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Appendix 1:
ASSIGNMENT FOR CREDIT AND EXAMINATION:
1.
Summary of literature
2. Observation
a. during a lesson
b. school visit
Interest activity at school
Extracurricular education
3. Reading of literature:
a) on philosophy of education
b) on psychology of education
c)
on comparative pedagogy
d) on moral education
e) popular educational literature (e.g. for parents)
f) on alternative schooling (one selected school).
4. Visit a school (lesson at an alternative school) and describe the
difference from the school you experienced. Read about its theoretical
foundations and educational objectives and the manner they want to
implement them.
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Appendix 2:
ESSENCE OF EDUCATION
Education is part of everyone’s life and everyone encounters it both as the
educatee and the educator. It is undertaken in family, at school, in a psychiatric
hospital; it accompanies work, leisure time as well as cohabitation of spouses.
It is the function of life and has a variety of goals, contents and means.
Although education has manifold forms, they have one thing in common:
education cultivates one’s relation to the world. Jiří Kyrášek saw the essence
of education in the shaping of one’s relation to the world
7
. If education forms
one’s relation to the nature, society and one’s self, we must ask a question
about the kind of this relation because we can understand it in many different
ways depending on one’s and the society’s condition. Human beings definitely
change the world with their very existence and activities but this is also what
other animate beings do when they do good to their environment but may also
destroy it. Human beings are different from animate
beings in the extent to
which they change their environment. Humans have developed means which
can be of immense benefit for the society and themselves or totally destroy
them.
This is why the relation of humans to the world is the crucial question of
philosophy and pedagogy. We can simplify it by naming two, currently co-
existing extremes. According to the first extreme approach, humans are a part
of the nature and are subjected to its laws, to the forces which are above, as
expressed by the will of gods in antique Greece
or Christianity or oriental
philosophy. According to the other extreme, humans are the master of the
nature (and hence, also of other people). We could see this in the philosophy of
Francis Bacon and René Descartes as well as in the exact science developed
since the 17
th
century and built on objective observation and experiments, freed
from prejudices and human errors and thus from human subjectivity and ethics.
A science based on the methodology of direct cognition of reality and induction
and resulting in the knowledge which is not doubted should have given humans
the power over the nature. However, it also opened (especially in the 19
th
century), Pandora’s box of wealth and devastation of humans and again raised
the question about the relationship of the man towards the nature, society,
one’s self. This is now reflected in the opinion of J. Zelený who says that the
previous approach taken by Galileo, Descartes, Bacon and Lock perceived the
world as a book: ‘There could be disputes over in which language the book
where we play the role of readers was written.
A major part of cognitive
objectives of modern sciences has something to do with the world where we
7
In: Chlup, O.- Kopecký, J.
Pedagogika. Prague: SPN, 1967, p. 16.
138
primarily are not in the role of readers of the book, but rather in the role of
producers and products’.
8
However, this proposition raises doubts because
producers who do not read in the book of the nature produce their arbitrariness
and are themselves products of this arbitrariness and the resulting errors.
Therefore, if humans do not want to become victims of their activities, they
must first read the book of the world.
Understanding the relation of man towards the
world is basically about
man’s cultivation in all of his stages and forms. Teaching at kindergarten, basic
and secondary schools and at institutions of higher education is only a special
case of man’s cultivation on his path towards nature, other people and one’s
self. The more complicated this path is, i.e. the broader the cognition is, the
more diverse the activities are and the more dependent interpersonal relations
are, the more important schooling is with its intensity and productiveness,
which may be seen in the entire history of school education. Education takes
over man’s position in the world, reproduces and co-creates it. The opinion on
this relation forms the
basis of specific objectives, contents and means of
education.
It is evident that the deformation of man’s relationship towards the nature,
society and one’s self endanger his life and chances to survive. A child who
does not learn the rules of family cohabitation poses a threat either to
himself/herself or his/her parents. Therefore, the only thing that family
education does (despite all opposing theories including anti-pedagogy) is that it
cultivates the behaviour of parents and children so that their cohabitation
satisfies the needs of life of all individuals and the family line.
Ideas and
standards such as respect for parents and children, mutual assistance,
diligence, unselfishness, willingness to share food and cooperate are not innate.
They must be fostered since very childhood as the basis of cohabitation and
develop from one generation to another. They keep reproducing and cannot be
destroyed unless they are destroyed by the family itself.
The form of the rules of family cohabitation and roles of family members
may change – and they do change – but the basic norms cannot be removed
should family keep on in its existence. For instance, physical punishments are
justly slowly diminishing from education and a greater emphasis is placed on
praise than on punishment, or new forms of collaboration are developing amid
the changing roles of family members, but the rules of cohabitation remain the
same. No family can tolerate arbitrariness, enviousness, selfishness or
aggressiveness towards other family members if it does not was to be
threatened.
8
Zelený, J. Afterword to Husserl, R.
Krize evropských věd a transcendentální filozofie. Prague:
Academia, 1972, p. 567.
140
Appendix 3:
REFLECTION on the study text
Answer the following questions:
1. What new and important aspects about education have you learned?
2. Which topic did you find the most interesting?
3. Have you found an answer to any of your problems or do you now know
where to find it?
4. Which books have made you think over them? Describe their importance
for you.
5. Read the questions at the beginning of this study text (p. 10). Try to
answer them.
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