Title of article
Review of "Dewey, Peirce, and the Learning Paradox"
Author/Authors
Apple، Michael W. نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages
-76
From page
77
To page
0
Abstract
This article deals with a problem that has vexed educators and learning theorists for years the so-called learning paradox. Attempts to explain how it is that new and better knowledge is fashioned out of prior, less complex knowledge typically rely on processes of deduction or induction or, as a third alternative, equate the generation of new knowledge with the development of new moves in the language game. A fourth promising solution to the learning paradox is advanced in this article. In this approach, based on Dewey and Peirceʹs work, ideas as opposed to schemas or postmodernist discourse are viewed as the real carriers of meaning. Ideas are thought to be generated through a metaphoric process known as abduction. Abduction offers the best chance of coming to terms with the learning paradox.
Keywords
Constructed wetland , reedbed , surface flow , subsurface flow , raft reedbed system , Bioremediation , airport runoff , glycol.
Journal title
American Educational Research Journal
Serial Year
1999
Journal title
American Educational Research Journal
Record number
22691
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