thinking with perceptual skills in philosophy for and with children (p4wc)

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12957/childphilo.2025.89060

Keywords:

multidimensional thinking, embodied philosophizing, drawing, perceptual skills, betty edwards

Abstract

Starting from Lipman’s interest in acquiring a balance between the cognitive and affective, the conceptual and the perceptual in the practice of P4C, we explore some possibilities of integrating Betty Edwards’s framework for training perceptual skills as a means of enriching the traditional construction of problems in the community of philosophical inquiry (CPI). To do so, we parallel Lipman’s and Sharp’s views on multidimensional thinking with insights from embodied learning and philosophizing, from the use of gestures, artistic illustrations, and drama, to drawing in the curriculum, in order to suggest ways of enriching discussion plans in the CPI. Often, the compatibility between the multidimensional thinking approach in P4C and a more experiential and embodied learning is natural: for example, caring thinking, which entails developing moral attitudes and a relational consciousness may need more attention to children’s expression of emotions, and mobilize more stimuli to complement the traditional dialogue. The interdependence between problematization, creativity and affectivity can also be illustrated with insights from Betty Edwards’s training perceptual skills’ method: our focus is to use the method as a resource for the development of philosophical problems in the CPI. We argue that, in addition to building a better relationship with one’s creativity, learning to see better may translate into better understanding the process of constructing philosophical problems, and, inspired by the specific perception skills developed by the method, we may add a more relational and situated framework for philosophical questioning.

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Author Biographies

anda fournel, Grenoble Alpes University

Anda Fournel, PhD in Language Sciences and graduate in Philosophy and Educational Sciences, is currently a researcher at Grenoble Alpes University, LIDILEM Laboratory (Laboratoire de linguistique et didactique des langues étrangères et maternelles), in France, and an associate researcher at the Collectif d.phi, an international group of researchers and practitioners working on the development and study of philosophical dialogue practices. Her research focuses on doubt, questioning, the role of gestures and imagination, and bodily involvement in the development of thought in dialogue. Through an interdisciplinary analysis, she also examines the links between the cognitive and social dimensions of these practices, looking at common problems in communities of philosophical inquiry. She has been practicing Philosophy for children since 2010 and is involved in training in philosophical dialogue, working with various partners (schools, theatres, museums, hospitals, etc.).

ileana dascălu, University of Bucharest

Ileana Dascălu obtained her PhD in philosophy from the University of Bucharest with a thesis on equality of opportunity and intergenerational justice. She is currently working at the Faculty of Philosophy, Department for Practical Philosophy and the History of Philosophy, as well as the UNESCO Chair for Interculturality, Good Governance and Sustainable Development. Over the past few years, her research has focused on philosophy of education, in particular on topics such as: the role of liberal education in the development of human personality, the transmission of cultural heritage through education, and the philosophy of John Dewey.

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Published

2025-03-16

How to Cite

FOURNEL, Anda; DASCĂLU, Ileana. thinking with perceptual skills in philosophy for and with children (p4wc). childhood & philosophy, Rio de Janeiro, v. 21, p. 01–31, 2025. DOI: 10.12957/childphilo.2025.89060. Disponível em: https://www.e-publicacoes.uerj.br/childhood/article/view/89060. Acesso em: 30 apr. 2025.

Issue

Section

dossier: “philosophy with children across boundaries”