Autonomy: The importance of a scientific theory in education reform
The six national goals established by the National Governors' Association for education reform in the 1990s were conceived by people who had the power to decide what outcomes they wanted based on their own values and priorities. Although it is impossible to avoid questions of values, it is nece...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Learning and individual differences 1993, Vol.5 (4), p.327-340 |
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description | The six national goals established by the National Governors' Association for education reform in the 1990s were conceived by people who had the power to decide what outcomes they wanted based on their own values and priorities. Although it is impossible to avoid questions of values, it is necessary in defining goals for education to consider scientific, explanatory theories about how human beings acquire knowledge and moral values. Jean Piaget's conceptualization of autonomy, in his unusual sense of the term, provides an overall aim for the development of individuals as well as of society, both in the intellectual and the moral realms. Autonomy as the aim of education is based on constructivism, a scientific theory, and would obviate the outdated conceptualization and contradictions among the six national goals. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/1041-6080(93)90016-L |
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subjects | Autonomy Constructivism Educational Policy Educational Reform Goals |
title | Autonomy: The importance of a scientific theory in education reform |
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