PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION
Philosophy of Education
First published Mon Jun 2, 2008;
substantive revision Sun Oct 7, 2018
Philosophy of education is the
branch of applied or practical philosophy concerned with the nature and aims of
education and the philosophical problems arising from educational theory and
practice. Because that practice is ubiquitous in and across human societies,
its social and individual manifestations so varied, and its influence so
profound, the subject is wide-ranging, involving issues in ethics and
social/political philosophy, epistemology, metaphysics, philosophy of mind and
language, and other areas of philosophy. Because it looks both inward to the
parent discipline and outward to educational practice and the social, legal, and
institutional contexts in which it takes place, philosophy of education
concerns itself with both sides of the traditional theory/practice divide. Its
subject matter includes both basic philosophical issues (e.g., the nature of
the knowledge worth teaching, the character of educational equality and
justice, etc.) and problems concerning specific educational policies and
practices (e.g., the desirability of standardized curricula and testing, the
social, economic, legal and moral dimensions of specific funding arrangements,
the justification of curriculum decisions, etc.). In all this the philosopher
of education prizes conceptual clarity, argumentative rigor, the fair-minded
consideration of the interests of all involved in or affected by educational efforts
and arrangements, and informed and well-reasoned valuation of educational aims
and interventions.
Philosophy of education has a long
and distinguished history in the Western philosophical tradition, from
Socrates’ battles with the sophists to the present day. Many of the most
distinguished figures in that tradition incorporated educational concerns into
their broader philosophical agendas (Curren 2000, 2018; Rorty 1998). While that
history is not the focus here, it is worth noting that the ideals of reasoned
inquiry championed by Socrates and his descendants have long informed the view
that education should foster in all students, to the extent possible, the
disposition to seek reasons and the ability to evaluate them cogently, and to
be guided by their evaluations in matters of belief, action and judgment. This
view, that education centrally involves the fostering of reason or rationality,
has with varying articulations and qualifications been embraced by most of
those historical figures; it continues to be defended by contemporary
philosophers of education as well (Scheffler 1973 [1989]; Siegel 1988, 1997,
2007, 2017). As with any philosophical thesis it is controversial; some
dimensions of the controversy are explored below.
This entry is a selective survey of
important contemporary work in Anglophone philosophy of education; it does not
treat in detail recent scholarship outside that context.
- 1. Problems in Delineating the Field
- 2. Analytic Philosophy of Education and Its Influence
- 3. Areas of Contemporary Activity
- 3.1 The Content of the Curriculum and the Aims and Functions of Schooling
- 3.2 Social, Political and Moral Philosophy
- 3.3 Social Epistemology, Virtue Epistemology, and the Epistemology of Education
- 3.4 Philosophical Disputes Concerning Empirical Education Research
- 4. Concluding Remarks
- Bibliography
- Academic Tools
- Other Internet Resources
- Related Entries
1.
Problems in Delineating the Field
The inward/outward looking nature of
the field of philosophy of education alluded to above makes the task of
delineating the field, of giving an over-all picture of the intellectual
landscape, somewhat complicated (for a detailed account of this topography, see
Phillips 1985, 2010). Suffice it to say that some philosophers, as well as
focusing inward on the abstract philosophical issues that concern them, are
drawn outwards to discuss or comment on issues that are more commonly regarded
as falling within the purview of professional educators, educational
researchers, policy-makers and the like. (An example is Michael Scriven, who in
his early career was a prominent philosopher of science; later he became a
central figure in the development of the field of evaluation of educational and
social programs. See Scriven 1991a, 1991b.) At the same time, there are
professionals in the educational or closely related spheres who are drawn to
discuss one or another of the philosophical issues that they encounter in the
course of their work. (An example here is the behaviorist psychologist B.F.
Skinner, the central figure in the development of operant conditioning and
programmed learning, who in works such as Walden Two (1948) and Beyond
Freedom and Dignity (1972) grappled—albeit controversially—with major
philosophical issues that were related to his work.)
What makes the field even more
amorphous is the existence of works on educational topics, written by
well-regarded philosophers who have made major contributions to their
discipline; these educational reflections have little or no philosophical
content, illustrating the truth that philosophers do not always write
philosophy. However, despite this, works in this genre have often been treated
as contributions to philosophy of education. (Examples include John Locke’s Some
Thoughts Concerning Education [1693] and Bertrand Russell’s rollicking
pieces written primarily to raise funds to support a progressive school he ran
with his wife. (See Park 1965.)
Finally, as indicated earlier, the
domain of education is vast, the issues it raises are almost overwhelmingly
numerous and are of great complexity, and the social significance of the field
is second to none. These features make the phenomena and problems of education
of great interest to a wide range of socially-concerned intellectuals, who
bring with them their own favored conceptual frameworks—concepts, theories and
ideologies, methods of analysis and argumentation, metaphysical and other assumptions,
and the like. It is not surprising that scholars who work in this broad genre
also find a home in the field of philosophy of education.
As a result of these various
factors, the significant intellectual and social trends of the past few
centuries, together with the significant developments in philosophy, all have
had an impact on the content of arguments and methods of argumentation in
philosophy of education—Marxism, psycho-analysis, existentialism,
phenomenology, positivism, post-modernism, pragmatism, neo-liberalism, the
several waves of feminism, analytic philosophy in both its ordinary language
and more formal guises, are merely the tip of the iceberg.
2.
