ABSTRACT

Constructing Pragmatist Knowledge reintroduces an explicit and systematic philosophical approach to education through American Pragmatism, expanding and detailing the practice of pragmatism itself for practitioners across various fields of social action.

While a number of theorists are referenced, it focuses on the work of the original pragmatists Charles Sanders Peirce, William James, John Dewey, George Herbert Mead and Jane Addams. It is written in a narrative style and connects personal and professional experience of the author with philosophical description, analysis and explanation. Major themes of pragmatism are encountered throughout involving knowledge, experience, inquiry, social acts, dialectic and contradiction, giving rise to human constructs of values, moral conduct and bricolage. Reintroducing pragmatism and epistemology as the focus of teaching and learning heralds revolutionary and democratic change for education systems worldwide and corrects neoliberal tendencies that impose anti-educational ideological, economic and political distortions.

This book will be of interest to academics, graduate students, teachers and pre-service teachers, policy makers and researchers in education, philosophy, sociology and epistemology.

part I|54 pages

Beginning practices

chapter 1|13 pages

Philosophy and democratic society

chapter 2|13 pages

Immersion in beach inquiries

chapter 3|13 pages

Thinking about science and the universe

chapter 4|13 pages

Activism and the Vietnam War

part II|54 pages

Transitional practices

chapter 5|13 pages

Confusions of teaching and curriculum

chapter 6|12 pages

Teacher unionism, then and now

chapter 7|14 pages

Community participation in education

chapter 8|13 pages

Educational policy-making

part III|59 pages

Theorising practices

chapter 10|15 pages

Corruption of higher education

chapter 11|12 pages

Collapse of the political left

chapter 12|14 pages

Critical bricolage

Closing the circle of practice-theorising

chapter |1 pages

Poem