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An
Autonomous Educational Philosophy
Theoretical
Background
This educational philosophy is rooted in the epistemology or Karl Popper,
who proposed a new view of learning, no longer based on the inductive
view of learning, but on the premise that true instruction comes from
within.
"We do not discover new facts or new effects by copying them, or
by inferring them inductively from observation, or by any other method
of instruction by the environment. We use, rather, the method of trial
and the elimination of error. As Ernst Gombrich says, 'making comes before
matching': the active production of a new trial structure comes before
its exposure to eliminating tests." (The Myth of the Framework, pp.
8-9)
On such a theory, extrinsic motivation is ruled out as a totally ineffective
strategy for learning, rather intrinsic motivation and problem solving
are at the heart of learning,
The
theoretical basis of my educational philosophy is that:
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The child/learner is best placed to know what best suits her intrinsic
motivation to learn provided that she has a rich and stimulating environment
in which to operate as a learner.
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Learning should follow the child/learner's questions.
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The child is an active learner with her own unique set of interests,
concerns, questions and problems that she is actively addressing at
any moment. The role of education is to support this.
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The growth of knowledge is a creative and non-mechanical process within
the mind of the learner. An environment with access to a large range
of resources, conversation, experiences outside the home etc, is best
placed to nurture and facilitate this process.
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Education is about every aspect of learning, every opportunity for conjecture
and refutation. Autonomous education is about having the conditions
for self-direction within life. Autonomous education does not divide
life up into 'education' and 'not education'.
Mode
of Learning
As
an overall paradigm, the constructivist theory of learning is more supportive
of an autonomous style of education. In this theory emphasis is placed
on the learner and it is the learner who interacts with problems to construct
his/her own solutions and ideas. The autonomy and initiative of the student
is a given and learning is something which takes place in the learner's
mind rather than being transmitted from the outside. Conjecture and refutation
are essential features of learning and children are given the opportunity
to build on earlier ideas and knowledge. The emphasis of this theory is
not on the teaching, but on the learning and the process of learning is
more important than an end product. The constructivist theory of learning
is also more likely to operate well in real life situations.
Autonomy
and intrinsic motivation
Autonomy
is the right of self-government and free will. Education is the process
by which we develop intellectual potential and foster the growth of knowledge.
Education relies on a rational development of conjecture and refutation.
Autonomous education is simply that process by which knowledge grows because
of the intrinsic motivation of the individual. In fact, the core to understanding
autonomous education is in understanding the absolutely fundamental and
unshakeable role of intrinsic motivation.
Basic
Skills
It
is a core assumption of autonomous education that children will acquire
the skills they need to take advantage of their environment and pursue
their own aspirations. As such literacy and numeracy are not forced components
of a curriculum, but are outcomes within the process acquired in numerous
ways, both formal and informal, depending on the child's questions and
developing educational priorities. What could be more efficient than a
child learning something to suit his or her own intrinsic and individual
purposes?
Socialisation
The
combination of autonomy and learning in the real world with access to
a broad range of social experiences spanning all age groups has an enormously
positive influence on the socialisation process. In an autonomous learning
situation the delicate and complicated balance between being a social
creature and the growth of personal knowledge are not put under the enormous
and artificial pressures for conformity and homogeneity. Rather, the child
is supported in negotiating their own solutions to complex social situations.
Progress
Monitoring
and evaluation are not neutral tools, but effect the process they attempt
to analyse or describe. Any kind of monitoring that intrudes on the process
will tend to objectify education as a discrete part of life rather than
as an integral and inevitable element of life. What is therefore most
relevant to ensuring that progress will occur is that parents are highly
committed to ensuring that the child has every opportunity to pursue whatever
it is they want to pursue for as long as it is relevant to the child.
Autonomous learning takes place all the time, in all contexts and is efficient
by definition (see above)
The
aims of autonomous education are:
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To respects the child as a real person with a right to her own thoughts.
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To maximise the innate impulses to learn.
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To maximise children's opportunities to participate in real life contexts
for learning and to succeed in a modern society.
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To give full scope to successful learning systems. Particularly conversation
and multi media opportunities.
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To allow for undamaged emotional and personal development.
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To allow children to develop such abilities as being able to define
problems, ask hard questions, work independently, argue coherently and
use a wide range of thinking strategies.
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To establish a model for life long learning.
In
conclusion
- Autonomous
education is a valid system of education, which allows children and
young people to develop the lifelong habit of being self-directed and
intrinsically motivated learners.
- Autonomous
education takes as its premise the idea of instruction from within.
- Education
is the process by which we develop intellectually as our knowledge grows
and it relies on the rational development of conjecture and refutation.
Autonomous education is simply that process by which knowledge grows
because of the intrinsic motivation of the individual.
- The
core to understanding autonomous education is the primacy of intrinsic
motivation.
- Autonomous
education, in addition to being centred in the child's intrinsic motivation,
demands a broad definition of education, a step back from the products
and outcomes thinking of conventional education, a positive view of
children as creative and rational and an ability to conceive of problems
as having solutions.
- Autonomous
education does not have a list of essentials, but considers that children
will learn whatever they need to live the lives they choose and they
will do so at ages that suit their own particular and individual processes.
- Education
is not something that can be demarcated from the bulk of life, but rather
involves the whole of life, in both breadth and duration.
- Autonomous
education is not only theoretically supportable, but also a consistent
legal way for parents to discharge their duties to educate their children
under section 7 of the 1996 Education Act
- It
is the optimal approach for ensuring that a process of flexible, creative,
lifelong learning is set in motion.
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