNAL HUSSAIN
Concept of education
Aims of education
Concept and aims of education
Meaning of education
What is education
What is education notes.b.ed
Jaynal sir notes pdf
Education notes by jaynal sir
B.ed notes by jaynal sir
Nursing Education - Philosophy of Education
Philosophy means “love of wisdom.” Philosophy and education are closely interrelated. Education is application of philosophy or philosophy of education is applied philosophy. It is the application of philosophy to study of the problems of education that is known as philosophy of education.
Moral Symmetry & Four Domains Of Moral Education PresRonald Zigler
A holistic model of morality, moral development and moral education is advanced which integrates ancient insights from Western and Eastern cultures along with the findings of modern science.
Moral Symmetry & Four Domains Of Moral EducationRonald Zigler
A holistic model of morality, moral development and moral education is advanced which integrates ancient insights from Western and Eastern cultures along with the findings of modern science.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
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Letter from the Congress of the United States regarding Anti-Semitism sent June 3rd to MIT President Sally Kornbluth, MIT Corp Chair, Mark Gorenberg
Dear Dr. Kornbluth and Mr. Gorenberg,
The US House of Representatives is deeply concerned by ongoing and pervasive acts of antisemitic
harassment and intimidation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Failing to act decisively to ensure a safe learning environment for all students would be a grave dereliction of your responsibilities as President of MIT and Chair of the MIT Corporation.
This Congress will not stand idly by and allow an environment hostile to Jewish students to persist. The House believes that your institution is in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, and the inability or
unwillingness to rectify this violation through action requires accountability.
Postsecondary education is a unique opportunity for students to learn and have their ideas and beliefs challenged. However, universities receiving hundreds of millions of federal funds annually have denied
students that opportunity and have been hijacked to become venues for the promotion of terrorism, antisemitic harassment and intimidation, unlawful encampments, and in some cases, assaults and riots.
The House of Representatives will not countenance the use of federal funds to indoctrinate students into hateful, antisemitic, anti-American supporters of terrorism. Investigations into campus antisemitism by the Committee on Education and the Workforce and the Committee on Ways and Means have been expanded into a Congress-wide probe across all relevant jurisdictions to address this national crisis. The undersigned Committees will conduct oversight into the use of federal funds at MIT and its learning environment under authorities granted to each Committee.
• The Committee on Education and the Workforce has been investigating your institution since December 7, 2023. The Committee has broad jurisdiction over postsecondary education, including its compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, campus safety concerns over disruptions to the learning environment, and the awarding of federal student aid under the Higher Education Act.
• The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is investigating the sources of funding and other support flowing to groups espousing pro-Hamas propaganda and engaged in antisemitic harassment and intimidation of students. The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is the principal oversight committee of the US House of Representatives and has broad authority to investigate “any matter” at “any time” under House Rule X.
• The Committee on Ways and Means has been investigating several universities since November 15, 2023, when the Committee held a hearing entitled From Ivory Towers to Dark Corners: Investigating the Nexus Between Antisemitism, Tax-Exempt Universities, and Terror Financing. The Committee followed the hearing with letters to those institutions on January 10, 202
Safalta Digital marketing institute in Noida, provide complete applications that encompass a huge range of virtual advertising and marketing additives, which includes search engine optimization, virtual communication advertising, pay-per-click on marketing, content material advertising, internet analytics, and greater. These university courses are designed for students who possess a comprehensive understanding of virtual marketing strategies and attributes.Safalta Digital Marketing Institute in Noida is a first choice for young individuals or students who are looking to start their careers in the field of digital advertising. The institute gives specialized courses designed and certification.
