Paradigms of liberal education in a philosophical exploration of Daniel DeNicola

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18778/1689-4286.36.06

Keywords:

liberal education, general education, paradigms of liberal education, good life, human flourishing, learning, transmission of culture

Abstract

The text presents thoughts of American philosopher of education Daniel R. DeNicola on liberal education contained in his book under the title „Learning to Flourishing. A Philosophical Exploration of Liberal Education”, published in 2012. He describes education realised in American Liberal Arts Colleges. Analysing paradigms in which liberal education developed and created its long and differentiated tradition, starting from the transmission of culture up to the skills of learning, DeNicola argues that none of them lost their validity. Building the thin (not thick) normative theory of liberal education aimed at the flourishing life, he states that we can still recall them all and rebuild the sense of that education. Its axiological distinctive features are freedom, autonomy, democracy and truth. DeNicola’s proposition is worth of discussing in Polish pedagogy where the prevalent equivalent of liberal education is general education. The main aims of the text are to strengthen the philosophical argument in favour of understanding general education more linked to liberal education because of its liberal elements, consequently to renew the sense of education as whole and finally to strengthen didactics philosophically.

References

Berlin, Isaiah, 2004, Pokrzywione drzewo człowieczeństwa, przeł. Magda Pietrzak–Merda, Maciej Tański, Warszawa: Prószyński i S–ka.
View in Google Scholar

DeNicola, Daniel, 2012, Learning to Flourish. A Philosophical Exploration of Liberal Education, New York London: Continuum International Publishing Group.
View in Google Scholar

Dewey, John, 1997, Experience and Education, New York: Touchstone.
View in Google Scholar

Elzenberg, Henryk, 2005, Wartość i człowiek, Toruń: Wydawnictwo Naukowe UMK.
View in Google Scholar

Kohlberg, Lawrence, Mayer, Rochelle, 1993, Rozwój jako cel wychowania, [w:] Zbigniew Kwieciński, Lech Witkowski (red.), Spory o edukację. Dylematy i kontrowersje we współczesnych pedagogiach, Warszawa: Instytut Badań Edukacyjnych, ss. 51–95.
View in Google Scholar

Kozłowski, Władysław, 1932, Co i jak czytać?: wykształcenie samego siebie i czytelnictwo metodyczne, Warszawa: Gebethner i Wolff.
View in Google Scholar

Marrou, Henri–Irénée, 1969, Historia wychowania w starożytności, przeł. Stanisław Łoś, Warszawa: Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy.
View in Google Scholar

Mill, John Stuart, 1931, The Inaugural Address at St. Andrews, [w:] Francis Alexander Cavenagh (red.), James & John Stuart Mill on Education, Cambridge: University Press, ss. 132–208.
View in Google Scholar

Nussbaum, Martha, 2008, W trosce o człowieczeństwo. Klasyczna obrona reform kształcenia ogólnego, przeł. Astrid Męczkowska, Wrocław: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Dolnośląskiej Szkoły Wyższej.
View in Google Scholar

Oakeshott, Michael, 2001, The Voice of Liberal Learning, Indianapolis: Liberty Fund.
View in Google Scholar

Peters, Richard Stanley, 1964, Education as Initiation, London: Evans Bros., for University of London Institute of Education.
View in Google Scholar

Sajdak, Anna, 2013, Paradygmaty kształcenia studentów i wspierania rozwoju nauczycieli akademickich. Teoretyczne podstawy dydaktyki akademickiej, Kraków: Oficyna Wydawnicza „Impuls”.
View in Google Scholar

Whitehead, Alfred North, 1967, The Aims of Education and Other Essays, New York: Free Press.
View in Google Scholar

Wrońska, Katarzyna, 2014, „Liberal education” w Polsce. Między kształceniem ogólnym a edukacją liberalną, „Paedagogia Christiana”, 33, ss. 11–28.
View in Google Scholar

Wrońska, Katarzyna (red.), 2014, Liberal Education, “Paedagogia Christiana”, 33.
View in Google Scholar DOI: https://doi.org/10.12775/PCh.2014.001

Published

2017-03-30

How to Cite

Wrońska, K. (2017). Paradigms of liberal education in a philosophical exploration of Daniel DeNicola. Hybris, 36(1), 73–93. https://doi.org/10.18778/1689-4286.36.06