Education as Mediation Between Child and World: The Role of Wonder

Anders Schinkel*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Education as a deliberate activity and purposive process necessarily involves mediation, in the sense that the educator mediates between the child and the world. This can take different forms: the educator may function as a guide who initiates children into particular practices and domains and their modes of thinking and perceiving; or act as a filter, selecting what of the world the child encounters and how; or meet the child as representative of the adult world. I look at these types of mediation (or aspects of the mediating role of the educator) at the hand of the work of John Dewey, Martin Buber, Hannah Arendt, and Richard Peters. The purpose of this paper is to explore the bearing that the mediating role of the educator—as interpreted by these authors—has on the role wonder may play in the educational process. I suggest that initiation highlights the familiarizing function of wonder, and is most readily associated with inquisitive wonder; representation draws attention to the defamiliarizing role of (in particular contemplative) wonder, as well as to its world-affirming role; and selection (the educator as ‘filter’) foregrounds the distinction between momentary and dispositional wonder.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)479-492
Number of pages14
JournalStudies in Philosophy and Education
Volume39
Issue number5
Early online date18 Oct 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2020

Keywords

  • Alfred North Whitehead
  • Contemplative wonder
  • Hannah Arendt
  • Inquisitive wonder
  • John Dewey
  • Martin Buber
  • Mediation
  • Richard Peters
  • Wonder
  • World

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