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it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
Biological screening of herbal drugs: Introduction and Need for
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This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
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Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
John Dewey, Eros, Ideals And A Descriptive Model Of The Exemplary Teacher
1. Table of Contents
276 Dewey, Eros, Ideals
John Dewey, Eros, Ideals, and Collateral Learning
Toward a Desciptive Model of the Exemplary Teacher
Ronald Lee Zigler
The Pennsylvania State University-Abington College
INTRODUCTION
In his text Dewey and Eros, Jim Garrison argues that the education of eros
should be the supreme aim of each level of teacher education.1 In this way we would
not only cultivate exemplary teachers who “desire the good” — the essence of his
meaning of eros — but presumably we may also promote the development of eros
among the elementary and secondary students with whom our teachers will ulti-
mately come into contact. On this account, I find myself in complete agreement with
Garrison. Without nurturing this emotional component to judgment and evaluation
among our prospective teachers, their teaching is likely to become little more than
an exercise in seemingly purposeless content through the application of “appropri-
ate” pedagogical strategies. Yet, precisely what is involved in this process of
nurturing eros? It is on this account that I wish to supplement the arguments
advanced by Garrison. While he does not explicitly delimit the full range of
experiences which may successfully foster eros, Garrison’s primary recommenda-
tions appear to focus on a direct, active, explicit educational encounter: most notably
the reflective, deliberative encounter afforded by the themes embedded in literary
works. His theory is what he terms a “critical-creative theory of intelligent delibera-
tion and the education of eros.”2 Yet, what is inadvertently omitted is an acknowl-
edgment and appreciation for an element of human experience that is best described
as subtle, tacit and indirect. That is, it is a decidedly non-deliberative experience.
This aspect of human experience is accounted for within the work of Dewey and may
be most explicitly understood as a component of what he once termed collateral
learning. I maintain that much of the exemplary teacher’s most vital lessons —
including the education of eros — operate through the mechanism of collateral
learning.
In this essay I wish to introduce a consideration of this subtle and indirect
dimension to the education of what Garrison terms eros. In doing so, I seek to outline
a readily overlooked feature of the exemplary teacher. While this essay is primarily
descriptive and speculative, I hope to demonstrate nonetheless that it is consistent
not only with some of Dewey’s most neglected insights, but also with research on
the brain which has begun to explore the subliminal dimension of what has been
termed our emotional unconscious. In doing this I hope to depict an account of those
qualities which teachers inadvertently and unwittingly bring into the classroom:
qualities which nonetheless have a profound bearing on the cultivation, or obstruc-
tion, of those positive emotions Garrison associates with eros.
GROWTH
Nurturing the form of eros with which Garrison is concerned may also be
profitably understood as part of the process by which Deweyan ideals are themselves
PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION 2001
2. Ronald Lee Zigler 277
conceptualized and advanced. It is, after all our imaginatively conceived ideals
which, according to Dewey, are capable of arousing “steady emotion.”3 More
importantly for Dewey, ideals are specifically concerned with the kind of emotions
or eros with which Garrison is also preoccupied. In drawing this distinction, what
must be kept in mind is Dewey’s own conception of the function of ideals. As he
wrote, “Ideals are like the stars; we steer by them, not towards them.”4 Consequently
ideals may be deemed the guide posts that direct emotion or eros in such a way as
to sustain growth. This, of course, is life’s ultimate purpose for Dewey and perhaps
his most important conceptual legacy.
I believe there is much that is valid in Dewey’s reading of what constitutes
educational growth. Indeed, as Steven Rockefeller as well as Garrison have each has
pointed out, Dewey’s concept of growth is not simply a significant part of his
educational theory, but a central element of his philosophy in general.5 It is, in effect,
life’s consummate ideal. Growth is for Dewey the all-inclusive human good because
it is intrinsically and instrumentally worthwhile. That is, growth is intrinsically
satisfying and instrumentally valuable insofar as it is distinguished by an increased
capacity to meet the challenges of living in our social and natural environments.
While growth may thus be deemed the primary ideal, it is rendered more deliberate
through a host of secondary ideals such as intellectual, moral and democratic ideals.
Intellectual ideals, as Garrison has also suggested, may be seen to emerge through
a proper blending of reason, emotion and imagination for the purpose of inquiry.
