Democratic school

Authors

  • Rafael Feito

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7203/RASE.2.1.8611

Keywords:

school democracy, ethnography, classroom, educative innovation

Abstract

Main traits of several democratic schools –primary and secondary, public and private ones- in Spain –in which the author has spend some time doing ethnographic work- are presented in this paper. The name “democratic school” was coined by Michael Apple and James Beane in a book with the same title. A democratic school meets, at least, three requirements. First of all, it must create conditions that guarantee schools success for everyone. Secondly, life in schools and classrooms –specially curriculum- must be widely democratic. And, in the third place, participation in control and management of school should be promoted.

This paper focuses on these seven features: curriculum globalization, a teaching based on dialogue, use of library, handling of new technologies, a singular way of organizing the classroom, special relationships with the surroundings and the accomplishment of a democratic living together.

Schools presented here propose to create inquisitive and participative citizens, annoying for political power –irrespective of its ideology-. These schools –specially primary schools- create people sympathetic, ready to get in touch with people from different backgrounds, able to solve problems appealing to dialogue.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Published

2009-01-30

How to Cite

Feito, R. (2009). Democratic school. Revista De Sociología De La Educación-RASE, 2(1), 17–33. https://doi.org/10.7203/RASE.2.1.8611
Metrics
Views/Downloads
  • Abstract
    7376
  • PDF (Español)
    3326

Metrics

Similar Articles

<< < 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.