Analytic Philosophy of Education and Its Influence
Conceptual analysis, careful
assessment of arguments, the rooting out of ambiguity, the drawing of
clarifying distinctions—all of which are at least part of the philosophical
toolkit—have been respected activities within philosophy from the dawn of the
field. No doubt it somewhat over-simplifies the complex path of intellectual
history to suggest that what happened in the twentieth century—early on, in the
home discipline itself, and with a lag of a decade or more in philosophy of
education—is that philosophical analysis came to be viewed by some scholars as
being the major philosophical activity (or set of activities), or even as being
the only viable or reputable activity. In any case, as they gained
prominence and for a time hegemonic influence during the rise of analytic
philosophy early in the twentieth century analytic techniques came to dominate
philosophy of education in the middle third of that century (Curren, Robertson,
& Hager 2003).
The pioneering work in the modern
period entirely in an analytic mode was the short monograph by C.D. Hardie, Truth
and Fallacy in Educational Theory (1941; reissued in 1962). In his
Introduction, Hardie (who had studied with C.D. Broad and I.A. Richards) made
it clear that he was putting all his eggs into the ordinary-language-analysis
basket:
The Cambridge analytical school, led
by Moore, Broad and Wittgenstein, has attempted so to analyse propositions that
it will always be apparent whether the disagreement between philosophers is one
concerning matters of fact, or is one concerning the use of words, or is, as is
frequently the case, a purely emotive one. It is time, I think, that a similar
attitude became common in the field of educational theory. (Hardie 1962: xix)
About a decade after the end of the
Second World War the floodgates opened and a stream of work in the analytic
mode appeared; the following is merely a sample. D. J. O’Connor published An
Introduction to Philosophy of Education (1957) in which, among other
things, he argued that the word “theory” as it is used in educational contexts
is merely a courtesy title, for educational theories are nothing like what bear
this title in the natural sciences. Israel Scheffler, who became the paramount
philosopher of education in North America, produced a number of important works
including The Language of Education (1960), which contained clarifying
and influential analyses of definitions (he distinguished reportive,
stipulative, and programmatic types) and the logic of slogans (often these are
literally meaningless, and, he argued, should be seen as truncated arguments), Conditions
of Knowledge (1965), still the best introduction to the epistemological
side of philosophy of education, and Reason and Teaching (1973 [1989]),
which in a wide-ranging and influential series of essays makes the case for
regarding the fostering of rationality/critical thinking as a fundamental
educational ideal (cf. Siegel 2016). B. O. Smith and R. H. Ennis edited the
volume Language and Concepts in Education (1961); and R.D. Archambault
edited Philosophical Analysis and Education (1965), consisting of essays
by a number of prominent British writers, most notably R. S. Peters (whose
status in Britain paralleled that of Scheffler in the United States), Paul
Hirst, and John Wilson. Topics covered in the Archambault volume were typical
of those that became the “bread and butter” of analytic philosophy of education
(APE) throughout the English-speaking world—education as a process of
initiation, liberal education, the nature of knowledge, types of teaching, and
instruction versus indoctrination.
Among the most influential products
of APE was the analysis developed by Hirst and Peters (1970) and Peters (1973)
of the concept of education itself. Using as a touchstone “normal English
usage,” it was concluded that a person who has been educated (rather than
instructed or indoctrinated) has been (i) changed for the better; (ii) this
change has involved the acquisition of knowledge and intellectual skills and
the development of understanding; and (iii) the person has come to care for, or
be committed to, the domains of knowledge and skill into which he or she has
been initiated. The method used by Hirst and Peters comes across clearly in
their handling of the analogy with the concept of “reform”, one they sometimes
drew upon for expository purposes. A criminal who has been reformed has changed
for the better, and has developed a commitment to the new mode of life (if one
or other of these conditions does not hold, a speaker of standard English would
not say the criminal has been reformed). Clearly the analogy with reform breaks
down with respect to the knowledge and understanding conditions. Elsewhere
Peters developed the fruitful notion of “education as initiation”.
The concept of indoctrination was
also of great interest to analytic philosophers of education, for, it was
argued, getting clear about precisely what constitutes indoctrination also
would serve to clarify the border that demarcates it from acceptable
educational processes. Thus, whether or not an instructional episode was a case
of indoctrination was determined by the content taught, the intention of the
instructor, the methods of instruction used, the outcomes of the instruction,
or by some combination of these. Adherents of the different analyses used the
same general type of argument to make their case, namely, appeal to normal and
aberrant usage. Unfortunately, ordinary language analysis did not lead to
unanimity of opinion about where this border was located, and rival analyses of
the concept were put forward (Snook 1972). The danger of restricting analysis
to ordinary language (“normal English usage”) was recognized early on by
Scheffler, whose preferred view of analysis emphasized
first, its greater sophistication as
regards language, and the interpenetration of language and inquiry, second, its
attempt to follow the modern example of the sciences in empirical spirit, in
rigor, in attention to detail, in respect for alternatives, and in objectivity
of method, and third, its use of techniques of symbolic logic brought to full
development only in the last fifty years… It is…this union of scientific spirit
and logical method applied toward the clarification of basic ideas that
characterizes current analytic philosophy [and that ought to characterize analytic
philosophy of education]. (Scheffler 1973 [1989: 9–10])
After a period of dominance, for a
number of important reasons the influence of APE went into decline. First,
there were growing criticisms that the work of analytic philosophers of
education had become focused upon minutiae and in the main was bereft of
practical import. (It is worth noting that a 1966 article in Time,
reprinted in Lucas 1969, had put forward the same criticism of mainstream
philosophy.) Second, in the early 1970’s radical students in Britain accused
Peters’ brand of linguistic analysis of conservatism, and of tacitly giving
support to “traditional values”—they raised the issue of whose English usage
was being analyzed?