Their intrinsic value is derived from the satisfaction that accompanies a new
understanding. The instrumental value of these intellectual ideals is derived from
their capacity to resolve problems we encounter in our natural environment. Moral
and democratic ideals, on the other hand, blend judgment, emotional responsiveness
and force of action in the service of resolving challenges that emerge in our social
environment. Applying these ideals to problematic situations sustains the ultimate
ideal: growth. Thereby, they make life meaningful and worthwhile, evoking the
development and exercise of all of our powers that are relevant to the advancement
of such specific democratic ideals as individual freedom and the community
experience.
Consequently, for Dewey the central goal of life as well as education is this
enhancement and expansion of the process of growing so that it flourishes in an
unimpeded fashion: thereby benefiting the individual and society. In addition, while
the direction this growth must take is pertinent to the lives of all individuals, it is
especially pertinent to the vocation of teaching. That is, if, as Dewey asserted, “the
dominant vocation of all human beings is intellectual and moral growth,” then it
would appear that a distinguishing feature of the exemplary teacher is an unambigu-
ous commitment to their own intellectual and moral growth as well as to that of their
students.6 Clearly, if teachers are not prominent models of this “dominant vocation
of all human beings” then who should be? Again, this also appears to be the rationale
underlying Garrison’s thesis when he suggests that the education of eros is the
supreme goal of teacher education. What I wish to add is that teachers not only foster
growth in their students by overtly challenging their students to construct new
understandings, but that they also play a vital collateral or incidental role as models
PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION 2001
3. 278 Dewey, Eros, Ideals
of growing human beings themselves. For this reason it is all the more important that
teachers (and professors of education) be committed to the ideal of growth.
If teachers are, as I believe, necessarily models for the students with whom they
interact and are thereby obligated to be committed to the ideals of intellectual and
moral growth, then we need to be clearer about what this precisely means since it is
central to our appreciation of the significance of collateral learning. A consideration
of the relation between growth and Dewey’s conception of self-knowledge will help
clarify these ideas, and their implications.
SELF-KNOWLEDGE
The active, dynamic nature of Dewey’s conception of self-knowledge is best
illustrated by this principle: the self is found in work.7 For Dewey the meaning of
self-knowledge can only be understood through a consideration of the activity to
which one is drawn — activity that is found intrinsically worthwhile (that is, is
conducive to personal growth). The activity to which one is drawn is a reflection of
one’s interests. Interests, according to Dewey, are particularly significant in so far
as they betray the “active or moving identity of the self.”8 For Dewey there is a clear
connection between our native interests, self-knowledge and the work or vocation
to which we should ultimately be engaged. Implicit here is the assumption that one
should pursue a career that fulfills one’s deeper interests — much as was tradition-
ally expressed in the notion of following one’s “calling.” This is the only guarantee
to long-term, continued personal growth.
The implication of our consideration of self-knowledge to our discussion of the
role of eros in the life of a teacher is perhaps obvious. An individual’s motivation
to pursue a career in teaching should reflect much more than an interest in — or
competence with — subject matter. Neither would a desire to master observable
pedagogical skills capture this central element of exemplary teachers. What teachers
must possess is, as Garrison also argues, an unequivocal passion (eros) for growth
— intellectual and moral — in the lives of themselves as well as their students. This
implies a desire to meet the intellectual and moral challenges of our social
environment, not only by exercising and applying appropriate ideals, but in assisting
young people in their capacity to meet these challenges as well. Such an exemplary
teacher finds the growth of these ideals in themselves and in their students equally
fulfilling.
Among the most revealing insights Dewey provides regarding his own concep-
tion of an exemplary teacher is the apparent lack of focus on pedagogical skill and
subject matter competence (although clearly those could not be entirely neglected).
