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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. Only use technology in ways that help and not in harmful ways
Kant and George Berkeley
Aristotle
general education
Amish
2. Rub shoulders with diverse group of people
reason for sending child to public school
Experimentalist view of education
legitimate forms for shaping behavior
philosophy
3. Learning is...
active
Arabasis
education - purificaton - and intellectual enjoyment
Epicurus
4. Recognizes no fixed - orderly reality which educators can impart to students; curriculum reflects version of truth by those who hold power and shows that their consciousness has been distorted by repressive systems
flute
Trivium and Quadrivium
atheistic wing of existentialism
postmodernist theory of education
5. Students taught deconstruction - how to uncover contradictions in texts and reveal power hierarchies involved
atheistic wing of existentialism
flute
postermodernist literary ideas
potentiality
6. Categories of philosophy as an activity
synthetic - analytic - and descriptive
Epicurus
ages that Trivium should be used
critique of great texts of western world
7. Aristotle advocated for these with morality; right vitues are located in the middle of two extreme vices and if you know the right thing to do - you still have to build healthy habits to do the right thing
Protagorean rationale for general education
Kant and George Berkeley
vocational training
Golden Mean and habit
8. Memory - perceptions - and rational intuition
liberal learning
theoretical side (ABC pattern)
rejected
noetic powers
9. Experimentalism; try to arouse students' curiosity by activity-based learning; one learns by doing
naturalistic cosmotogies
general education
leaner-centered approach
Dead White European Male
10. What themes unified the Great Tradition of liberal arts for more than 2 millenia?
Hindu Patheism
atheistic wing of existentialism
formation of character - cultivation of intellect - and development of judgment - inspiration of delight in the right things
fundamental part of teaching
11. Experimentalist; says that experience goes past just sensory experience but also includes all that humans things and feel; stressed practical effectiveness
John Dewey
Protagoras
What messes up a meritocracy the most?
Family
12. Rational structure of Christian thought
general education
Experimentalist view of education
postmodernist theory of education
dogmatic theory
13. Attempt to represent accurately 'what is the case'; describe facts clearly and objectively
philosophical analysis
descriptive
reader-response theory
confidence
14. Debated Protagoras; never wrote anything down; the main character of Plato's writings; also taught Xenophon; human virtue was his primary concern; uses dialogue to bring out truth; responsibility for learning is on the learning and did not call himse
in the home
postermodernist literary ideas
cognitive
Socrates
15. Have students study the truth to avoid falsehoods
axiology
Tolkein approach
transcendential idealism
rhetoric
16. Who believes that the Fall really didn't mess us up that much?
postmodernist aesthetics
Peterson
preciseness
hairsplitting
17. Very military-oriented; concerned with Spartan freedom - not necessarily individual freedom; more celebrated in ancient times; slave society with slaves known as helots owned by the state; no names on tombstones except when dying in battle or giving
Sparta
flute
California and Texas
local government
18. Human person is a spiritual or rational being
preciseness
logic
idealist metaphysics
axiology
19. Each individual must decide what is pleasing - delightful - and beautiful; art need not be judged by relationship to some actual object
Euthydemus
Baby Boomlets (Generation Y)