Third, criticisms of language
analysis in mainstream philosophy had been mounting for some time, and finally
after a lag of many years were reaching the attention of philosophers of
education; there even had been a surprising degree of interest on the part of
the general reading public in the United Kingdom as early as 1959, when Gilbert
Ryle, editor of the journal Mind, refused to commission a review of
Ernest Gellner’s Words and Things (1959)—a detailed and quite acerbic
critique of Wittgenstein’s philosophy and its espousal of ordinary language
analysis. (Ryle argued that Gellner’s book was too insulting, a view that drew
Bertrand Russell into the fray on Gellner’s side—in the daily press, no less;
Russell produced a list of insulting remarks drawn from the work of great
philosophers of the past. See Mehta 1963.)
Richard Peters had been given
warning that all was not well with APE at a conference in Canada in 1966; after
delivering a paper on “The aims of education: A conceptual inquiry” that was
based on ordinary language analysis, a philosopher in the audience (William
Dray) asked Peters “whose concepts do we analyze?” Dray went on to
suggest that different people, and different groups within society, have
different concepts of education. Five years before the radical students raised
the same issue, Dray pointed to the possibility that what Peters had presented
under the guise of a “logical analysis” was nothing but the favored usage of a
certain class of persons—a class that Peters happened to identify with (see
Peters 1973, where to the editor’s credit the interaction with Dray is
reprinted).
Fourth, during the decade of the
seventies when these various critiques of analytic philosophy were in the
process of eroding its luster, a spate of translations from the Continent
stimulated some philosophers of education in Britain and North America to set
out in new directions, and to adopt a new style of writing and argumentation.
Key works by Gadamer, Foucault and Derrida appeared in English, and these were
followed in 1984 by Lyotard’s The Postmodern Condition. The classic
works of Heidegger and Husserl also found new admirers; and feminist
philosophers of education were finding their voices—Maxine Greene published a
number of pieces in the 1970s and 1980s, including The Dialectic of Freedom
(1988); the influential book by Nel Noddings, Caring: A Feminine Approach to
Ethics and Moral Education, appeared the same year as the work by Lyotard,
followed a year later by Jane Roland Martin’s Reclaiming a Conversation.
In more recent years all these trends have continued. APE was and is no longer
the center of interest, although, as indicated below, it still retains its
voice.
3.
Areas of Contemporary Activity
As was stressed at the outset, the
field of education is huge and contains within it a virtually inexhaustible
number of issues that are of philosophical interest. To attempt comprehensive
coverage of how philosophers of education have been working within this thicket
would be a quixotic task for a large single volume and is out of the question
for a solitary encyclopedia entry. Nevertheless, a valiant attempt to give an
overview was made in A Companion to the Philosophy of Education (Curren
2003), which contains more than six-hundred pages divided into forty-five
chapters each of which surveys a subfield of work. The following random
selection of chapter topics gives a sense of the enormous scope of the field:
Sex education, special education, science education, aesthetic education,
theories of teaching and learning, religious education, knowledge, truth and
learning, cultivating reason, the measurement of learning, multicultural
education, education and the politics of identity, education and standards of
living, motivation and classroom management, feminism, critical theory,
postmodernism, romanticism, the purposes of universities, affirmative action in
higher education, and professional education. The Oxford Handbook of
Philosophy of Education (Siegel 2009) contains a similarly broad range of
articles on (among other things) the epistemic and moral aims of education,
liberal education and its imminent demise, thinking and reasoning, fallibilism
and fallibility, indoctrination, authenticity, the development of rationality,
Socratic teaching, educating the imagination, caring and empathy in moral
education, the limits of moral education, the cultivation of character, values
education, curriculum and the value of knowledge, education and democracy, art
and education, science education and religious toleration, constructivism and
scientific methods, multicultural education, prejudice, authority and the
interests of children, and on pragmatist, feminist, and postmodernist
approaches to philosophy of education.
Given this enormous range, there is
no non-arbitrary way to select a small number of topics for further discussion,
nor can the topics that are chosen be pursued in great depth. The choice of
those below has been made with an eye to highlighting contemporary work that
makes solid contact with and contributes to important discussions in general
philosophy and/or the academic educational and educational research
communities.
3.1
The Content of the Curriculum and the Aims and Functions of Schooling
The issue of what should be taught
to students at all levels of education—the issue of curriculum
content—obviously is a fundamental one, and it is an extraordinarily difficult
one with which to grapple. In tackling it, care needs to be taken to
distinguish between education and schooling—for although education can occur in
schools, so can mis-education, and many other things can take place there that
are educationally orthogonal (such as the provision of free or subsidized
lunches and the development of social networks); and it also must be recognized
that education can occur in the home, in libraries and museums, in churches and
clubs, in solitary interaction with the public media, and the like.
