mind and spirit. All human beings should develop independent and critical thinking, and
form their own judgement. It restates the fear ‘Learning to be’, the report of the International
Commission on Education, 1972 that “the world would be dehumanized as a result of
technical change”. Therefore, education should help an individual to solve his own problems,
make his own decisions and shoulders his responsibilities. Education should strive to ‘give
people the freedom of thought, judgement, feeling and imagination that they need in order
to develop their talents and remain as much as possible InControl of their lives’.
In the twenty first century, it is required that standardization of individual behaviour
must pave the way for the qualities of imagination and creativity, the clearest manifestations
of human freedom. The commission emphasizes “it is therefore important to provide children
and young people with every possible opportunity for discovery and experiment-aesthetic,
artistic, sporting, scientific, cultural and social swell as appealing introductions to the creation
of their contemporaries or earlier generations”. To sum up, education must try to foster a
fully developed and balanced personality in human beings.
In the 21st century three curricular discourses, autonomous learners, participatory
citizenship, and globalization, have become rather influential in the debates. These discourses
argue that contemporary schooling should allow individual learners to construct their own
knowledge base and competences. It should prepare young people for their future role as
active, responsible, and productive citizens in a democratic society. Furthermore, schools
are expected to be instrumental in equipping individuals for the challenges created by
economic and cultural globalization.
Dostları ilə paylaş: