This interactive guide on John Dewey is divided into several sections indicated by tabs at the top of the screen. This initial version of the guide emphasizes Progressive Education, since this was the primary major focus of the FLCoCT seminar. Future updates will include other areas of Dewey's prodigious thought and writings.
To navigate through the Guide, click on the tabs above to view those pages; the guide is divided into the following sections
Home: beginning page for this guide, with biographical and historical background on John Dewey
Books: monographs and reference sources on Dewey (available through the CCP Library)
Articles: online articles (via the Public or "Free Web") and Databases (via the CCP Library, or "Fee-based Web")
Web Sites and Blogs: selected web sites and blogs dealing with Dewey and his writings
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John Dewey (1859-1952)
"Education is not preparation for life; education is life itself." ~John Dewey
(Source: http://louisville.libguides.com/gov_education)
John Dewey was a major contributor in the late-19th and early to mid-20th century to a number of academic disciplines including education, philosophy and psychology. He "fought for civil and academic freedom, founded the Progressive School Movement...(and) promoted a scientific approach to intellectual development."(from Dover edition of How We Think (1910)). Dewey is also credited (along with William James) with being one of the developers of the philosophy of pragmatism and the founder of the field of functional psychology. In addition, he was a long-term member of the American Federtion of Teachers (AFT).
Here are links to a few biographical articles (and sites) on John Dewey:
An important factor in our analysis of Dewey's How We Think was the historical context for Dewey's writings, particularly a consideration of what it meant to be 'scientific' in the early part of the 20th century. Here are some historical highlights for Dewey's lifetime: the year that Dewey was born (1859), when he published How We Think (1910) and at the end of his life (1952).
1859
1910
1952
[Sources: Timetables of History (1991), Chronicle of the 20th Century (1987 ed.)]