This is revealed in his observation that even if a teacher’s “methods of instruction
and discipline…are technically faulty” they “may be rendered practically innocuous
by the inspiration of the personal method that lies back of them.”9 It is this
“inspiration of personal method” which I believe is best characterized as a teacher’s
deep-seated underlying passion for intellectual and moral growth on both a personal
and professional level. Furthermore, it suggests, as I will argue, that an important
indirect element of the educational encounter lies within the emotional qualities that
a teacher inadvertently brings to the classroom. As suggested, this relation between
PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION 2001
4. Ronald Lee Zigler 279
emotion and ideals was clearly recognized by Dewey. He noted within his concep-
tion of ideals that emotion plays a major role not only in directing our interests, and
our sense of purpose, but also — and more importantly — in sustaining our efforts
toward improving the actual social and physical environments in which we live: that
is, applying intellectual and moral insights to problematic situations and thereby
resolving the problems with which we are faced.10
An appreciation of this role of emotion among exemplary teachers is implicit
in the recent observations of historian Richard Traina who examined the autobiog-
raphies of some one-hundred twenty-five prominent Americans in the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries in order to discover what these individuals said about the
teachers they valued. Traina observes that an extraordinarily consistent pattern in the
descriptions of these exceptional teachers emerged from his research. Among these
descriptions there was noted “a palpable energy that suffused the competent and
caring teacher, some mark-making quality.”11 I believe the basic implication that
emerges from Traina’s research and Dewey’s theories is that it is through the
emotional inspiration of a teacher that the most valuable dimension of any lesson is
advanced. This, it should be clear, is not simply a matter of any emotional feeling,
but of particular emotions which emerge as timely undercurrents to the sincere
application — and subsequent transmission — of the intellectual, moral and
democratic ideals which themselves sustain and inspire growth. Such transmission,
I wish to emphasize, may be a necessary precondition to the cognitive transaction
by which a new, explicit conscious understanding becomes constructed in our
awareness.
In sum, Dewey’s vision of an exemplary teacher (a teacher in possession of self-
knowledge) encompasses what can best be described as an enthusiastic, contagious
passion for pursuing the development of a classroom, a school, and a society in
which our intellectual, moral and democratic ideals are enlivened. It should be clear
that this is not to suggest that the development of academic knowledge and skills is
unimportant. As Dewey once felt compelled to emphasize when addressing some of
the excesses in child-centered schooling, the organization of subject matter is not
hostile to the student.12 However, it is the narrow focus on this one aspect of
schooling that is positively injurious to educational growth. After all, as Dewey
would remind us, teachers are “above all others…the consecrated servants of the
democratic ideals.”13 And, ultimately, being a servant of these ideals is to be a model
and a transmitter of them as well; and to a large extent, being a transmitter is to be
genuinely inspired on an emotional level by these ideals.
As suggested, a teacher’s potential for shaping the interests and ideals of
students implies that teachers must first consciously endeavor to pursue these ideals
in their personal as well as their professional lives. In some respects, this is a
fundamental application of Dewey’s principle of continuity of experience that he
elucidated in Experience and Education.14 It is unrealistic, on the basis of Dewey’s
principle of continuity, to expect a teacher to undergo a change of ideals and
character each morning he or she heads for the classroom. If Dewey’s constellation
of intellectual, moral and democratic ideals become a lifetime pursuit for the teacher
PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION 2001
5. 280 Dewey, Eros, Ideals
— personally and professionally — it is then, and only then, that he or she brings
more to the classroom than mere subject matter competence or pedagogical skills.
Once again, I believe these qualities are the basis of the “inspiration of personal
method” which, as Dewey suggested, may obviate “technically faulty methods of
instruction and discipline.” It is only in this way that the teacher avoids being merely
a model of subject matter competence. A model of teacher competence based too
narrowly on the mastery of subject matter and pedagogical skill, Dewey would
maintain, is a clear threat to the social and moral integrity of a school insofar as it
overlooks — and undervalues — the personal, emotional investment a teacher must
make. These are qualities and ideals that come into play while a teacher exercises
pedagogical skill and demonstrates mastery of subject matter. For this reason, we are
compelled to draw our attention more closely still to the “personal method” of a
teacher and what may be his or her subtle, tacit or inadvertent influence. After all,
it is through this influence that a teacher brings into the classroom his or her “mark
making qualities” — qualities that shape the social and emotional climate of the
classroom and constitute the essential ingredient behind the transmission of ideals.
