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education

Published on Dec 09, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

education

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functions of schools

  • McNergney and Herbert (2001) described the school as first and foremost a social institution, that is, an established organization having an identifiable structure and a set of functions meant to preserve and extend social order.

functions of schools

  • the school is a place for the contemplation of reality, and our task as teachers, in simplest terms, is to show this reality to our students, who are naturally eager about them.
  • at home, we teach reality to children in a profoundly personal, informal, and unstructured way.
  • in school, we teach reality in professional, formal and structured way.
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purposes of SCHOOLing

  • intellectual purposes
  • political purposes
  • social purposes
  • economic purposes
Photo by Ken Lund

intellectual purpoes

  • to teach the basic cognitive skills such as reading, writing, and mathematics; to transmit specific knowledge, for example in literature, history and sciences; and to help students acquire higher-order thinking skills such as analysis, evaluation, and synthesis.

politacal purposes

  • to inculcate allegiance to the existing political order (patriotism); to prepare citizens who will participate in the political order; to help assimilate diverse cultural groups into a common political order; and to teach children the basic law of society.

social purposes

  • to socialize children into the various roles, behaviors, and values of the society.
Photo by Ed Yourdon

economic purposes

  • to prepare students for their later occupational roles and to select, train, and allocate individuals into the devision of labor.

multiple functions of the schools

  • technical-economic functions
  • human/social functions
  • political functions
  • cultural functions
  • education functions

technical/economic functions

  • they refer to the contributions of schools to the technical or economic development and needs of the individual, the institution, the local community, the society and the international community.
Photo by RDECOM

human/social functions

  • they refer to the contribution of schools to human development and social relationships at different levels of the society.

political functions

  • they refer to the contribution of schools to the political development at different levels of society.

cultural functions

  • they refer to the contribution of schools to the cultural transmission and development at different levels of society.

education functions

  • they refer to the contribution of schools to the development and maintenance of education at the different level of society.

manifest functions of education

  • socialization
  • social control
  • social placement
  • transmitting culture
  • promoting social and political integration
  • agent of change

latent functions of education

  • restricting some activities
  • matchmaking and production of social networks
  • creation of generation gap

functions of schools as stated by calderon

  • conservation functions
  • instructional functions
  • research functions
  • social service functions