In developing a curriculum (whether
in a specific subject area, or more broadly as the whole range of offerings in
an educational institution or system), a number of difficult decisions need to
be made. Issues such as the proper ordering or sequencing of topics in the
chosen subject, the time to be allocated to each topic, the lab work or
excursions or projects that are appropriate for particular topics, can all be
regarded as technical issues best resolved either by educationists who have a
depth of experience with the target age group or by experts in the psychology
of learning and the like. But there are deeper issues, ones concerning the
validity of the justifications that have been given for including/excluding
particular subjects or topics in the offerings of formal educational
institutions. (Why should evolution or creation “science” be included, or
excluded, as a topic within the standard high school subject Biology? Is the
justification that is given for teaching Economics in some schools coherent and
convincing? Do the justifications for including/excluding materials on birth
control, patriotism, the Holocaust or wartime atrocities in the curriculum in
some school districts stand up to critical scrutiny?)
The different justifications for
particular items of curriculum content that have been put forward by
philosophers and others since Plato’s pioneering efforts all draw, explicitly
or implicitly, upon the positions that the respective theorists hold about at
least three sets of issues.
First, what are the aims and/or
functions of education (aims and functions are not necessarily the same)? Many
aims have been proposed; a short list includes the production of knowledge and
knowledgeable students, the fostering of curiosity and inquisitiveness, the
enhancement of understanding, the enlargement of the imagination, the
civilizing of students, the fostering of rationality and/or autonomy, and the
development in students of care, concern and associated dispositions and
attitudes (see Siegel 2007 for a longer list). The justifications offered for
all such aims have been controversial, and alternative justifications of a
single proposed aim can provoke philosophical controversy. Consider the aim of
autonomy. Aristotle asked, what constitutes the good life and/or human
flourishing, such that education should foster these (Curren 2013)? These two
formulations are related, for it is arguable that our educational institutions
should aim to equip individuals to pursue this good life—although this is not
obvious, both because it is not clear that there is one conception of the good
or flourishing life that is the good or flourishing life for everyone, and it
is not clear that this is a question that should be settled in advance rather
than determined by students for themselves. Thus, for example, if our view of
human flourishing includes the capacity to think and act autonomously, then the
case can be made that educational institutions—and their curricula—should aim
to prepare, or help to prepare, autonomous individuals. A rival justification
of the aim of autonomy, associated with Kant, champions the educational
fostering of autonomy not on the basis of its contribution to human
flourishing, but rather the obligation to treat students with respect as
persons (Scheffler 1973 [1989]; Siegel 1988). Still others urge the fostering
of autonomy on the basis of students’ fundamental interests, in ways that draw
upon both Aristotelian and Kantian conceptual resources (Brighouse 2005, 2009).
It is also possible to reject the fostering of autonomy as an educational aim
(Hand 2006).
Assuming that the aim can be
justified, how students should be helped to become autonomous or develop a
conception of the good life and pursue it is of course not immediately obvious,
and much philosophical ink has been spilled on the general question of how best
to determine curriculum content. One influential line of argument was developed
by Paul Hirst, who argued that knowledge is essential for developing and then
pursuing a conception of the good life, and because logical analysis shows, he
argued, that there are seven basic forms of knowledge, the case can be made
that the function of the curriculum is to introduce students to each of these
forms (Hirst 1965; see Phillips 1987: ch. 11). Another, suggested by Scheffler,
is that curriculum content should be selected so as “to help the learner attain
maximum self-sufficiency as economically as possible.” The relevant sorts of
economy include those of resources, teacher effort, student effort, and the
generalizability or transfer value of content, while the self-sufficiency in
question includes
self-awareness, imaginative weighing
of alternative courses of action, understanding of other people’s choices and
ways of life, decisiveness without rigidity, emancipation from stereotyped ways
of thinking and perceiving…empathy… intuition, criticism and independent
judgment. (Scheffler 1973 [1989: 123–5])
Both impose important constraints on
the curricular content to be taught.
Second, is it justifiable to treat
the curriculum of an educational institution as a vehicle for furthering the
socio-political interests and goals of a dominant group, or any particular
group, including one’s own; and relatedly, is it justifiable to design the
curriculum so that it serves as an instrument of control or of social
engineering? In the closing decades of the twentieth century there were
numerous discussions of curriculum theory, particularly from Marxist and postmodern
perspectives, that offered the sobering analysis that in many educational
systems, including those in Western democracies, the curriculum did indeed
reflect and serve the interests of powerful cultural elites. What to do about
this situation (if it is indeed the situation of contemporary educational
institutions) is far from clear and is the focus of much work at the interface
of philosophy of education and social/political philosophy, some of which is
discussed in the next section. A closely related question is this: ought
educational institutions be designed to further pre-determined social ends, or
rather to enable students to competently evaluate all such ends? Scheffler
argued that we should opt for the latter: we must
surrender the idea of shaping or
molding the mind of the pupil. The function of education…is rather to liberate
the mind, strengthen its critical powers, [and] inform it with knowledge and
the capacity for independent inquiry. (Scheffler 1973 [1989: 139])
Third, should educational programs
at the elementary and secondary levels be made up of a number of disparate
offerings, so that individuals with different interests and abilities and
affinities for learning can pursue curricula that are suitable? Or should every
student pursue the same curriculum as far as each is able?—a curriculum, it
should be noted, that in past cases nearly always was based on the needs or
interests of those students who were academically inclined or were destined for
elite social roles. Mortimer Adler and others in the late twentieth century
sometimes used the aphorism “the best education for the best is the best
education for all.”
