Chapter 4 Reflection
Chapter 4 Reflection
authors viewed it as the least important to discuss. There is not nearly enough written about this third psychology as
the first two and it feels sort of like an after thought. In working with students who come from unstable home
environments and challenging situations I felt this section spoke to me the most while also aligning with my
personal philosophy of developing the whole child. That being said I do not agree with the authors presentation of
the information in this section but can appreciate their methodology in structuring the chapter the way they did.
I feel as though the authors influenced my thinking of the psychological foundations of curriculum by
detailing the many facets of each foundation. I too agree that curriculum should encompass and stem from various
degrees of all three psychological foundations. There is no denying the validity of the practical albeit mechanistic
and rigid behaviorist approach, the logical yet constrictive cognitive approach nor the holistic but qualitative
characteristics of the humanistic and phenomenological approach. Reading and analyzing these three methods has
helped me clarify and name the practices and approaches I employ in my classroom and has also afforded me the
opportunity to achieve a heightened level of self-awareness.