Philosophy of Teaching I believe that every student is capable of learning no matter who the child is or what circumstance the child may face. It all depends on the teacher and whether or not he or she is willing to work and try new methods. Different things motivate different students. I received my calling to the teaching profession at the beginning of my junior year in college. My high school football coach offered me a position coaching and the principle offered me a teaching position.
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of punishment in the field of corrections. Firstly‚ Retribution can be seen as the idea that an offender should be punished for their wrongdoings or in other words “the punishment should fit the crime”. A perfect example of an application of this philosophy applied in contemporary correction for example the death penalty. The death penalty in the United States is mostly served on offenses such as 1st degree murder or in some severe cases of treason; it highlights the idiom “an eye for an eye”. There
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1) Explain (the main ideas and views) and evaluate (by giving arguments) the view of Heraclitus regarding the nature of reality? Heraclitus was one of many pre-Socratic philosophers‚ and he’s considered to be the most important and influential. I don’t know why‚ I find him a bit contradictory. His way of thinking was the result of perception and intuition. He despised rational‚ logical‚ conceptual thought. His pronouncements were purposely self-contradictory. "We are and at the same time are not
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wasn’t educated on theories at the time and didn’t know what to say‚ but I had this interest in wanting to "be there" for them. 1 I can confidently say that my childhood experience has had a significant impact in the development of my philosophy of "helping"/counseling people and‚ on the other hand‚ education is what helped me be a better counselor. • I will introduce the second bullet by stating a quote from Henry David Thoreau "Simplify the problem of life. When the mathematician solves
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Ballantine Montessori‚ Maria (1972) The Discovery of The Child‚ New York: Ballantine Lillard‚ Paula Polk (1972) Montessori‚ A Modern Approach‚ New York: Schocken Books Montessori‚ Maria (2007a) The absorbent Mind‚ Amsterdam: AMI Isaacs‚ Barbara (2010 2nd Ed) Bringing the Montessori approach to your Early Years Practice. Abingdon‚ Oxon: Routledge MCI‚ (2010)Module 1: Philosophy‚ London:MCI Montessori‚ Maria (2012) The 1946 London Lectures Amsterdam: Montessori – Pierson Publishing
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My Philosophy in Life People lived their lives with different mottos and rules to live by. Some live wild and dangerously while others are reserved and quiet. I live my life on a day-to-day basis. I take things as they come and do what I feel is right. I like the way I live and I wouldn’t change it for the world. My philosophy in life is simple-take things day by day‚ one step at a time‚ keep your friends close and your enemies closer‚ and never take things for granted. I live by these three mottos
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moral? Many philosophers give their own accounts of how they conceive morals should be judged‚ sometimes completely separate from society. In this essay we are going to concentrate on some of the most influential minds to tackle the subject from ancient Greece up to the nineteenth century; Plato‚ Aristotle‚ Jeremy Bentham‚ John Stuart Mill and Immanuel Kant. The first two theories covered are classical. ‘Education ends with a moral illumination’ (Groarke‚ 2011‚ p. 125). Plato (429-347BC)‚ born in
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came as to “where did they come from (being)?” Nietzsche says‚ “nothing up to now has been more naively persuasive than the error of being.” In an attempt to aid his listeners understanding Nietzsche created four theses concerning his ‘“Reason” in Philosophy.” The first proposition explains that this world in which we live in is regarded as “apparent” or “grounds for its reality” any other reality cannot
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Positive liberty will be on exam‚ short question on it. Our culture is based on a negative liberty tradition. Liberalism means when used in a philosophy class usually is an ideology consists of two ideas‚ one is that liberty (neg. liberty) is a constraint on the state‚ set of notions that things the govt cant do to people. Plus idea of equality‚ so liberty constrains the other ideas of equality
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Legal Philosophy Positive Law Law as the Sovereign’s Command – John Austin * the subject of jurisprudence is positive law * law set by political superiors to political inferiors Command – a significance of desire In commands‚ unlike in other significations of desire‚ the one commanding has the power to inflict evil or harm upon the one commanded‚ once the command is ignored. Command and Duty are correlative terms (parang games lang‚ haha!) * wherever a duty lies‚ a command
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