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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

A critique of John Dewey's theory of the nature and the knowledge of reality in the light of the principles of Thomism,

Fleckenstein, Norbert J., January 1954 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Catholic University of America. / Bibliography: p. 185-188.
2

Confucians and Dewey on community

Fu, Hui 02 June 2009 (has links)
This thesis offers a comparison between liberalism, Dewey’s pragmatism, and Confucianism on their views of community. Today, as China struggles with the influences of modernity, the relations between its Confucian heritage and liberal democracy have been much debated. Some scholars contend that classical Confucianism and the communitarian critique of liberal politics converge, because they both challenge the dominance of modern liberalism. Among the communitarian theories, John Dewey’s theory of democratic community comports well with the Confucian doctrine of community to argue against rights-based liberalism. For in a Confucian community, as in a Deweyan democracy, public consensus is often achieved at the aesthetic and practical levels rather than based on the claims of reason. For pragmatists like Dewey and Confucians, experiencing the world aesthetically is a practical way to improve the social functions of everyday life. In this thesis, following John Dewey, I argue that as a crucially communicative and social practice, art plays a key role on communal harmony. When traditional Confucian China as a ritual-based community is grounded in aesthetic practices, it is comparable and compatible with Dewey’s view of community. In addition, the Confucian theory of community is a source for putting contemporary communitarian ideas into practice. I conclude that by relating aesthetics to his democratic theory, Dewey puts forth a theory of pragmatist community that suits well with the Confucian ideal.
3

Science and experience a Deweyan pragmatist philosophy of science /

Brown, Matthew J. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, San Diego, 2009. / Title from first page of PDF file (viewed July 14, 2009). Available via ProQuest Digital Dissertations. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 224-232) and index.
4

A New Look at Dewey’s Cooking Lab: a Pedagogical Model for Interdisciplinary Learning in Contemporary Higher Education

Belliveau, Cynthia 12 September 2007 (has links)
This dissertation examines the link between cooking and learning. It first examines John Dewey’s pedagogical philosophy in which he asserts that the kitchen laboratory was an ideal learning environment to teach and learn about a broad range of subjects, an illustration of Dewey’s philosophical notions about true experiential education. Second, there is an examination of a Home Economic Department and its historical role in teaching cooking which introduces the issues of cooking and learning in the post secondary, higher education context. Finally to determine whether Dewey’s kitchen-based pedagogical approach applied in higher education, a pedagogical experiment was undertaken in which cooking was integrated into a college-level humanities course on food and culture. Reported as a case study, the ‘experiment’ was to recreate Dewey’s University of Chicago Laboratory School’s curriculum with 28 college-aged students in a kitchen laboratory at the University of Vermont. This qualitative research yielded results that suggest that Dewey’s methodology is a highly effective pedagogy at the college level and enhances students’ learning about the role of food in their own and in other cultures. Finally, these findings make the case for including more interdisciplinary, experientially based learning opportunities in higher education, generally, and for using food laboratories as a site for such learning opportunities.
5

Elevers tillägnande av reflektion inom portfoliometoden

Karlsson, Ulrika January 2010 (has links)
Den här uppsatsen behandlar hur elevers reflekterande kring en utveckling inom ett ämne från årskurs sex till årskurs nio ser ut. Materialet består av ett inspelat material från vårterminen 2009. Skolan som eleverna har gått på är en friskola som arbetar utifrån portfoliometoden. Inom portfoliometoden är reflektion ett viktigt verktyg som eleverna ska använda sig av. I skolans kursplaner står det att elever ska kunna reflektera kring bland annat sin egen utveckling vilket också är syftet med den uppgift eleverna har fått i det granskade materialet. Jag har försökt att fånga elevernas reflektioner i ett analysschema som jag konstruerat utefter John Deweys teori och analys av reflektionen. Det jag tycker mig se är att eleverna har en bra förmåga att reflektera och de verkar vana med verktyget. De flesta verkar ställa sig frågan varför de gjort som de gjort och försöker komma på förslag genom tidigare erfarenheter och dra slutsatser därefter. / 2010ht4687
6

John Dewey's Concept of Morality and Some of its Implications for Modern Education

Swick, Kevin J. January 1966 (has links)
No description available.
7

John Dewey and Documentary Narrative

Mueller, Denis 21 November 2007 (has links)
No description available.
8

Self-realization in John Dewey and Confucius: its philosophical and educational features

MA, WEN 02 September 2009 (has links)
This thesis attempts to present John Dewey and Confucian views regarding self-realization and its implication for education. Although there is an increasing body of comparative literature examining the two schools of thought, the examination of the two philosophers’ theories from a perspective of self-realization is greatly lacking. Examining Deweyan notion of self as social, ethical and ever-growing, and the Confucian concept of self as Ren (Humane), He (Harmonious) and Cultivating, self-realization will be illustrated as the expansion, enhancement and enrichment of the individual resulting from a closed gap between oneself and one’s environment. Such unity of self as the feature of self- realization not only illustrates Deweyan and Confucian philosophical theories toward the development of an individual, it also reflects their notions of education as means and ends to realize unification at all levels. / Thesis (Master, Education) -- Queen's University, 2009-09-01 10:34:58.687
9

Myrby träsk - från havsvik till betesmark : En manual för visningar vid Gamla Uppsala.

Niklasson, Emil, Persson, Kristina January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
10

John Dewey's Instrumentalism: A Cultural and Humanist View of Knowledge

Allman, Philip R. 01 December 2013 (has links)
My thesis is an attempt to show the brilliance and novelty of John Dewey's theory of knowledge, instrumentalism. The main objective of my thesis is to explain Dewey's theory of knowledge, which he coined instrumentalism, and to describe how instrumentalism as a theory of knowledge overcomes the pitfalls of competing theories within the philosophical tradition. Dewey's theory of instrumentalism does not assume that ideas are mental entities nor that ideas are true if they somehow match or fit with the object in question; thus, Dewey's theory presents a different view opposed to what we have usually called coherence, or correspondence theories of knowledge. Dewey also argued that consciousness and thinking are functions of a complex organism in transaction with its environment and thus consciousness is an instrumentality not a thing-in-itself.

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