Precursor of Didactics
Precursor of Didactics
In the seventeenth century, a time when the church exerted great influence on people's lives.
people and that, and where we have Comênio. According to Norodawski (2004) there was not
concern about the way of teaching, there was no concern about how to teach,
what content to teach. The teaching was verbal and dogmatic, there were no books nor
A clear explanation, the studies were memorized and mechanically repeated.
Clero taught and the teaching was for the intellectuals, there was no concern for
As it is to teach, he was a teacher who taught a group of people.
Comenius, a Theco educator and Protestant pastor, was the first to write works.
classics on didactics, he was the first educator to propose an institution, he
he envisioned the school as the classroom. For him, education was a right for all, where
he lived in a time when only a few had that right. For Comenius, the
man must be educated according to his natural development, he divided the
study by age, this model we still saw today in schools, separating,
contents suitable for a certain age, at the time there wasn't a teacher
separated for home age. At the time, teaching an adult and a child was the
same thing, but Comênio creates a teaching proposal, to teach everyone but
separate, a teacher for a specific class always the same and the teaching was
sequential.
The purpose of education for Comenius (1657) was to lead to eternal happiness with
God promotes the regeneration of human life through wisdom, morality and
religion, thus being a natural right of all. The main task of didactics would be
study the characteristics and corresponding teaching methods of
natural development of men and the studied things. Education would promote the
sensitive perception of things through direct observation, of the recording of
impressions, in such a way that teaching needed to be planned so that it could be taught
one thing at a time, and that way, the child could understand it, for it to start
always from knowledge to the unknown to the unknown (LIBANESE, 1994).
Comenius proposes that the teacher should make a great effort for the student
would like to learn, needing to intervene with the student, bringing them closer to the ideal of
He appeals to the authorities to ensure that there are resources and
investments in schools for underprivileged people.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
Rousseau (1712 to 1778) was a French philosopher who lived in the century, and is considered the father of
modern pedagogy for proposing a new conception of childhood. At that time, the
children were treated as miniatures of adults. Rousseau lived in a time that
The teaching was authoritarian and rigid in the Jesuit schools, or schools
aristocratic, where there was no concern to differentiate between the education of children and that of
adults.
For Rousseau, education should be natural, far from the social environment, because man
corrupts the child, he decentralized the teacher, the child was the center.
Education was not meant to satisfy the needs of the market or the future, it led to
Being a child, the instructor taught in the natural environment, without imposing things.
mechanics, the teacher should only convey what was of interest to the child. The
the role of the educator was to guide the training process, he did not believe in
traditional learning where there is a programmed content and the center of
Know was the teacher. For Rousseau, man is educated by nature and education.
it naturally happened he was concerned with the child's immediate interests. In the
work Emílio, Rousseau these foundations of natural education.
the child could already go to a school because she was already prepared, where her childhood
had been preserved. Roseau's great concern was to preserve childhood.
In the 19th century, Herbert (1766-1841) theorized about the purposes of education and pedagogy.
as science and produced the difference between Pedagogy and Didactics (LIBÂNEO, 1999). A
pedagogy was not a science, it was a natural process, there were no rules or
specificity was pedagogical ideas, starting from Herbert that pedagogy begins to
being scientific. For Herbert, moral education would be achieved through instructions
educational directed and controlled by the teacher, an architect of minds, verbalist,
with formal steps directed and controlled the teacher had to prepare the class,
the materials that I would use and the materials used in the class. As a theoretical of the
education, defended the idea that the goal of pedagogy is the development of
moral character. Teaching should be based on the application of knowledge.
Psychology. For Herbert, there was a way to do things and a way to teach.
the formulation of global rules; it is especially important for developing the mind
beyond the immediate perception. It is the application, which aims to show
utility for what was learned.
