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Test your basic knowledge |
DSST Foundations Of Education
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
dsst
,
teaching
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Try to guard against the indoctination of students to champion their right to make free choices
scholastic
flute
value neutrality
Justice and meritocracy
2. Experience is reality; activity-based
pragmatism
modernity
There are some rich schools - some middle-income schools - and some poor schools
Liberal vs. Vocational Dichotomy
3. Aspect which makes something intelligible to the mind
actuality
categorical imperative
form
Outmoded
4. 'What is valuable?'
normative philosophy of education
Liberally educated person
axiology
theistic wing of existentialism
5. Friedrich Nietzche; asserts radical views; exposes and discards notion of independent - external - stable reality; denies that we can make secure cognitive contact with the world at all; no truer or better interpretations - only more persuasive ones;
Protagorean rationale for general education
Justice and meritocracy
postmodernism
criticism of latin
6. Aspect which makes something tangible
matter
local government
rhetoric
Dorian music
7. Beauty is what people do in fact enjoy; what is admired ought to be admired
conceptual mapping
Blessing
Jacques Derrida
Experimentalist aesthetics
8. Common language is adequate for human purposes; we simply need to better understand its various functions and structure; replaced ideal language analysis after 1920-30
Abraham Lincoln
philosophical idealist
ordinary language analysis
Sophists
9. The number and percentage of students receiving 'A's' in up or down?
First Amendment activists
up
subjective idealism
postmodernist theory of education
10. Without this - the whole educational system is full of loose ends
postermodernist literary ideas
Theology
difference between leisure and amusement
controlled transaction
11. What do Americans have the most of in education?
confidence
rejected
noetic powers
Lyceum
12. Excessive individualism - non-objective morality - and extreme forms of self-expression - makes faith out to be based not at all on fact or reason
Protagoras
Criticism of existentialism
national government
Epicurus
13. Who decides what textbooks go in schools?
liberal education and career training
Liberally educated person
theoretical issues
national government
14. Invites studnets to discuss - question - and reflect upon the values that they are taught
helps with learning other languages; emphasizes speaking more than writing; particularly helpful with learning your own language; is involved in math - science - etc
Dorian music
postmodernism
complete moral education
15. All reality comes from material components of the universe and their operations
Sigmund Freud
experiential
Materialism
normative
16. One of the departmental philosophies; attempts to bring the insights and methods of philosophies to bear on the educational enterprise
Monkey Trial
philosophy of education
Laws
ethics
17. Portion of being
actuality
modernity
Memorabilia
Strict neutrality
18. Grammar - logic - and rhetoric
Hindu Patheism
revelation
trivium
multiculturalism
19. Complete - systematic set of answers to basic philosophical questions
worldview
analysis
practical issues
logic
20. Rejects any concept of a transcendent - ultimate fixed reality; experience is the only basis for philosophy; we can adapt to and even control our environment
logic
empirical analytics
experimentalism (pragmatism - instrumentalism)
flute
21. In the past - learning a foreign language involved just translating - and this was a great mental exercise with what?
leaner-centered approach
Neil Postman
Justice and meritocracy
preciseness
22. Father of History
Nicocles
Liberally educated person
Herodotus
happiness
23. What we take to be reality is created by our language; postmodernist thought
organized knowledge
synthetic - analytic - and descriptive
Protestant Reformation
linguistic descriptions
24. Emphasizes increasingly complex patterns of moral reasoning through which child advances
undergraduate schools
cognitive-stage theories
experimentalism (pragmatism - instrumentalism)