The thinking here can be explicated
in terms of the analogy of an out-of-control virulent disease, for which there
is only one type of medicine available; taking a large dose of this medicine is
extremely beneficial, and the hope is that taking only a little—while less
effective—is better than taking none at all. Medically, this is dubious, while
the educational version—forcing students to work, until they exit the system,
on topics that do not interest them and for which they have no facility or
motivation—has even less merit. (For a critique of Adler and his Paideia
Proposal, see Noddings 2015.) It is interesting to compare the modern “one
curriculum track for all” position with Plato’s system outlined in the Republic,
according to which all students—and importantly this included girls—set out on
the same course of study. Over time, as they moved up the educational ladder it
would become obvious that some had reached the limit imposed upon them by
nature, and they would be directed off into appropriate social roles in which
they would find fulfillment, for their abilities would match the demands of
these roles. Those who continued on with their education would eventually
become members of the ruling class of Guardians.
3.2
Social, Political and Moral Philosophy
The publication of John Rawls’s A
Theory of Justice in 1971 was the most notable event in the history of
political philosophy over the last century. The book spurred a period of
ferment in political philosophy that included, among other things, new research
on educationally fundamental themes. The principles of justice in educational
distribution have perhaps been the dominant theme in this literature, and
Rawls’s influence on its development has been pervasive.
Rawls’s theory of justice made
so-called “fair equality of opportunity” one of its constitutive principles.
Fair equality of opportunity entailed that the distribution of education would
not put the children of those who currently occupied coveted social positions
at any competitive advantage over other, equally talented and motivated
children seeking the qualifications for those positions (Rawls 1971: 72–75).
Its purpose was to prevent socio-economic differences from hardening into
social castes that were perpetuated across generations. One obvious criticism
of fair equality of opportunity is that it does not prohibit an educational
distribution that lavished resources on the most talented children while
offering minimal opportunities to others. So long as untalented students from
wealthy families were assigned opportunities no better than those available to
their untalented peers among the poor, no breach of the principle would occur.
Even the most moderate egalitarians might find such a distributive regime to be
intuitively repugnant.
Repugnance might be mitigated
somewhat by the ways in which the overall structure of Rawls’s conception of
justice protects the interests of those who fare badly in educational
competition. All citizens must enjoy the same basic liberties, and equal
liberty always has moral priority over equal opportunity: the former can never
be compromised to advance the latter. Further, inequality in the distribution
of income and wealth are permitted only to the degree that it serves the
interests of the least advantaged group in society. But even with these
qualifications, fair equality of opportunity is arguably less than really fair
to anyone. The fact that their education should secure ends other than access
to the most selective social positions—ends such as artistic appreciation, the
kind of self-knowledge that humanistic study can furnish, or civic virtue—is
deemed irrelevant according to Rawls’s principle. But surely it is relevant,
given that a principle of educational justice must be responsive to the full
range of educationally important goods.
Suppose we revise our account of the
goods included in educational distribution so that aesthetic appreciation, say,
and the necessary understanding and virtue for conscientious citizenship count
for just as much as job-related skills. An interesting implication of doing so
is that the rationale for requiring equality under any just distribution
becomes decreasingly clear. That is because job-related skills are positional
whereas the other educational goods are not (Hollis 1982). If you and I both
aspire to a career in business management for which we are equally qualified,
any increase in your job-related skills is a corresponding disadvantage to me
unless I can catch up. Positional goods have a competitive structure by
definition, though the ends of civic or aesthetic education do not fit that
structure. If you and I aspire to be good citizens and are equal in civic
understanding and virtue, an advance in your civic education is no disadvantage
to me. On the contrary, it is easier to be a good citizen the better other
citizens learn to be. At the very least, so far as non-positional goods figure
in our conception of what counts as a good education, the moral stakes of
inequality are thereby lowered.
In fact, an emerging alternative to
fair equality of opportunity is a principle that stipulates some benchmark of
adequacy in achievement or opportunity as the relevant standard of
distribution. But it is misleading to represent this as a contrast between
egalitarian and sufficientarian conceptions. Philosophically serious
interpretations of adequacy derive from the ideal of equal citizenship (Satz
2007; Anderson 2007). Then again, fair equality of opportunity in Rawls’s
theory is derived from a more fundamental ideal of equality among citizens.
This was arguably true in A Theory of Justice but it is certainly true
in his later work (Dworkin 1977: 150–183; Rawls 1993). So, both Rawls’s
principle and the emerging alternative share an egalitarian foundation. The
debate between adherents of equal opportunity and those misnamed as
sufficientarians is certainly not over (e.g., Brighouse & Swift 2009;
Jacobs 2010; Warnick 2015). Further progress will likely hinge on explicating
the most compelling conception of the egalitarian foundation from which
distributive principles are to be inferred. Another Rawls-inspired alternative
is that a “prioritarian” distribution of achievement or opportunity might turn
out to be the best principle we can come up with—i.e., one that favors the
interests of the least advantaged students (Schouten 2012).
The publication of Rawls’s Political
Liberalism in 1993 signaled a decisive turning point in his thinking about
justice. In his earlier book, the theory of justice had been presented as if it
were universally valid. But Rawls had come to think that any theory of justice
presented as such was open to reasonable rejection. A more circumspect approach
to justification would seek grounds for justice as fairness in an overlapping
consensus between the many reasonable values and doctrines that thrive in a
democratic political culture. Rawls argued that such a culture is informed by a
shared ideal of free and equal citizenship that provided a new, distinctively
democratic framework for justifying a conception of justice. The shift to
political liberalism involved little revision on Rawls’s part to the content of
the principles he favored. But the salience it gave to questions about
citizenship in the fabric of liberal political theory had important educational
implications. How was the ideal of free and equal citizenship to be
instantiated in education in a way that accommodated the range of reasonable
values and doctrines encompassed in an overlapping consensus? Political
Liberalism has inspired a range of answers to that question (cf. Callan
1997; Clayton 2006; Bull 2008).