Instruction is the central element of the three procedures that, for Herbart,
constitute the pedagogical action. The first is what he called government, that is,
maintenance of order through the control of the child's behavior, an assignment
initially from the parents and then from the teachers. It is a set of rules
outside tax, with the aim of keeping the child occupied. The second
the procedure is the educational instruction itself and its driver is interest, which
it must be multiple, varied, and harmoniously distributed. The third is discipline, which
it serves to preserve the will on the path of virtue. At this stage, it strengthens
self-determination as a prerequisite for character formation. Unlike the
government consists of an internal process of the student, from Herbart's contributions to
psychology and pedagogy remain valuable, but their thinking and practice that
they originated in the 19th century became outdated, especially with the
emergence of the active school movement. Its main representative, the North-
American John Dewey (1859-1952) made harsh criticisms of the Herbartian doctrine.
contemporary pedagogy has made the student the subject of teaching and replaced the
18th century individualism for a more complex view of the factors involved in
work of teaching. "Today, it is accepted in theoretical terms that the human mind is
originally active, while in practice, in Brazil.
Maria Montessori
Maria Montessori (1870-1952) Born in Italy, she arrived at pedagogy by different paths.
initially dedicated to children with disabilities. His method
respected the natural growth of children, developing primarily sensory,
an active and sensory education.
She is convinced that education is only achieved through one's own activity.
a subject who educates appeals for greater freedom to satisfy their own stimuli
of the student. For Maria Montessori, the educational process had to center on the student,
The educator should teach little, observe a lot, and guide in psychological activities.
She proposed to awaken children's activity through stimulation and promote the
child autonomy. His method employed an abundant didactic material.
the material used is essentially sensory and is therefore designed to work with each
one of the sensory qualities.
Maria Montessori believed that neither education nor life should be limited to
material achievements. The most important individual objectives would be: to find a
place in the world, develop a rewarding work and nurture peace and depth
interiors to have the capacity to love. The educator believed that these would be the
foundations of any peaceful communities, made up of individuals
independent and responsible.
Jean Piaget
Jean Piaget was the most influential name in the field of education during the second
mid-20th century, to the point of almost becoming synonymous with pedagogy. It does not exist,
process that follows the same laws of functioning that allow living beings
to remain in balance with their means of survival. that learning is
constructed by the student and it is his theory that according to Piaget the role of action and
from all over Europe and also served as a training center for
teachers. Pestalozzi applied his principle of integral education in class, not
limited to the absorption of information. According to him, the educational process should
to encompass three human dimensions, identified with the head (intellectual), the hand
physical) and the heart (affective or moral). The final goal of learning should be a
training is also triple: intellectual, physical, and moral.
And the study method should be reduced to its three simplest elements: sound,
shape and number. Only after perception would language come. With the instruments
acquired in this way, the student would have the ability to find within themselves
freedom and moral autonomy. How to achieve this goal depended on a trajectory
intimate, Pestalozzi did not believe in external judgment. For this reason, in his schools
there were no grades or tests, punishments or rewards, in a time when whipping
The students were common. Learning through loving experiences. Its methodology
from the easiest and simplest, to the most difficult and complex, from the known to the new
from the concrete to the abstract, the ideal is 'learning by doing', the educational process
it must encompass three human dimensions for training: intellectual, physical and
moral. The study method should be reduced to its three simplest elements,
sound, shape and number. In their schools, there were no grades or tests, punishments or
John Dewey
Célestin Freinet
Freinet (1896-1966) was born in France and was one of the educators who made the greatest mark on education.
the elementary school in your country in this century. It had the enormous courage and happiness of
The school activities designed by the educator have become so widely used that there are
educators who use them without ever having heard of the author. This is the case of the classes-
field trips (or field studies), from the educational corners and the exchange of
correspondence between schools. It is not necessary to have a deep knowledge of Freinet's work.
to make good use of these resources, but to understand the theory that motivated their creation
should enable its integrated application and make them more fertile.
Freinet created a pedagogy of work. For him, activity is what guides the
school practice and the ultimate goal of education is to train citizens for free labor and
creative, capable of mastering and transforming the environment and emancipating those who practice it. One of
the teacher's duties, according to Freinet, is to create a laborious atmosphere in the school, of
Another primordial function of the teacher, according to Freinet, is to collaborate as much as possible for the
Neill (1883-1973) carried out his idea of an education in freedom for a world
but freer and happier. It is one of the most radical alternatives to education.
traditional. The Niellian pedagogical alternative is built in a very personal way.
A man in search of freedom is always a solitary.
