Allama Iqbal Open University: Assignment No: 1
Allama Iqbal Open University: Assignment No: 1
Allama Iqbal Open University: Assignment No: 1
Assignment No: 1
Roll No : BZ665402
Question no. 1
Evaluate the role of philosophy in educational policy and practice.
The philosophy of education is a practical philosophical discipline that explores,
studies and promotes the basic principles of education. ... With the development of
human civilization and culture, educational activity is advanced too, and at the same
time its social role and responsibility are increased. It explains that the philosophy of
education is the branch of philosophy that addresses philosophical questions
concerning the nature, aims, and problems of education. The book examines the
problems concerning the aims and guiding ideals of education
Question no. 2
Discuss the main tent of idealism and realism. Also
estimate their applicability in current education system.
Idealism and Realism relate to teaching and student learning because
teachers tend to teach through an idealist's perspective verses a realist's
perspective. Idealists believe through epistemology that knowing is of
latent ideas—these ideas have already existed in the Mind of God. ..
Main tent of idealism and realism.
Idealism
Idealism is the school of educational thought promoted by Plato in 400 B.C.
Plato thought that humans could be improved from within, by correcting their
thoughts and discovering knowledge already there since birth. Idealism
focuses on reasoning and how a person can bring knowledge up from inside of
himself. In this view, the world exists solely in the minds of people and that
ultimate truth relies on a consistency of ideas. The more perfect our ideas
become, therefore, the better we can serve the world. In Emmanuel Kant's
idealism, the world exists, but our minds are separate from it.
2 Realism
Realism is the school of educational thought promoted by Plato's student, Aristotle.
Realism holds that the only reality is the material world, that study of the outer world
is the only reliable way to find truth; the world is an objective phenomenon that our
minds must adhere to. We achieve greater and greater knowledge through proper
study of the world. In Realism, a person is an empty vessel for knowledge, which can
only come from outside of the self, through observation. This philosophy was the
progenitor of the scientific method, a system of inquiry relying on objective facts.
3 Different Methods
Idealism seeks to ascertain an ultimate reality through logic and introspection.
Plato held that individuals are born with great knowledge that can be unlocked
through a study of ideas and through the Socratic Method, a series of
questions that lead the pupil to greater knowledge. For instance, in Plato's
dialogue "Meno," Socrates helps a slave boy discover an inner knowledge of
mathematics, despite no prior training. Thus, every student is equally capable
of tapping inner resources of knowledge and wisdom. Realism, on the other
hand, seeks to instruct students as though they were empty vessels for
knowledge. Any practical methods are appropriate, including technology. This
philosophy also accepts the scientific testing of students to place them in
appropriate classrooms.
• Locke believed that as people have more experiences, they have more
ideas imprinted on the mind and more
with which to relate.
• Comte is responsible for the coining and introduction of the term
altruism. Altruism is an ethical doctrine that
holds that individuals have a moral obligation to help, serve, or benefit
others, if necessary at the sacrifice of
self interest.
• One universal law that Comte saw at work in all sciences where he
called it the „law of three phases‰. It is by
his statement of this law that he is best known in the English-speaking
world; namely, that society has gone
through three phases: theological, metaphysical, and scientific.
• Darwin coined the idea that „nature is in process without some
preconceived or predetermined end,
redefined reality as a state of becoming, not a state of being‰. Darwin
gave credence to the idea that
education should be tied directly to biological and social development by
demonstrating that the process of
becoming was subject to external forces.
• Dewey attempted to create a philosophy that captured and reflected
the influences of the contemporary
world on the preparation of the future leaders through the educational
system. The reliance on the source of
knowledge has to be tempered by an understanding of the societal
effects if the learning was to be meaningful,
beneficial, or productive.
• John Dewey discussed the Nature of Experience; experience and
nature are not two different things
separated from each other, rather experience itself is of nature :
experience is and of nature.
• Idealists believe that ideas can change lives. The most important part
of a person is the mind. It is to be
nourished and developed.
• The world of ideas and matter defined in idealism by Plato and
Socrates do not exist separately and apart
from each other for realists. They contend that material things can exist
whether or not there is a human being
around to appreciate or perceive them.
• They believe that educators should seek out new process, incorporate
traditional and contemporary ideas, or create new ideas to deal with the
changing world.
Question no. 3
Describe the characteristics of curriculum developed on the basis
of idealism.
, Inidealism, the aim of education is to discover and develop each
individual's abilities and full moral excellence in order to better serve
society. The curricular emphasis is subject matter of mind: literature,
history, philosophy, and religion.
Most Important Fundamental Principles of Idealism are given below:
Question no.5
Explain the natural knowledge and revealed
knowledge.
Natural knowledge
Natural knowledge is that part of God’s knowledge
which He knows by His very nature or essence, and
since His essence is necessary, so is that which is
known through it. That is, the content of natural
knowledge includes all metaphysically necessary
truths. For example, the statement, “All bachelors are
unmarried” is both necessary and part of natural
knowledge. Other examples include other tautologies,
mathematical certainties (e.g., 1+1=2), and all
possibilities (since all possibilities are necessarily so).
Natural knowledge can therefore be thought of as
including a virtually infinite number of propositions of
the form, It is possible that p, as well as a number of
propositions of the form, It is the case that p. Thus,
natural knowledge, properly conceived, is that part of
God’s knowledge which could not have been different
from what it is. It follows from this fact that the content
of God’s natural knowledge is independent of His will;
God has no control over the truth of the propositions
He knows by natural knowledge. Consider, for
example, the mathematical truth, 1+1=2. No matter
what God wills, it will always be true that the concepts
represented by the symbols 1, 2, +, and =, when
arranged in a formulaic expression, one plus one
equals two. It is important to note that, because
natural knowledge is independent from God’s will and,
to some extent, places limits upon the kinds of things
God can do, natural knowledge informs(ed) God’s
decision(s) regarding His creative work. This also
means that natural knowledge is prevolitional.
Revealed knowledge
Certain behaviour, actions, philosophies, people, or
items are ‘good’ or ‘bad’ based upon the authoritative
word of some higher power. Sometimes this higher
power is an individual person or a group of people, such
as the ‘dear leader’ who is worshipped by the North
Korean proletariat. Other times it comes from a
supernatural entity, such as the ancient Israelites
believing that God gave Moses tens of thousands of
words governing personal conduct and society. A nation
that operates its government using almost entirely
revealed knowledge is Iran. Generally, the root of all
revealed knowledge is a deep-seated anxiety about the
world. That is its own essay that is far too expansive to
go into here.