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Summary Education in Frankenstein- contextual notes and discussion

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This document details the importance of education in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, a critical discussion point and contextual argument for the OCR English Literature and other exam board assessments.

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AO3 – USEFUL CONTEXTUAL INFORMATION LINKED TO EDUCATION
AND NATURE OF KNOWLEDGE

JEAN JACQUES ROUSSEAU ON EDUCATION/ CHILD DEVELOPMENT
(1700s)

 The noblest work in education is to make a reasoning man, and we
expect to train a young child by making him reason! This is
beginning at the end; this is making an instrument of a result. If
children understood how to reason they would not need to be
educated.” –Rousseau, Emile.
 Rousseau’s philosophy isn’t concerned with imparting information
and concepts, but rather with developing the pupil’s character and
moral sense; the child will then be able to practice self-mastery and
virtue in spite of the un-natural and imperfect society he may have
to live in.
 The hypothetical boy in Rousseau’s ‘Emile’ is raised in the
countryside (healthier and more natural) under the guardianship of
a tutor who will guide him through various learning experiences.
 This idea is called ‘natural consequences’; children learn through
right and wrong through experiencing the consequences of their
acts rather than physical punishment.
 Rousseau separates childhood into stages:
o Up to age 12, guided by emotions and impulses
o 12-16, development of reason
o 16 onwards development into an adult (applying what has
been learnt)


JOHN LOCKE: ‘AN ESSAY CONCERNING HUMAN UNDERSTANDING’
(1690)

 An essay concerning the foundation of human knowledge and
understanding.
 He describes the mind at birth like a blank sheet of paper, filled
later through experience
 He was one of the key founders of ‘empiricism’
 Essentially, Locke did not believe in the concept of ‘nature’,
favouring ‘nurture’: ‘If we attentively consider new born children, we
shall have little reason to think that they bring many ideas into the
world with them… by degrees afterwards, ideas come into their
minds.’
 There are no innate ideas; everything is derived from experience



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