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cover of episode Episode 297: Balance of Educational Philosophy

Episode 297: Balance of Educational Philosophy

2025/3/21
logo of podcast A Delectable Education Charlotte Mason Podcast

A Delectable Education Charlotte Mason Podcast

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Jessica Becker
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Jessica Becker: 本期节目探讨了夏洛特·梅森的教育哲学思想,她认为教育应在自然主义和唯心主义两种极端之间寻求平衡,即“中庸之道”。她指出,忽略教育背后的哲学基础会导致教育缺乏连贯性和明确目标。我们应整合资源,优先考虑重要事项,并将教育实践与哲学思想相结合。自然主义认为只有自然界存在,超自然现象不存在,人的思想和情感只是大脑的副产品。自然主义教育的弱点在于实用主义观点,只重视有用的知识,忽略文学等非实用性学科。唯心主义认为思想和意识构成现实的根本,物质世界可能并不存在,一切存在都与经验相关。唯心主义的弱点在于其观点模糊,忽视了思想和观念对物质的影响,以及人作为具体存在体的现实。中庸之道并非简单的折中,而是指在两种极端之间找到一种新的、更强大的方法。教育的两个主要功能是习惯养成和观念呈现,两者相互关联,缺一不可。父母和老师在教育中扮演次要角色,主要作用是呈现思想,而非塑造孩子。父母的责任是为孩子提供充足的、有益的思想,但不能强迫他们接受。评估教育内容时,应关注其核心思想及其对孩子智力与道德发展的影响,而非仅仅关注其实用性。科学教育应兼顾哲学精神和具体知识,将科学史融入教学,激发学生的学习热情。 Emily Kaiser, Nicole Williams, Liz Gatrell: 三位主持人与Jessica Becker就夏洛特·梅森的教育哲学展开了深入讨论,分享了她们在实践中遇到的问题和经验,并对自然主义、唯心主义和中庸之道这三种教育理念进行了分析和比较。她们认为,许多家庭教育中存在缺乏哲学指导的问题,导致教育目标不明确,方法缺乏连贯性。她们强调了在教育中寻找平衡的重要性,避免走向极端,并指出夏洛特·梅森的方法正是这种平衡的体现。她们还讨论了如何选择合适的教育资源,以及如何评估教育内容对孩子智力、道德发展的影响。

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This chapter explores Charlotte Mason's critique of educational approaches that neglect philosophical foundations. It emphasizes the importance of understanding the underlying philosophy to achieve continuity and purpose in education, contrasting the tendency to merely gather suggestions without a coherent framework.
  • Lack of philosophical grounding leads to aimless efforts in education.
  • Charlotte Mason advocates for tracing educational practices back to their philosophical roots.
  • Finding a balance between educational extremes is crucial for effective teaching.

Shownotes Transcript

Charlotte Mason viewed all educational possibilities as fitting into one or the other of two schools of philosophy: Materialism and Idealism. Instead, she offers a "middle way," a new path that draws on the strengths of both schools. The portion of Parents and Children where she discusses these ideas is dense. In this episode of the podcast, Jessica Becker guides us through what Miss Mason had to say, and, more importantly, why it is essential for parents and teachers to find balance between these two educational extremes.

 

Parents and Children (Volume 2), Charlotte Mason, chapters 11-13

"Probably the chief source of weakness in our attempt to formulate a science of education is that we do not perceive that education is the outcome of philosophy. We deal with the issue and ignore the source. Hence our efforts lack continuity and definite aim. We are content to pick up a suggestion here, a practical hint there, without even troubling ourselves to consider what is that scheme of life of which such hints and suggestions are the output." (2/118) 

"Method implies two things-a way to an end, and step-by-step progress in that way." (1/8)

"We need not aspire to a complete and exhaustive code of educational laws. This will· come to us duly when humanity bas, so to speak, fulfilled itself. Meantime, we have enough to go on with if we would believe it. What we have to do is to gather together and order our resources ; to put the first thing foremost and all things in sequence, and to see that education is neither more nor less than the practical application of our philosophy. Hence, if our educational thought is to be sound and effectual we must look to the philosophy which underlies it, and must be in a condition to trace every counsel of perfection for the bringing-up of children to one or other of the two schools of philosophy of which it must needs be the outcome." (2/119-120)

"Is our system of education to be the issue of naturalism or of idealism, or is there indeed a media via?" (2/120)

"The truth is, we are in the throes of an educational revolution ; we are emerging from chaos rather than about to plunge into it; we are beginning to recognise that education is the applied science of life, and that we really have existing material in the philosophy of the ages and the science of the day to formulate an educational code whereby we may order the lives of our children and regulate our own." (2/119)

"The functions of education may be roughly defined as twofold : (a) the formation of habits; (b) the presentation of ideas. The first depends far more largely than we recognise on physiological processes. The second is purely spiritual in origin, method, and result. Is it not possible that here we have the meeting-point of the two philosophies which have divided mankind since men began to think about their thoughts and ways? Both are right ; both are necessary; both have their full activity in the development of a human being at his best." (2/125)

"For a habit is set up by following out an initial idea with a long sequence of corresponding acts. You tell a child that the Great Duke slept in so narrow a bed that he could not turn over, because, said he, ' When you want to turn over it's time to get up.' The boy does not wish to get up in the morning, but he does wish to be like the hero of Waterloo. You stimulate him to act upon this idea day after day for a month or so, until the habit is formed, and it is just as easy as not to get up in good time." (2/125)

"You may bring your horse to the water, but you can't make him drink; and you may present ideas of the fittest to the mind of the child; but you do not know in the least which he will take, and which he will reject." (2/127)

"Our part is to see that his educational plat is constantly replenished with fit and inspiring ideas, and then we must needs leave it to the child's own appetite to take which he will have, and as much as he requires." (2/127)

"We shall not be content that they learn geography, history, Latin, what not,-we shall ask what salient ideas are presented in each such study, and how will these ideas affect the intellectual and moral development of the child." (2/127)

"We shall probably differ from him in many matters of detail, but we shall most likely be inclined to agree with his conclusion that, not some subject of mere utility, but moral and social science conveyed by means of history, literature, or otherwise, is the one subject which we are not at liberty to leave out from the curriculum of' a being breathing thoughtful breath.'" (2/127-28)

"Two things are necessary. First, we must introduce into the study of each science the philosophic spirit and method, general views, the search for the most general principles and conclusions. We must then reduce the different sciences to unity by a sound training in philosophy, which will be as obligatory to students in science as to students in literature. . . • Scientific truths, said Descartes, are battles won ; describe to the young the principal and most heroic of these battles; you will thus interest them in the results of science, and you will develop in them a scientific spirit by means of the enthusiasm for the conquest of truth; you will make them see the power of the reasoning which has led to discoveries in the past, and which will do so again in the future. How interesting arithmetic and geometry might be if we gave a short history of their principal theorems; if the child were mentally present at the labours of a Pythagoras, a Plato, a Euclid, or in modern times of a Viete, a Descartes, a Pascal, or a Leibnitz. Great theories, instead of being lifeless and anonymous abstractions, would become human, living truths, each with its own history, like a statue by Michael Angelo, or like a painting by Raphael." (2/128)

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