Cosmic dualism
25. Enable students to become thinkers and leaders and not just prepare them to function in society
goal of liberal education
Allegory of the Cave
Integrated Education
existentialism
26. Who was Socrates strongly influenced by?
Acquisition of organized knowledge - development of intellectual skills - and enlargement of understanding - insights - and appreciation
Isocrates
Plato and the arts
Republic
27. Aristotle; explored education - character - and virtue; stresses the need for the laws to regulate the discipline of children and adults; says that Sparta seems to be the only state in which the lawgiver has paid attention to the nurture and exercise
philosophy of education
Justice and meritocracy
Protagoras
Nicomachean Ethics
28. Knowledge most worth having
idealist metaphysics
Integrated Education
form
self-knowledge
29. What Sayers says is the best language to learn
pure secularism
philosophy of education
Latin
experimentalist aesthetic view
30. Each individual must decide what is pleasing - delightful - and beautiful; art need not be judged by relationship to some actual object
existentialism
ethics and aesthetics
Plato and the arts
existentialist aesthetics
31. Use women more as slaves
rhetoric
national government
Thracians
preciseness
32. What was created to protect academic freedom?
Baby Boomlets (Generation Y)
Essence
Tenure
worldview
33. Students need wide exposure to different ideas and opinions to navigate society and persuade others to accept views; may be legitimately doubted
hubris
Protagorean rationale for general education
embrace them intellectually
philosophy of education
34. Experimentalist students are to be both:
tradition of liberal arts education
national government
Modernity
mirror of society and critic of society
35. Express information to others; high school; want to express themselves
rhetoric
religious zealots
self-knowledge
Naturalism vs. Christianity
36. Character is Xenophon's Memorabilia; thought himself very wise because he read many philosophers and poets; Socrates used the Socratic method on him and made him see that he was not wise; spent as much as possible with Socrates after this
rhetoric
Justice and meritocracy
Euthydemus
Integrated Education
37. What is a 'DWEM'?
Naturalist aim of education
Dead White European Male
idealism - naturalism - and Thomistic realism
Criticism of existentialism
38. What Jacques Maritain calls 'service education'
philosophy as a subject matter
vocational training
ideal language analysis
Essence
39. Aristotle praises them for making education the business of the state; criticizes them for brutalizing their children by laborious exercises which they think will make them courageous
existence precedes essence
Sparta (Lacedaemonians)
Monkey Trial
Aristotle
40. Peterson thinks we are doing well with what Christian mind?
Individual Christian mind
logic
education - purificaton - and intellectual enjoyment
idealist theory of education
41. Grammar: 9-11; Dialectic: 12-14; rhetoric; 14-?
idealist theory of education
Herodotus
ages that Trivium should be used
Criticism of existentialism
42. What are the three steps to Chrsitian teaching and learning?
Acquisition of organized knowledge - development of intellectual skills - and enlargement of understanding - insights - and appreciation
Abraham Lincoln
goal of liberal education
Protestant Reformation
43. Children born from 1981-1999
theoretical side (ABC pattern)
Nicocles
Baby Boomlets (Generation Y)
Dorian music
44. Plato; most important part of education is right training in the nursery; 2 branches of education are gymastics (body) and music (improvement of soul); 2 branches of gymnastics are dancing and wrestling; any change except from evil is the most danger
radical personalism of questions of philosophy
Plato's division of human decisions
Laws
Sigmund Freud
45. Intelligent forms of discipline and correction as well as clear - rational explanation
legitimate forms for shaping behavior
cognitive
ideal language analysis and ordinary language analysis
normative
46. The beliefs on must embrace; the propositions one must accept as true
confidence
theoretical side (ABC pattern)
cognitive
philosophy as a subject matter
47. Emphasizes knowing what's right and wrong and putting action to it
Thomistic realism
Athens
Platonic concept of education
noetic powers
48. Rational structure of Christian thought
Socrates
Experimentalist aesthetics
synthetic
dogmatic theory
49. Scopes v. State; clear example of confusing a scientific opinion with theological heresay
arete
Monkey Trial
descriptive
Baby Boomlets (Generation Y)
50. Best - objective - recognition - There is no objective truth - taste - most powerful people's opinions win - include much more variety
leaner-centered approach
tradition of liberal arts education
objectivity and subjectivity of Canon
California and Texas