This represents the most significant aspect of what Dewey once described as
collateral learning.
COLLATERAL LEARNING
It was in Moral Principles in Education that Dewey most forcefully distin-
guished between direct and indirect instruction. In making such a distinction,
Dewey sought to emphasize the extent to which indirect instruction had a more
profound influence on the lives of young people than formal, direct instruction.
While direct instruction might involve a conscious, deliberate discussion about
moral ideals, indirect instruction was that which was conveyed by the incidental
circumstances of life in a classroom and a school. As Dewey wrote it was the “larger
field of indirect and vital moral education” which had the most profound impact on
the child. Such development proceeded through “all the agencies, instrumentalities,
and materials of school life.”15 Today, some of the efforts that have proceeded under
the banner of “character education” have attempted to accommodate this idea
insofar as they have sought to address those issues — such as school rituals — which
may affect the school climate and culture. These efforts reflect an implicit apprecia-
tion of Dewey’s observation that “[t]he analysis of character into aspects of wise
judgment, sensitive emotional responsiveness, and force in action reveals how
largely character forming must be indirect, slow, gradual, and unconscious.”16
Because of these largely “unconscious” factors, Dewey pointed out “that educa-
tional methods and materials which, on their face, have little to do with securing
moral results, may nevertheless be so treated that character formation is their more
abiding and significant end, albeit largely an unconscious and indirect end.”17 While
only moral ideals have been addressed here, this principle is equally applicable to
intellectual ideals as well. I believe that what underlies the transmission of either set
of ideals is the notion that they are most effectively transmitted in a slow, gradual,
indirect, largely unconscious process by a teacher who aspires to these ideals and
constantly endeavors to apply them at appropriate intervals during life inside or
outside the classroom. It should be clear that enthusiastic application of ideals during
PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION 2001
6. Ronald Lee Zigler 281
problematic situations (moral or intellectual) is not the same as explicit, direct
instruction about, or deliberation on, these same ideals.
While Dewey’s work is seldom associated with ideas of the unconscious, he was
clearly sensitive to how non-cognitive, unconscious forces play a central role in the
development of our attitudes, values and, ultimately, our ideals as well. Indeed, I
would like to suggest that the transmission of eros and ideals in the classroom and
in life involves a process that is (as Dewey suggested) “slow, gradual and uncon-
scious.” Here I wish to underscore the idea that this is a different, albeit complemen-
tary process to the conscious, cognitive construction of knowledge and understand-
ing. Furthermore, these ideals — inadvertently transmitted by a teacher and acquired
by a student — emerge as the attitudes and emotional responses that are in many
respects a central consequence of collateral learning: learning that occurs while a
teacher is engaged in the more traditional tasks of teaching content and skills in the
classroom. Once again, this is precisely why “technically faulty methods of
instruction” may be overcome by a “personal method.” Nowhere is this idea made
more clearly or forcefully by Dewey than in Experience and Education where he
writes:
Perhaps the greatest of all pedagogical fallacies is the notion that a person learns only the
particular thing he is studying at the time. Collateral learning in the way of formation of
enduring attitudes, of likes and dislikes, may be and often is much more important than the
spelling lesson or lesson in geography or history that is learned.18
Furthermore according to Dewey, “these attitudes are fundamentally what
count in the future.” This is because they determine whether the desire to learn, to
grow itself has been imparted; and this, as we have seen is the fundamental, all-
inclusive ideal of life: growth. In essence, as Dewey wrote elsewhere, school
provides a significant arena for the abiding influence of the habits of others —
especially our teachers. This may not always be a positive influence, of course. In
some instances, as Dewey wrote, “a teacher’s best conscious efforts may be more
than counteracted by the influence of personal traits which he is unaware of or
regards as unimportant.”19 This observation underscores the importance of continu-
ity between the ideals a teacher aspires to in his or her professional and personal life.
