Unit I The Scientific Approach in Education
Unit I The Scientific Approach in Education
A. Sources of Knowledge
The sources of knowledge may be categorized under five headings:
i. Experience
ii. Authority
iii. Deductive Reasoning
iv. Inductive Reasoning
v. The Scientific Approach
Experience
a familiar and well-used source of knowledge
much of wisdom passed from generation to generation is a result of experience
ability to learn from experience is prime characteristic of intelligent behavior
limitations as a source of truth
o two individuals have different experiences in same situation
o one frequently needs to know things that one as an individual cannot learn by experience
Authority
seeks the answers to questions from someone who has the experience with the problem or has some
other source of expertise
accept as truth the word of those who are recognized as authorities
not relying on an individual as an authority merely because of position or rank
inclined to accept the assertions of an authority only when that authority bases its assertions on
experience or other recognized sources of knowledge
custom and tradition are closely related (however both must be appraised before one accepts them as
truth)
has shortcomings
o authorities can be wrong; they have no claim to infallibility
o authorities may be in disagreement among themselves on issues indicating that their authoritative
statements are often more personal opinion than fact
Deductive Reasoning
thinking process in which one proceeds from general to specific statements using prescribed rules of
logic
system for organizing known facts in order to reach a conclusion which is done through the use of
logical arguments
argument consists of a number of statements standing in relation to one another
the final statement is the conclusion; the rest, called premises, comprise supporting evidence
one major kind of deductive reasoning is syllogism
syllogism consists of a major premise and a minor premise followed by a conclusion
if the premises are true, the conclusion is necessarily true
enables one to organize premises into patterns that provide conclusive evidence for the validity of a
conclusion
is useful in the research process
provides a means for linking theory and observation
enables researchers to deduce from existing theory what phenomena should be observed
Inductive Reasoning
a conclusion is reached by observing examples and generalizing from the examples to the whole class
to be absolutely certain of an inductive conclusion, the investigator must observe all examples
inductive conclusions can be absolute only when the group about which they are asserted is small
since one can make perfect inductions only on small groups, we commonly use imperfect induction, a
system in which one observes a sample of a group and infers from the sample what is characteristic
of the entire group
imperfect induction does not lead to infallible conclusions
imperfect induction can provide reliable information upon which one can make reasonable decisions
one makes observations first and then organizes the information gained