Historia de la educacion

Stages of education through history

  • 5000 BCE

    EGYPT

    EGYPT
    In Egypt, societies were hierarchical, so education
    it was reserved for the elites. The
    Pharaoh, the nobles and priests.
    They received the benefit of education, which spanned a
    set of rules of conduct and civics, public speaking, writing and
    physical education. And also the areas
    specialized, such as engineering and astronomy. As for the rest of the Egyptians, their education was limited to
    family bosom, teaching that was transmitted from parents to children.
  • Period: 5000 BCE to 400

    OLD AGE

    In the specific case of the cultures of the Ancient East (Mesopotamia, Egypt, Phenicia and Persia), the culture that most influenced Western cultures, Greece and Rome, was the Egyptian. This is why the history of ancient education tends to focus on Egyptian education, since some aspects of its culture and education were preserved in the Greco-Latin traditions, which we preserve today and help us understand the origins of our tradition. educational.
  • 1800 BCE

    Greece

    Greece
    Greek society was strictly
    hierarchical, so that education was exclusively for the elites. For the
    ruling groups, in addition to the art of war and gymnastics, had a
    political arts education. For free Greek men who don't
    held government office, learned a variety of trades through
    imitation. Finally, the lower classes, the slaves, did not receive
    any kind of education.
  • 400

    High Middle Ages

    High Middle Ages
    There were Germanic tribes with dialectical variants, although they all coincided in the same Germanic linguistic trunk.
    Scholasticism was practiced in the universities, a branch of philosophy that sought, through reasoning, to reconcile the knowledge of the classics with the Bible.
    The universalist spirit of Christianity transformed the history of education as, for the first time, institutions were seen as obligated to guarantee education for all.
  • Period: 400 to 1500

    Middle Ages

    The Middle Ages is also the era of feudalism, a mode of production characterized by serfdom.
    The feudal and his serfs lived in fiefdoms, which were large, economically self-sufficient properties; they generated little surplus, so their trade was very little.
  • 1000

    Low Middle Ages

    Low Middle Ages
    A series of changes in education emerged: the importance of free teachers, the creation of universities, scholasticism and chivalric education. Teachers received voluntary contributions from students, as they had no salary.
    In a society where moral values ​​were the highest virtues, knights were expected to have their own moral codes, namely chivalric honor and dignity. Every gentleman must behave properly, in accordance with Christian virtues.
  • 1300

    Humanism and Renaissance

    Humanism and Renaissance
    It is known as humanism, since man is once again the center of thought reflection. It is known as Renaissance, because it is a time when the culture takes up the Greco-Latin tradition.
    Regarding education, merchants began to pay private teachers to educate their children or themselves, which meant a great change in education.
    Education becomes secular and in terms of instructional methods, continues in a master-apprentice style.
  • 1500

    Reform

    Reform
    The importance of the Reformation for education and culture
    European was of utmost importance, because in addition to promoting the importance
    of reading, he emphasized that education should be for everyone. With
    over time, a reformist ethic different from the papal church was formed. A
    distinctive feature of the Reformation was the importance of work as a form
    to get closer to God.
  • Period: 1500 to

    Modern age

    During the 16th and 17th centuries, the religious wars of the Reformation and the Counter-Reformation ravaged Europe. The corruption of the Vatican hindered the development of powers that were far from Rome.
    At the end of the wars
    religious, the Vatican lost power but maintained its control over the kingdoms
    Catholics.
    As a consequence, there was a separation of faith and knowledge in the political, social, economic and cultural spheres.
  • 1545

    Counter Reformation

    Counter Reformation
    The Council of Tento, promoted the reorganization of schools to
    prevent reformist expansion in countries that were still
    mostly Catholic, such as Spain, France and Italy. In the schools
    of the metropolitan churches, as well as those of the monasteries more
    poor, the teaching of grammar, sacred texts and
    theology. In addition, the bishops were in charge of controlling the
    counter-reform of the schools, so that they acquired greater
    relevance in Catholic countries
  • Absolutism

    Absolutism
    By the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the King became the
    absolute mandatory of his kingdom. This power allowed him to build a state
    centralized.
    Where the King indicated what and who learned.
  • Education in the 18th century

    Education in the 18th century
    This new era of the diffusion of instruction to popular groups,
    birth of the nursery school, the diffusion of textbooks,
    the new schools for the training of teachers, marks a
    macroscopic return to didactic research
  • Illustration

    Illustration
    It was characterized by secularization, by its struggle
    against faith and superstitions and for their rationalism. Reason was put at the center.
    Scientific associations emerged that
    prompted the creation of inventions, such as the microscope,
    telescope, precision watch, thermometer, etc.
    For Rousseau, between 2 and 12
    years, instruction had to be based on the education of the senses;
    from 12 to 15 years, in intelligence education; while of
    15 to 25, in the education of conscience.
  • Period: to

    Contemporary age

    In the Contemporary Age, nation-states are consolidated, the
    economic production is no longer local and globalization is achieved.
    The Industrial Revolution in England, the
    US Independence and the French Revolution.
    education still
    remained restricted to popular groups, an aspect that changed
    notably when these required more complex instruction to
    be able to perform better in industrial work.
  • Education in the 19th century

    Education in the 19th century
    One of the greatest educational innovations of the 19th century was
    regulate the grading of education, from "kindergarten" or kindergarten
    to university.
    Froebel created a series of educational and didactic instruments
    appropriate for your kindergarten or nursery school.
    In addition, between secondary and university education arises the school
    technical, which would specialize in some branch of the industrial sector.
  • 20th century education

    20th century education
    At present, there are many pedagogical currents, such as associationism, functionalism, behaviorism, gestalsism,
    operationalism, cogniscionism, structuralism, etc. All these streams
    they have emanated from the relationship between psychology and pedagogy.
    Corporal punishment disappeared in schools, the relationship
    teacher-student changed and even the constitution of the
    classrooms changed, organizing students into semicircles, teams, or a group.