Whitehead and a new look at teaching elementary science |
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Authors: | Robert S Brumbaugh |
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Institution: | (1) Present address: Dept. of Philosophy, Yale University, 150 Ridgewood Avenue, 06473 North Haven, CT, USA |
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Abstract: | If Whitehead is right, science teachers who try to increase student interest by making the science they teach more pure and by covering more material are going about their work in just the wrong way. Science, for purposes of precision in measurement, translates the dynamic world of feeling and force, of causal efficacy (for example, the San Francisco earthquake), into a static representation spatialized and given presentational immediacy (for example, the Richter scale). But notice that the Richter scale isn't very interesting (even as abstract art) apart from its connection, via symbolic reference, to the earthquake. Such reference is essential to give both a sense of reality and a feeling of interes to the subject, but it makes the science less pure, and it takes more time to cover the material. An example of teaching pure and impure formal logic is given as a case study. |
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Keywords: | education science teaching curriculum interests measurement motivation Whitehead covering the material causal efficacy presentational immediacy symbolic reference |
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