As stated, Dewey advocated that education be based upon the quality of experience. For an experience to be educational, Dewey believed that certain parameters had to be met, the most important of which is that the experience has continuity and interaction. Continuity is the idea that the experience comes from and leads to other experiences, in essence propelling the person to learn more (Experience & Education, Dewey).
Description:
The SAC (Structured Academic Controversy) was developed by cooperative learning researchers David and
Roger Johnson of the University of Minnesota as a way to provide
structure and focus to classroom discussions. Working in pairs and then
coming together in four-person teams, students explore a question by
reading about and then presenting contrasting positions. Afterwards,
they engage in discussion to reach consensus.
Rationale:
By the time students reach adolescence, many believe that every issue
comes neatly packaged in a pro/con format, and that the goal of
classroom discussion, rather than to understand your opponent, is to
defeat him. The SAC method provides an alternative to the "debate
mindset" by shifting the goal from winning classroom discussions to
understanding alternative positions and formulating historical
syntheses. The SAC's structure demands students listen to each other in
new ways and guides them into a world of complex and controversial
ideas.
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