Se ha denunciado esta presentación.
Se está descargando tu SlideShare. ×

Social reconstructionism ppt

Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Anuncio
Cargando en…3
×

Eche un vistazo a continuación

1 de 24 Anuncio

Más Contenido Relacionado

Presentaciones para usted (20)

Similares a Social reconstructionism ppt (20)

Anuncio

Más reciente (20)

Social reconstructionism ppt

  1. 1. Social Reconstructionism Lira Lei Ann I. Bondoc, LPT, MAED-EM
  2. 2. What word can you associate with the word reconstruct? renovate Reconstruct recreate recondition reestablish rebuild Make over
  3. 3. What word can you associate with the word society? Society community nation Human groups culture Public/people alliance
  4. 4. Is there a need to reconstruct society? What word in the society are in need of reconstruction? Reconstruction of Society education culture health leadership Rules/laws policies
  5. 5. What word can you associate with the word learners? Learners students beginners disciples beginners novice apprentice
  6. 6. What word can you associate with the word teachers? Teachers facilitator trainers masters tutor mentor instructor
  7. 7. What word can you associate with the word curriculum? Curriculum syllabus program education pedagogy subjects literacy
  8. 8. Social Reconstructionism It is a philosophy of education that focuses on using education to eliminate social inequities. It is student-centered philosophy that is currently relevant and beneficial. Prepares students for a future that is ever changing.
  9. 9. Social Reconstructionism Its focuses on educating students about issues going on in their society. It inform students, give them the skills they need to be able to take action with what they learn, encourage them to improve society and guide them in improving society.
  10. 10. Social Reconstructionism Reconstructionist believe that students learn more, remember it longer, and apply it to new situations better if they learn through experience, rather than trough being told something.
  11. 11. Purpose of Education Its main purpose is to reconstruct the society. George Counts proposed schools reform society, an idea that spread like a wildfire when his book Dare the Schools Build a New Social Order was written in 1932, and still has not burn out. Education was the means of preparing people for creating new social order.
  12. 12. Purpose of Education  Sadket and Zittleman (2010) explain that the purpose of education is to encourage “schools, teachers, and students to focus their studies and energies on alleviating pervasive social inequities and, as the name implies reconstruct soci0ety into a new and more just social order.  Learning and all efforts that follow should be for the common goal of eliminating injustices in the society. Since “racism, sexism, global warming, and environmental pollution, homeliness, poverty, substance abuse, homophobia, AIDS, and violence are rooted in misinformation and thrive in ignorance. The school is an ideal place to begin alleviating this problems.
  13. 13. Purpose of Education Theodore Brameld, the founder of Social Reconstructionism, believes that public education system that perceived behavioral sciences can bring about fundamental changes in the social economic structure of society. Brameld founded social reconstructionism as a response to the realities of World War II, he recognized the potential for either human annihilation through technology and human cruelty or the capacity to create a beneficent society using technology and human compassion.
  14. 14. Purpose of Education  Paulo Freire, reject the social Darwinism and introduced Praxis Doctrine.  Freire accused schools in endorsing social Darwinism, in other words, students who are talented or come from rich and powerful families rise to the top of their classes and undeserving students fall to the bottom both socially and economically. He introduces one of his own, Praxis, which means self-improvement are attainable and injustices in society don’t not exist.  He believes that educations is to reconstruct society for the better, which proves the praxis doctrine to be true and social Darwinism to be false.
  15. 15. Social reconstructionism focused on the discrepancies between wealth and poverty in society, the social and economic reforms needed and the possibilities of schools who, with the help of other cultural agencies, could become agents of reconstruction and reform in the society.
  16. 16. The Curriculum The curriculum should be used to improve students abilities to think critically about problems in the society. Students are presented with social challenges and problems they should feel a desire to want things to be different. The lessons allows the learners to freely discuss about issues in the past and in the present, that automatically cause the students to formulate their own opinions towards controversial or important topics.
  17. 17. The Curriculum The curriculum incorporate lessons that require students to take action and they are learning on how to become responsible citizens and how to take matters on their own hands. The curriculum should inform students, stir emotions within them, shed light upon social inequities, improve student abilities to think critically and charge students to take action.
  18. 18. The Curriculum Reconstructionist do not believe is predetermined curriculum. They would use the subject matter from any or all disciplines when needed to solve problems.
  19. 19. Assessment  Learners are required to express their opinions about certain problems within society eloquently and adamantly.  Assessment are designed with the tent to improve students communications skills through testing students abilities to write essays, provide short answers to questions, thoroughly answering discussion questions and being able to explain why answers are correct or why they believe what they do.  Students also make research as an assessment rather that standardized test. They are evaluate subjectively on the basis of their ability as a social activist rather that give written examinations.
  20. 20. Role of the Teacher Teachers are facilitators of learners. Its their duty to provide the learners lessons that bot intellectually inform and emotionally affect students about the inequities that surround them. Teachers also create a democratic environments so that lessons and topic maybe discussed, debated, and students voices may be heard. In order for students to end up changing their society, they have to believe that their voice matters and they can make difference in the world.
  21. 21. Role of the Teacher Teachers main role is being the resource person or a research project director that guides the students learning rather than being a dispenser of knowledge. Teachers carries on a dialogue with students, helping them identify problems, frame hypothesis, find data, draw appropriate conclusions and select efficacious courses of actions.
  22. 22. The Method of Instruction It is student-centered philosophy, means “less authoritarian, less concerned with the past and training of mind, more focused on individual needs, contemporary relevance and preparing students for a changing future”. Teacher spend less time on lecturing and more time allowing students to work together in groups, challenging one another and bouncing ideas of one another.

×