existentialist aesthetics
sauromatides
20. 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
value neutrality
existentialism
Experimentalist values
21. Public education should teach in accord to a Christian nation
religious zealots
Kant and George Berkeley
actuality
philosophy as a subject matter
22. Started naturalism
goal of liberal education
Sir Francis Bacon
conceptual mapping
There are some rich schools - some middle-income schools - and some poor schools
23. Where is the essential Christian liberarl arts model most clearly demonstrated?
responsibility theory
dialectic
pure secularism
undergraduate schools
24. Aristotle; statments about good and happy life of excellent activities + to achieve good life we must cultivate certain dispositions=we ought to cultivate these dispositions
theoretical side (ABC pattern)
virtue
analytic philosophy
Hellenica
25. We ought to cultivate certain dispositions + factual and scientific statements about how to produce desired results=statements recommending what to do how - when - and so on
Republic
practical side (CDE pattern)
legitimate forms for shaping behavior
experimentalism - existentialism - philosophical analysis - and postmodernism
26. Experimentalist students are to be both:
philosophy of education
value neutrality
Kant and George Berkeley
mirror of society and critic of society
27. 1600s; get to truth through science
complete moral education
controlled transaction
modernity
in the home
28. Reading and writing - gymnastics exercises - music - and drawing
Protagorean rationale for general education
Jacques Derrida
experiential
Customary branches of education according to Aristotle
29. Has achieved significant degree of mental freedom - understands moral and civil responsibility - is tolerant and humane - and has a deep sense of historic aspirations and struggles of the human race
Liberally educated person
clarifying key terms and concepts - pointing out implications of philosophical statements - and examining structure of educational theories
reader-response theory
idealist theory of education
30. Art is the catalyst for the changing viewers' experience and for creating new feelings - insights - and intuitions
experimentalist aesthetic view
X Generation
Traditional reasons why we should study the canon
goal of liberal education
31. An untranslatable word that encompasses the total formation of a human being
Monkey Trial
Canon
paideia
Stanley Fish
32. Plato; an analogy of the mind as a darkened cave - and the ideal world is really what is important
existentialist aesthetics
Allegory of the Cave
Key elements of Greek education
socialization theories
33. Experience is reality; activity-based
rhetoric
education - purificaton - and intellectual enjoyment
Plato
pragmatism
34. One of the departmental philosophies; attempts to bring the insights and methods of philosophies to bear on the educational enterprise
Abraham Joshua Heschel
philosophy of education
Isocrates
Integrated Education
35. One who stands alone - outside any organized human endeavor
epitome of postmodern person
Neo-Platonism
analytic philosophy
idealist value theory
36. In the past - learning a foreign language involved just translating - and this was a great mental exercise with what?
Jacques Derrida
trivium
preciseness
consumerism
37. Peterson thinks we are not doing very well with what Christian mind - because it is not a strong force in academia?
collective Christian mind
Peterson
C.S. Lewis and Peterson approach
mirror of society and critic of society
38. 1. Learn a language 2. Learn how to use a language 3. learn how to express oneself in language 4. compose thesis upon a theme and defend it against the criticism of the faculty
Order of Trivium
responsibility theory
Key elements of Greek education
cognitive-stage theories
39. Lists and defines a set of dispositions to be fostered in students; projects comprehensive vision of education
normative philosophy of education
naturalism
the mean - the possible - and the becoming
sauromatides
40. 'What is good?'
ethics
Golden Mean and habit
3 basic approaches to dealing with false philosophy in classroom
tradition of liberal arts education
41. What do all 3 key elements of Greek culture involve?
cognitive-stage theories
truth from narratives and story-telling
ordinary language analysis
cognitive
42. To discover regularities of the natural world and make them into generalizations that represent scientific law
ideal language analysis and ordinary language analysis
a subject matter and an activity
What messes up a meritocracy the most?
goal of empiricism
43. All reality comes from material components of the universe and their operations
Justice and meritocracy
Thoreau
Materialism
up
44. Thought that you should understand everything from its cause; liked music more than Plato
naturalism
Aristotle
practical issues
Sophists
45. 'What is reality' 'What is God like' 'What is time'
leaner-centered approach
metaphysics
philosophical analysis
California and Texas
46. 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
John Dewey
Peterson
Nicomachean Ethics
experimentalism (pragmatism - instrumentalism)
47. Emphasizes increasingly complex patterns of moral reasoning through which child advances
cognitive-stage theories
Laws
Experimentalist values
Sir Francis Bacon
48. A healthy type of multiculturalism?
postmodernist aesthetics
Pluralism
Strict neutrality
helps with learning other languages; emphasizes speaking more than writing; particularly helpful with learning your own language; is involved in math - science - etc
49. Thomas Aquinas became foundation of intellectual endeavor in Catholic church; kept learning alive during Dark Ages; monks preserved church
analytic
Protagoras
pure secularism
Middle Ages
50. 1. Reason - Head - Philosopher kings and guardians 2. Will - Chest - military 3. Appetites - Stomach - Providers/farmers
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