Other philosophers besides Rawls in
the 1990s took up a cluster of questions about civic education, and not always
from a liberal perspective. Alasdair Macintyre’s After Virtue (1984)
strongly influenced the development of communitarian political theory which, as
its very name might suggest, argued that the cultivation of community could
preempt many of the problems with conflicting individual rights at the core of
liberalism. As a full-standing alternative to liberalism, communitarianism
might have little to recommend it. But it was a spur for liberal philosophers
to think about how communities could be built and sustained to support the more
familiar projects of liberal politics (e.g., Strike 2010). Furthermore, its
arguments often converged with those advanced by feminist exponents of the
ethic of care (Noddings 1984; Gilligan 1982). Noddings’ work is particularly
notable because she inferred a cogent and radical agenda for the reform of
schools from her conception of care (Noddings 1992).
One persistent controversy in
citizenship theory has been about whether patriotism is correctly deemed a
virtue, given our obligations to those who are not our fellow citizens in an
increasingly interdependent world and the sordid history of xenophobia with
which modern nation states are associated. The controversy is partly about what
we should teach in our schools and is commonly discussed by philosophers in
that context (Galston 1991; Ben-Porath 2006; Callan 2006; Miller 2007; Curren
& Dorn 2018). The controversy is related to a deeper and more pervasive
question about how morally or intellectually taxing the best conception of our
citizenship should be. The more taxing it is, the more constraining its
derivative conception of civic education will be. Contemporary political
philosophers offer divergent arguments about these matters. For example,
Gutmann and Thompson claim that citizens of diverse democracies need to
“understand the diverse ways of life of their fellow citizens” (Gutmann &
Thompson 1996: 66). The need arises from the obligation of reciprocity which they
(like Rawls) believe to be integral to citizenship. Because I must seek to
cooperate with others politically on terms that make sense from their
moral perspective as well as my own, I must be ready to enter that perspective
imaginatively so as to grasp its distinctive content. Many such perspectives
prosper in liberal democracies, and so the task of reciprocal understanding is
necessarily onerous. Still, our actions qua deliberative citizen must be
grounded in such reciprocity if political cooperation on terms acceptable to us
as (diversely) morally motivated citizens is to be possible at all. This is
tantamount to an imperative to think autonomously inside the role of citizen
because I cannot close-mindedly resist critical consideration of moral views alien
to my own without flouting my responsibilities as a deliberative citizen.
Civic education does not exhaust the
domain of moral education, even though the more robust conceptions of equal
citizenship have far-reaching implications for just relations in civil society
and the family. The study of moral education has traditionally taken its
bearings from normative ethics rather than political philosophy, and this is
largely true of work undertaken in recent decades. The major development here
has been the revival of virtue ethics as an alternative to the deontological
and consequentialist theories that dominated discussion for much of the
twentieth century.
The defining idea of virtue ethics
is that our criterion of moral right and wrong must derive from a conception of
how the ideally virtuous agent would distinguish between the two. Virtue ethics
is thus an alternative to both consequentialism and deontology which locate the
relevant criterion in producing good consequences or meeting the requirements
of moral duty respectively. The debate about the comparative merits of these
theories is not resolved, but from an educational perspective that may be less
important than it has sometimes seemed to antagonists in the debate. To be
sure, adjudicating between rival theories in normative ethics might shed light
on how best to construe the process of moral education, and philosophical
reflection on the process might help us to adjudicate between the theories.
There has been extensive work on habituation and virtue, largely inspired by
Aristotle (Burnyeat 1980; Peters 1981). But whether this does anything to
establish the superiority of virtue ethics over its competitors is far from
obvious. Other aspects of moral education—in particular, the paired processes
of role-modelling and identification—deserve much more scrutiny than they have
received (Audi 2017; Kristjánsson 2015, 2017).
3.3
Social Epistemology, Virtue Epistemology, and the Epistemology of Education
Related to the issues concerning the
aims and functions of education and schooling rehearsed above are those
involving the specifically epistemic aims of education and attendant
issues treated by social and virtue epistemologists. (The papers collected in
Kotzee 2013 and Baehr 2016 highlight the current and growing interactions among
social epistemologists, virtue epistemologists, and philosophers of education.)
There is, first, a lively debate
concerning putative epistemic aims. Alvin Goldman argues that truth (or
knowledge understood in the “weak” sense of true belief) is the fundamental
epistemic aim of education (Goldman 1999). Others, including the majority of
historically significant philosophers of education, hold that critical
thinking or rationality and rational belief (or knowledge in the
“strong” sense that includes justification) is the basic epistemic educational
aim (Bailin & Siegel 2003; Scheffler 1965, 1973 [1989]; Siegel 1988, 1997,
2005, 2017). Catherine Z. Elgin (1999a,b) and Duncan Pritchard (2013, 2016;
Carter & Pritchard 2017) have independently urged that understanding
is the basic aim. Pritchard’s view combines understanding with intellectual
virtue; Jason Baehr (2011) systematically defends the fostering of the
intellectual virtues as the fundamental epistemic aim of education. This
cluster of views continues to engender ongoing discussion and debate. (Its
complex literature is collected in Carter and Kotzee 2015, summarized in Siegel
2018, and helpfully analyzed in Watson 2016.)