Thanks to the creation of the educational community of Summertil, the pedagogical proposal of
Neill traversed nearly the entire 20th century and acted as a unique link between the
experiences the self-government of the beginning of the 20th century and the proposals
anti-authoritarian that would come later. Neill refers to P. Goodman, J. Holt, and I. Illich.
like some of the authors who would emerge with new and promising ideas for the future of
education and humanity.
Maurício Trangtenberg
One of the few contemporary anarchist thinkers concerned with education, Mauricio.
Trangtenberg today represents an important current of thought and political action.
The areas of knowledge are formed from disciplinary political practices, founded on
surveillance. This means keeping the student under constant observation, recording, counting
all observations and notes about the students, to establish a
strict classification of students and their aptitudes.
The practice of teaching in its essence reduces surveillance. In basic school units and
oh teacher who judges the student based on the grade. The student's subject has the system of
exam is an excellent instrument, they are tests. Any school is structured in
function of a quantity of knowledge, measured in doses, administered
homeopathically. The exams sanction an appropriation of knowledge, a
occasional poor performance, a certain delay that proves the student's inability to
appropriating knowledge. To avoid discouraging those with weaker will, the emergence of
active methods in education. The group dynamics applied to education has alienated itself
it brought the training group to the forefront. The possibility of uncoupling knowledge
of school power, lies in the creation of horizontal organizational structures where the
professors, students, and staff form a real community. And it is a result that only
can come from many struggles, from sectorial victories, defeats as well. Without school
democratic there is no democratic regime; therefore the democratization of the school is
For Makarenko, the collective is a living social organism placed, at the same time,
as means and ends of education. It is a finalized set of individuals, interconnected with each other.
given the psychological current that explains the development of the human mind with
based on the principles of dialectical materialism," that is, it has as a referential basis the
philosophical works of Marx and Engels.
Dialectical historical materialism, broadly speaking, understands that human nature
it constitutes the relationship of man with the objects of reality - created and
reproduced by the human being itself - and whose mediation is done through activity. The
the development of the psyche has its roots in the relationships established between the
individuals in this sociocultural context of production. The material character of life
humanity, and that organizes it, is built over a process of evolution of the
humanity and, therefore, it is from the study of this historical organization that we
it will understand its nature (LIBÂNEO and FREITAS, 2006; PIRES, 1997).
According to historical-cultural theory, therefore, learning is of a nature
social. It is from social interactions that the human being develops functions.
higher psychological processes; (LIBÂNEO and FREITAS, 2006;)
According to Libâneo and Freitas (2006), the historical-cultural theory has its
your activity, comes into contact with the objects and phenomena of the surrounding world,
acts upon them and transforms them, also transforming oneself. Centered on
theoretical category of activity, the historical-cultural theory of activity (or theory of
activity) emerged as a development of the historical-cultural conception and was
developed by Leontiev (1903-1979) and later by his followers.
Leontiev investigated activity in order to demonstrate that psychic development
humans find their expression in psychic activity as a peculiar form of
human activity, 'as a product and a derivative of material life, of external life,
"that transforms into an activity of consciousness" (Leontiev apud GOLDER, 2002, p.
52).
At the core of the theory of activity is the Marxist conception of nature.
socio-historical of the human being explained in the following premises: 1) the activity
represents the human action that mediates the relationship between man, subject of
activity, and the objects of reality, giving the configuration of human nature; 2) the
development of psychic activity, that is, of higher psychological processes,
it originates from the individual's social relations in their social and cultural context.
Davydov (1930-1988) incorporated concepts from Vygotsky, Leontiev, and Elkonin.
to formulate a theory of teaching: the theory of developmental teaching. For him, the
the task of contemporary school consists of teaching students to orient themselves
independently from scientific information and in any other, to teach them to think,
through teaching that promotes mental development. (DAVÍDOV, 1988, p.3).
In his work, concepts such as culture, meanings, language, human relations,
interaction, mediation, sociocultural context, among others, become even more
relevance and imply important theoretical and practical developments for the
school education, particularly for didactics (DAVYDOV, 1978; 1987; 1988;
1999; 2000.
Vygotsky explains human development through mediated processes and
highlights the importance of education and teaching in the acquisition of higher levels
Pedagogical Thoughts
Goiânia, 31/05/2015