Developing Dewey’s Sociocultural Vision

Toward Educating Citizens in the 21st Century

Authors

  • Michael L. Bentley University of Tennessee at Knoxville
  • Stephen C. Fleury Le Moyne College

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14288/ce.v16i3.187230

Keywords:

John Dewey, critical constructivism, pedagogy, neoliberalism, critical social constructivism

Abstract

The work of John Dewey continues to challenge educators whose work is to put theory into practice in the classroom. In the United States and elsewhere, a popular impression of Dewey and progressive education is that of inductive, child-centered pedagogy, but his writings in Democracy and Education—as well as in subsequent re-writings of previous works such as in How We Think (1910) — demonstrate that his earlier notions of inductive methods and a child-centered progressivism were supplanted by a pragmatism that was more akin to today’s social constructivism in terms of consideration of experience, subject matter, community, and the inherent tension between public and private and objective and subjective knowledge (Garrison, 1995, Prawat, 2000). Contrasting the current resurgence of a myopic psychological behaviorism ushered in by neoliberal testing and the standards movement over the past 25 years, Dewey’s turn toward recognizing the social and interactive continues to provide sustenance and hope for the development of more educationally robust schooling, both reflective and leading to a social and civil society that is more democratically infused. Here we attempt to explain how ideas Dewey first laid out in Democracy and Education have been seminal in our own pursuit and development of more philosophically vigorous contemporary constructivist theorizing whose philosophical anthropology, in contrast to most cognitively defined and confined versions, embraces and engenders a critical, creative, and emancipatory education. We will pay particular attention to the educative and emancipatory potency emanating from Dewey’s emphasis on community and communication, and exemplified in our descriptions of actual classroom practice.

Author Biographies

Michael L. Bentley, University of Tennessee at Knoxville

Michael L. Bentley retired from science and environmental education at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Thereafter he directed the Elementary Science Institute at Hollins University, and was Education Associate for the Virginia Museum of Natural History. Bentley served on the expert panel for Educatio.com and has written two-dozen books and chapters in books, including Connecting Children to Nature, with Mueller and Martin (Woods & Barnes) and An Educator’s Field Guide with Edward and Christine Ebert (Corwin). 

Stephen C. Fleury, Le Moyne College

Stephen C. Fleury died unexpectedly in February 2025. He taught at Le Moyne College in Syracuse, NY for 27 years where he was Professor and Chair of the Education Department. He began his education career as a social studies teacher in upstate New York. After completing his doctorate at Syracuse University, he was a professor at Hobart and William Smith College and then taught and served as Associate Dean in the School of Education at SUNY Oswego for eleven years. He was an advocate for high quality teacher education and a defender of faculty rights and responsibilities as well as an activist for progressive education as a school board member and co-founder of the Rouge Forum. His scholarly interests and research focused on sociology and politics of knowledge, especially the nature of science and its impact on social knowledge. Beyond his scholarly work, Dr. Fleury was a life-long farmer, with passions for playing music, genealogical research, and storytelling.

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Published

2025-08-15

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Articles