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John Dewey

Definition: John Dewey

John Dewey

Noun

1. American pragmatic philosopher who advocated progressive education (1859-1952).

Source: WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
 


Synonym: John Dewey

Synonym: Dewey (n). (additional references)

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Specialty Definition: John Dewey

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

John Dewey (1859-1952) was an American philosopher and teacher who greatly influenced education in the United States.

Educational Philosophy

As can be seen in his Democracy and Education Dewey attempts to at once synthesize, criticize, and expand upon the democratic educational philosophies of Rousseau and Plato. He saw Rousseau's as overemphasizing the individual and Plato's as overemphasizing the society. For Dewey, this distinction was by and large a false one; like Vygotsky, he viewed the mind and its formation as communal process. However, as evidenced in his later Experience and Nature Dewey recognizes the importance of the subjective experience of individual people in introducing revolutionary new ideas.

For Dewey, it was vitally important that education not be the teaching of mere dead fact, but that the skills and knowledge which students learned by integrated fully into their lives as citizens and human beings. At the Laboratory School which Dewey and his wife Alice ran at the University of Chicago, children learned much of their early chemistry, physics, and biology by investigating the natural processes which went into cooking breakfast--an activity they did in their classes. This practical element--learning by doing--sprang from his subscription to the philosophical school of Pragmatism. His lab school however performed so poorly that Dewey was forced to leave Chicago and his failing school in less than three years. He set up his famous Lincoln School in Manhattan where it too ultimately failed.

Dewey was essentially the foundational thinker of educational progressivism and an important progressive in general. His ideas, while quite popular, were never broadly and deeply integrated into the practices of American public schools, though some of his values and terms were widespread. Progressive education (both as espoused by Dewey, and in the more popular and inept forms of which Dewey was critical) was essentially scrapped during the Cold War, when the dominant concern in education was creating and sustaining a scientific and technological elite for military purposes.

Deweyan Pragmatism

Dewey was a second-generation pragmatist, following Charles Sanders Pierce and William James. He was not nearly so pluralist or relativist as James. He held that value was a function not of whim nor purely of social construction, but a quality inherent in events; he also held, unlike James, that experimentation (social, cultural, technological, philosophical) could be used as a relatively hard-and-fast arbiter of truth. For example, James felt that personal without "over-belief" in religious concepts used to explain common experience, human life was shallow and rather uninteresting. Dewey, in contrast, while honoring the important rule that religious institutions and practices played in human life, rejected belief in any static ideal, such as God. For Dewey, God was the method of intelligence in human life; that is to say, rigorous inquiry, or, very broadly configured, science. From the time of World War I onward, Dewey's thinking was strongly influenced by the work of F. Matthias Alexander.

Dewey has regained prominence recently in philosophy of education and in technical philosophy generally. Because of his process-oriented and sociologically conscious view of the world and knowledge, he is sometimes seen as a useful alternative to both modern and postmodern ways of thinking. Recent exponents like Richard Rorty have not always remained faithful to Dewey's original vision, but this itself is completely in keeping both with Dewey's usage of other thinkers and with his own philosophy--for Dewey, past doctrines always require reconstruction in order to remain useful for the present time.

Further Reading

Secondary Sources Louis Menand, The Metaphysical Club

External links

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "John Dewey."

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Crosswords: John Dewey

English words defined with "John Dewey": derived, Deweyanexistential, experientialintrinsic, intrinsicalmultiformtechnical. (references)

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Commercial Usage: John Dewey

DomainTitle

Books

  • Cultural Politics and Education (The John Dewey Lecture) (reference)

  • Democracy and Education, 1916 (Middleworks of John Dewey 1899-1944) (reference)

  • The Life and Mind of John Dewey (reference)

    (more book examples)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Frequency of Internet Keywords: John Dewey

The following statistics estimate the number of searches per day across the major English-language search engines as identified by various trade publications. Hyperlinks lead to commercial use of the expression at Amazon.com.
 
ExpressionFrequency
per Day

john dewey

385

john dewey high school

29

education john dewey

13

john dewey progressive education

7

john dewey philosophy

6
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Ancestral Language Translations: John Dewey

LanguagePeriodTranslations
Latin500 BCE-Modern

Ceratonia siliqua, Sanctus Johannes Baptista, Zeidae, Zenopsis conchifer, Zenopsis conchifera, Zenopsis ocellata, Zeus faber, Zeus japonicus, Zeus pungio. (various references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

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Misspellings: John Dewey

Misspellings

"John Dewey" is suggested in spellcheckers for the following: jhon dewey, jphn dewey. (additional references)

Source: compiled by the editor, based on several corpora (additional references).

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Anagrams: John Dewey

Scrabble® Enable2K-Verified Anagrams

Words within the letters "d-e-e-h-j-n-o-w-y"

-1 letter: honeydew.

-2 letters: enjoyed, honeyed.

-3 letters: hoyden.

-4 letters: donee, downy, doyen, endow, enjoy, hewed, honed, honey, howdy, jewed, jowed, joyed, needy, owned, weedy, weeny, wheen, yowed.

-5 letters: dene, deny, dewy, dhow, done, down, dyne, enow, eyed, eyen, eyne, heed, hewn, hoed, hone, howe, jeed, jeon, joey, john, need, node, ohed, owed, weed, ween, wend, whee, when.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Alternative Orthography: John Dewey


Hexadecimal (or equivalents, 770AD-1900s) (references)

4A 6F 68 6E      44 65 77 65 79

Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519; backwards) (references)

    

Binary Code (1918-1938, probably earlier) (references)

01001010 01101111 01101000 01101110 00100000 01000100 01100101 01110111 01100101 01111001

HTML Code (1990) (references)

&#74 &#111 &#104 &#110 &#32 &#68 &#101 &#119 &#101 &#121

ISO 10646 (1991-1993) (references)

004A 006F 0068 006E      0044 0065 0077 0065 0079

Encryption (beginner's substitution cypher): (references)

4481748023871897191

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INDEX

1. Definition
2. Synonyms
3. Crosswords
4. Usage: Commercial
5. Expressions: Internet
6. Translations: Ancient
7. Derivations
8. Anagrams
9. Orthography
10. Bibliography


  

Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.