A further controversy concerns the
places of testimony and trust in the classroom: In what
circumstances if any ought students to trust their teachers’ pronouncements,
and why? Here the epistemology of education is informed by social epistemology,
specifically the epistemology of testimony; the familiar reductionism/anti-reductionism
controversy there is applicable to students and teachers. Anti-reductionists,
who regard testimony as a basic source of justification, may with equanimity
approve of students’ taking their teachers’ word at face value and believing
what they say; reductionists may balk. Does teacher testimony itself constitute
good reason for student belief?
The correct answer here seems
clearly enough to be “it depends”. For very young children who have yet to
acquire or develop the ability to subject teacher declarations to critical
scrutiny, there seems to be little alternative to accepting what their teachers
tell them. For older and more cognitively sophisticated students there seem to
be more options: they can assess them for plausibility, compare them with other
opinions, assess the teachers’ proffered reasons, subject them to independent
evaluation, etc. Regarding “the teacher says that p” as itself a good
reason to believe it appears moreover to contravene the widely shared
conviction that an important educational aim is helping students to become able
to evaluate candidate beliefs for themselves and believe accordingly. That
said, all sides agree that sometimes believers, including students, have good
reasons simply to trust what others tell them. There is thus more work to do
here by both social epistemologists and philosophers of education (for further
discussion see Goldberg 2013; Siegel 2005, 2018).
A further cluster of questions, of
long-standing interest to philosophers of education, concerns indoctrination:
How if at all does it differ from legitimate teaching? Is it inevitable, and if
so is it not always necessarily bad? First, what is it? As we saw earlier,
extant analyses focus on the aims or intentions of the
indoctrinator, the methods employed, or the content transmitted.
If the indoctrination is successful, all have the result that students/victims
either don’t, won’t, or can’t subject the indoctrinated material to proper
epistemic evaluation. In this way it produces both belief that is evidentially
unsupported or contravened and uncritical dispositions to believe. It might
seem obvious that indoctrination, so understood, is educationally undesirable.
But it equally seems that very young children, at least, have no alternative
but to believe sans evidence; they have yet to acquire the dispositions
to seek and evaluate evidence, or the abilities to recognize evidence or
evaluate it. Thus we seem driven to the views that indoctrination is both
unavoidable and yet bad and to be avoided. It is not obvious how this conundrum
is best handled. One option is to distinguish between acceptable and
unacceptable indoctrination. Another is to distinguish between indoctrination
(which is always bad) and non-indoctrinating belief inculcation, the latter being
such that students are taught some things without reasons (the alphabet, the
numbers, how to read and count, etc.), but in such a way that critical
evaluation of all such material (and everything else) is prized and fostered
(Siegel 1988: ch. 5). In the end the distinctions required by the two options
might be extensionally equivalent (Siegel 2018).
Education, it is generally granted,
fosters belief: in the typical propositional case, Smith teaches Jones
that p, and if all goes well Jones learns it and comes to believe it.
Education also has the task of fostering open-mindedness and an
appreciation of our fallibility: All the theorists mentioned thus far,
especially those in the critical thinking and intellectual virtue camps, urge
their importance. But these two might seem at odds. If Jones (fully) believes
that p, can she also be open-minded about it? Can she believe, for
example, that earthquakes are caused by the movements of tectonic plates, while
also believing that perhaps they aren’t? This cluster of italicized notions
requires careful handling; it is helpfully discussed by Jonathan Adler (2002,
2003), who recommends regarding the latter two as meta-attitudes concerning
one’s first-order beliefs rather than lessened degrees of belief or commitments
to those beliefs.
Other traditional epistemological
worries that impinge upon the epistemology of education concern (a) absolutism,
pluralism and relativism with respect to knowledge, truth and
justification as these relate to what is taught, (b) the character and status
of group epistemologies and the prospects for understanding such
epistemic goods “universalistically” in the face of “particularist” challenges,
(c) the relation between “knowledge-how” and “knowledge-that” and their
respective places in the curriculum, (d) concerns raised by multiculturalism
and the inclusion/exclusion of marginalized perspectives in curriculum content
and the classroom, and (e) further issues concerning teaching and learning.
(There is more here than can be briefly summarized; for more references and
systematic treatment cf. Bailin & Siegel 2003; Carter & Kotzee 2015;
Cleverley & Phillips 1986; Robertson 2009; Siegel 2004, 2017; and Watson
2016.)
3.4
Philosophical Disputes Concerning Empirical Education Research
The educational research enterprise
has been criticized for a century or more by politicians, policymakers,
administrators, curriculum developers, teachers, philosophers of education, and
by researchers themselves—but the criticisms have been contradictory. Charges of
being “too ivory tower and theory-oriented” are found alongside “too focused on
practice and too atheoretical”; but in light of the views of John Dewey and
William James that the function of theory is to guide intelligent practice and
problem-solving, it is becoming more fashionable to hold that the “theory v.
practice” dichotomy is a false one. (For an illuminating account of the
historical development of educational research and its tribulations, see
Lagemann 2000.)
