Education from a post-post-foundationalist perspective and for post-post-foundationalist conditions
Abstract
Viewed from a Western historical-philosophical perspective, there seem to be at least three
broad philosophical orientations on the basis of which Christian educators could approach
their pedagogical task. The first is to approach it from a modernist (foundationalist, rationalist)
perspective in terms of which the principles and guidelines gleaned from the Bible are cast into a
coherent and all-embracing theory that is deterministically applied to ensure certain pedagogical
outcomes. The second is just the opposite, namely to operate post-foundationalistically on the basis
of a loose collection of Biblical principles and values, and hence to expect the child or young person
to muddle through in the postmodern maze in which they are growing up nowadays. The third,
referred to in this article as a post-post-foundationalist orientation, an orientation that arguably
also can respond appropriately to post-modern conditions, allows the educator to effectively steer
through between these two extremes.
Collections
- Faculty of Education [759]