Today we possess stronger evidence than ever before of the extent and power of the
unconscious — inadvertent influences of others upon our morals, manners and
character — and consequently on our attitudes, ideals and eros as well. Dewey, of
course, would have welcomed such research. Indeed, in many respects, it represents
something he clearly anticipated. I will now briefly consider some of the ideas to
emerge from this research.
THE EMOTIONAL UNCONSCIOUS
In the research examined by Joseph LeDoux in The Emotional Brain, we find
an empirical basis upon which to advance our consideration of the relation between
eros in the form of emotional impulses, ideals and the inadvertent, unconscious
processes that underlie classroom encounters. As LeDoux has pointed out, there has
been over recent years an expansion of research on both subliminal stimulation and
the often hidden, implicit emotional impact of what is otherwise a clear, conscious
perception. This research has gone a long way toward establishing the reality of what
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7. 282 Dewey, Eros, Ideals
has been termed our emotional unconscious. For instance, it has demonstrated how
unconscious factors affect our thought and behavior when we least suspect them.
Indeed, as remarked by one researcher, unconscious influences have their largest
effect precisely when they are least expected — explicitly.20 Most important, this
research has demonstrated that “emotions, attitudes, goals, and intentions can be
activated without awareness, and that these can influence the way people think about
and act in social situations.”21 This, it would appear, is what Dewey was suggesting
when he identified collateral learning, as well as the slow, unconscious processes
that define character formation — and, I would add, the formation of eros. The
influence of teachers as providers of a “collateral learning experience” corresponds
to what LeDoux discusses in his text as the role that “priming stimuli” play in
establishing what will become a potent influence on our subsequent behavior.
According to these studies, stimuli with emotional connotations that remain either
implicit or subliminal can profoundly influence subsequent behavior. In the class-
room setting, teachers whose conduct is accompanied by those positive emotions or
eros that reflect a genuine and abiding appreciation and respect for important
intellectual, social and moral ideals, create a basis upon which these ideals them-
selves are genuinely nurtured. In effect, I believe that Dewey’s own discussion of
the influence of teachers through collateral processes may be deemed to exemplify
an implicit grasp of the manner in which the teacher transmits enduring attitudes and
ideals. In other words, exemplary teachers are, in effect, “priming stimuli” for
important intellectual and social ideals: complete transmission of which is effected
by subsequent exposure to the explicit, cognitive aspect of these ideals. It is, I
believe, the explicit, conscious, cognitive element with which Garrison’s thesis is
ultimately concerned. In contrast, I believe collateral learning processes provide the
proper foundation upon which ideals and values are later cognitively reconstructed
and integrated into conscious understanding following subsequent experience. It is
this subsequent experience in the form of narrative explorations that Garrison has
well described.
A proper consideration of the subliminal, collateral processes embedded in the
educational encounter suggests that regular, close, personal contact between a
teacher inspired by compelling ideals and a student is critical to the transmission of
these ideals. I believe that this is the reason why Dewey predicted that in the kind
of “progressive” school he envisioned there may be “more multiplied and more
intimate contacts between the mature and the immature than ever existed in the
traditional school, and consequently more, rather than less guidance by others.”22
Regular, sustained, intimate contact between the student and a teacher animated by
deep seated ideals — that is, a teacher of eros — is the basis for the transmission of
ideals while knowledge is acquired. The challenge, as Dewey well understood, was
how these contacts between teacher and student can be established without violating
his principle of learning through personal experience. I believe this paradox may be
resolved by attending to the quality of experience, provided by a teacher motivated
by the ideals of growth: intellectual, moral, and democratic — thereby overcoming
so-called “technically faulty methods of instruction.” A teacher with a sincere
commitment to these ideals brings an inspiring emotional quality — that is, eros —
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8. Ronald Lee Zigler 283
into the classroom. This is a quality that may remain subtle and tacit but nonetheless
determines whether the experience afforded in a classroom is fully educational in the
Deweyan sense — that is, conducive to the continued growth of the student, not just
knowledge competence. And ultimately, as Dewey wrote: “The criterion of the
value of school education is the extent in which it creates a desire for continued
growth and supplies means for making the desire effective in fact.”23
CONCLUSION
I believe it is fair to say that the exemplary teacher is a teacher with an abiding
faith in or vision of the intellectual, moral and democratic ideals that optimize
individual and social growth. This faith or vision is, of course, the “common faith”
of which Dewey wrote. It is a vision conceived by imagination and founded upon “a
clear and intense conception of a union of ideal ends with actual conditions.” Such
a vision, Dewey continues, “is capable of arousing steady emotion.”24 Once again,
I believe it is this “steady emotion” built on a vision of both intellectual and widely
shared democratic ideals, that is at the heart of what Garrison terms eros. Such
emotion or eros not only sustains a teacher through the challenges of teaching, but
is also the basis of the teacher’s “personal method” which more than compensates
for otherwise deficient methods of instruction.