A similar trend can be discerned
with respect to the long warfare between two rival groups of research
methods—on one hand quantitative/statistical approaches to research, and on the
other hand the qualitative/ethnographic family. (The choice of labels here is
not entirely risk-free, for they have been contested; furthermore the first
approach is quite often associated with “experimental” studies, and the latter
with “case studies”, but this is an over-simplification.) For several decades
these two rival methodological camps were treated by researchers and a few
philosophers of education as being rival paradigms (Kuhn’s ideas, albeit in a
very loose form, have been influential in the field of educational research),
and the dispute between them was commonly referred to as “the paradigm wars”. In
essence the issue at stake was epistemological: members of the
quantitative/experimental camp believed that only their methods could lead to
well-warranted knowledge claims, especially about the causal factors at play in
educational phenomena, and on the whole they regarded qualitative methods as
lacking in rigor; on the other hand the adherents of qualitative/ethnographic
approaches held that the other camp was too “positivistic” and was operating
with an inadequate view of causation in human affairs—one that ignored the role
of motives and reasons, possession of relevant background knowledge, awareness
of cultural norms, and the like. Few if any commentators in the “paradigm wars”
suggested that there was anything prohibiting the use of both approaches in the
one research program—provided that if both were used, they were used only
sequentially or in parallel, for they were underwritten by different
epistemologies and hence could not be blended together. But recently the trend
has been towards rapprochement, towards the view that the two methodological
families are, in fact, compatible and are not at all like paradigms in the
Kuhnian sense(s) of the term; the melding of the two approaches is often called
“mixed methods research”, and it is growing in popularity. (For more detailed
discussion of these “wars” see Howe 2003 and Phillips 2009.)
The most lively contemporary debates
about education research, however, were set in motion around the turn of the
millennium when the US Federal Government moved in the direction of funding
only rigorously scientific educational research—the kind that could establish
causal factors which could then guide the development of practically effective
policies. (It was held that such a causal knowledge base was available for medical
decision-making.) The definition of “rigorously scientific”, however, was
decided by politicians and not by the research community, and it was given in
terms of the use of a specific research method—the net effect being that the
only research projects to receive Federal funding were those that carried out
randomized controlled experiments or field trials (RFTs). It has become common
over the last decade to refer to the RFT as the “gold standard” methodology.
The National Research Council
(NRC)—an arm of the US National Academies of Science—issued a report,
influenced by postpostivistic philosophy of science (NRC 2002), that argued
that this criterion was far too narrow. Numerous essays have appeared
subsequently that point out how the “gold standard” account of scientific rigor
distorts the history of science, how the complex nature of the relation between
evidence and policy-making has been distorted and made to appear overly simple
(for instance the role of value-judgments in linking empirical findings to
policy directives is often overlooked), and qualitative researchers have
insisted upon the scientific nature of their work. Nevertheless, and possibly
because it tried to be balanced and supported the use of RFTs in some research
contexts, the NRC report has been the subject of symposia in four journals,
where it has been supported by a few and attacked from a variety of
philosophical fronts: Its authors were positivists, they erroneously believed
that educational inquiry could be value neutral and that it could ignore the
ways in which the exercise of power constrains the research process, they
misunderstood the nature of educational phenomena, and so on. This cluster of
issues continues to be debated by educational researchers and by philosophers
of education and of science, and often involves basic topics in philosophy of
science: the constitution of warranting evidence, the nature of theories and of
confirmation and explanation, etc. Nancy Cartwright’s important recent work on
causation, evidence, and evidence-based policy adds layers of both
philosophical sophistication and real world practical analysis to the central
issues just discussed (Cartwright & Hardie 2012, Cartwright 2013; cf.
Kvernbekk 2015 for an overview of the controversies regarding evidence in the
education and philosophy of education literatures).
4.
Concluding Remarks
As stressed earlier, it is
impossible to do justice to the whole field of philosophy of education in a
single encyclopedia entry. Different countries around the world have their own
intellectual traditions and their own ways of institutionalizing philosophy of
education in the academic universe, and no discussion of any of this appears in
the present essay. But even in the Anglo-American world there is such a
diversity of approaches that any author attempting to produce a synoptic
account will quickly run into the borders of his or her competence. Clearly
this has happened in the present case.
Fortunately, in the last thirty
years or so resources have become available that significantly alleviate these
problems. There has been a flood of encyclopedia entries, both on the field as
a whole and also on many specific topics not well-covered in the present essay
(see, as a sample, Burbules 1994; Chambliss 1996b; Curren 1998, 2018; Phillips
1985, 2010; Siegel 2007; Smeyers 1994), two “Encyclopedias” (Chambliss 1996a;
Phillips 2014), a “Guide” (Blake, Smeyers, Smith, & Standish 2003), a
“Companion” (Curren 2003), two “Handbooks” (Siegel 2009; Bailey, Barrow, Carr,
& McCarthy 2010), a comprehensive anthology (Curren 2007), a dictionary of
key concepts in the field (Winch & Gingell 1999), and a good textbook or
two (Carr 2003; Noddings 2015). In addition there are numerous volumes both of
reprinted selections and of specially commissioned essays on specific topics,
some of which were given short shrift here (for another sampling see A. Rorty
1998, Stone 1994), and several international journals, including Theory and
Research in Education, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Educational
Theory, Studies in Philosophy and Education, and Educational
Philosophy and Theory. Thus there is more than enough material available to
keep the interested reader busy.
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Acknowledgments
The authors and editors would like
to thank Randall Curren for sending a number of constructive suggestions for
the Summer 2018 update of this entry.
Copyright
© 2018 by
Harvey Siegel <hsiegel@miami.edu>
D.C. Phillips <dcpphd@stanford.edu>
Eamonn Callan <ecallan@stanford.edu>
Harvey Siegel <hsiegel@miami.edu>
D.C. Phillips <dcpphd@stanford.edu>
Eamonn Callan <ecallan@stanford.edu>
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