John Locke John Locke
    • £32.99

Publisher Description

John Locke is one of the great minds in educational history. Drawing on his perceptive observations of families and children he saw the importance of adapting learning to the child's dispositions. Critical of schools, he is the fountainhead of home tutoring, child-centred learning, and the importance of enjoyable learning. But for Locke learning was not about facts: a good education produced gentlemen who could in turn adapt themselves to commerce and politics. Locke's philosophy helped provide rigour to the scientific revolution, the impetus for the expansion of schools for the poor (which should be profitable) and child psychology.



Alexander Mosely sets Locke's educational writings in their context with a sensitive reading of what Locke understood by 'education' and highlights the relevance of the study of Locke's work to our understanding of education today.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2014
23 October
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
248
Pages
PUBLISHER
Bloomsbury Academic
SIZE
855.7
KB

More Books by Alexander Moseley

Aristotle Aristotle
2014
Human Rights and Military Intervention Human Rights and Military Intervention
2018

Other Books in This Series

Rudolf Steiner Rudolf Steiner
2014
Jean Piaget Jean Piaget
2014
Robert Owen Robert Owen
2014
Lev Vygotsky Lev Vygotsky
2014
A. S. Neill A. S. Neill
2014
Michel Foucault Michel Foucault
2014