Given my thesis, I believe that the most prominent obstacles to nurturing eros,
Deweyan ideals and the “common faith” which define them, are negative emotions
like cynicism and pessimism, which, by their very nature, undermine the ideals, faith
and vision Dewey recognized as so important to human growth. Consequently, I
believe our principal challenge as educators if we wish to make the education of eros
our supreme aim, is one of overcoming widespread cynicism, pessimism and a sense
of impotence in the face of influential cultural forces. In his own day, Dewey found
the spread of cynicism and pessimism deplorable and lamented that “it has even
become in many circles a sign of lack of sophistication to imagine that life is or can
be a fountain of cheer and happiness.”25 For this reason I believe our efforts would
be incomplete if we simply attended to Garrison’s recommendations and engaged
students and prospective teachers in the exploration of important narrative works or
even Dewey’s writings that cover the intellectual and moral ideals that should
inspire us. Neither may it be sufficient for prospective teachers to receive the
attention of college professors and teachers who themselves are animated by these
ideals and moral faith: although this does constitute a very important implication of
our discussion. Rather, in so far as we need to integrate the ideals guiding our
personal and professional lives, prospective teachers may need to consider some
strategies for neutralizing the cynicism and pessimism so prevalent today. In one
way or another, these strategies to overcome such negative emotions must touch
upon our personal lives and the emotional dispositions we consciously or unwit-
tingly bring to the classroom. To do this, these strategies must invariably touch upon
the personal habits and beliefs of our future teachers. This admittedly controversial
proposal may be the principal challenge involved in any effort to make the education
of eros the supreme aim of education.
For response see essay by Giarelli
PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION 2001
9. 284 Dewey, Eros, Ideals
1. Jim Garrison, Dewey And Eros: Wisdom and Desire in the Art of Teaching (New York: Teachers
College Press, 1997).
2. Ibid., 127.
3. John Dewey, The Collected Works of John Dewey, 1882-1953 The Electronic Edition, “A Common
Faith,” ed. Jo Ann Boydston (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1981), 35.
4. Ibid., “The Study of Ethics,” 262.
5. Steven Rockefeller, John Dewey: Religious Faith and Democratic Humanism (New York: Columbia
University Press, 1991).
6. Dewey, Democracy and Education, 320.
7. Ibid., 361.
8. Ibid., 362.
9. Dewey, “How We Think,” 217.
10. See Dewey, “Human Nature and Conduct,” 180.
11. Richard Traina, “What Makes A Good Teacher?,” Education Week 18, No. 9 (20 January 1999): 34.
12. Dewey, “Essays,” 264.
13. Ibid., 210.
14. Dewey, Experience and Education, 13-22.
15. Dewey, Moral Principles In Education, 268.
16. Ibid., 388.
17. Ibid.
18. Dewey, Experience and Education, 29.
19. Dewey, “How We Think,” 217.
20. Joseph LeDoux, The Emotional Brain (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1996), 63.
21. Ibid., 61-62.
22. Dewey, Experience and Education, 8 (emphasis added).
23. Dewey, Democracy and Education, 58.
24. Dewey, “A Common Faith,” 35.
25. Dewey, Experience and Nature, 41.
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