Vandenberg, Donald. “Critical Thinking about Truth in Teaching:
The Epistemic Ethos.” Educational Philosophy and Theory
41.2 (2009): 155-165. Print.
Vandenberg discusses western education is Sophist in the sense of teaching truth. This questioning of actual truth is challenged more so with controversial issues. “Socratic ignorance, [taking a neutral approach to one’s own education]” (157) is a platform for devising a solution for epistemic ethos. Vandenberg explicitly states truth should be, “...within its own operations...thinking for educational purposes should be domain specific (156).
A solution to epistemic ethos in teaching truth lies in a adopting a Socratic sense of neutrality backed by a combination of Dewey and Plato educational philosophies. Vandenberg offers six levels of neutrality for sustaining truth particularly during controversial subjects. These levels revolve in the typical classroom and range from exclusion of controversial issues, presenting issues objectively, providing both sides of the issue, and the instructor providing advantages and disadvantages just to name a few.
Truth can be taught if the teacher stays within one of the six levels of neutrality and is in cohorts with a Neo-Modern approach to teaching truth (162).
- Teacher is loyal to knowledge and/or skill being learned.
- Follow Harry Broudy’s philosophy that the teacher persuades the learner to perceive, classify, and related ad does the expert in a given domain of knowledge.
- In respects to David Hume and Immanuel Kant, accept a loose, flexible combination of the main theories of knowledge that retain half-truth of each domain.
In the end truth in teaching for epistemic ethos must be flexible domain wise, and as Maxine Green stated “require neutrality in regards to controversies regarding various epistemologies.
This scholarship does not seem to satisfy the original inquiry. This Socratic resolution of simple neutrality seems too simple for such a complex pedagogical concern. It is safe to say teacher ethos in very influential on teaching and learning and can impacts many domains of pedagogical practice, not just truth inquiries and critical thinking. The introduction of this article briefly suggests the influence constructionism has had on western education. Teacher ethos appears to be directly correlated with educational philosophies and varies greatly based on shared or separate cultures experiences between teacher and student. Moving forward I will continue to inquiry about teacher ethos, but carefully examine epistemic teacher educational philosophy and the social and cultural contexts. I will also examine other forms of inquiry impacted by ethos not just the search for truth. Two questions posed by Vandenberg provide an appropriate fork in the road:
- What is good knowledge?
- What is knowledge good for?