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  • THE IMPLEMENTATION OF WALDORF EDUCATION IN INDONESIA AT A GLANCE
    111-132
    Views:
    140

    In the education world, Waldorf education exists in some countries. Waldorf education revitalized the Indonesian education issue to improve individual well-being. This study reviews Waldorf education in Indonesia. We collected data via online content analysis focused on the Waldorf school website and Facebook. It was reported that Waldorf education only exists in big cities such as Jakarta, Bandung, Yogyakarta, Balikpapan, and Bali. All Waldorf education in Indonesia only offered play gardens, except Arunika Waldorf and Madu Waldorf, which offer an elementary school. All of the websites from Jagat Alit, Arunika, Bambino Preschool, Madu Waldorf, and Kulila Playgroup provide all the information about their school. However, for Denia Beun Play Garden, the information was mostly updated on their Facebook account. The implementation of Waldorf philosophy was well implemented in all schools. The adjustment point only on cultures because of the differences between Europe culture and Indonesian culture.

  • THE PEDAGOGICAL EXPERIMENT OF MONTESSORI-CONDUCTIVE EDUCATIONAL PRACTICE 2000-2003
    11-23
    Views:
    305

    The researchers call Montessori's pedagogy developer or development pedagogy. In the past decade, in Hungary, it appeared as a development pedagogy in the pedagogical practice. The conductive education is a special, complex pedagogical method [6] because it takes into consideration special educational needs in planning and implementation. We can view Mária Montessori's method as a development pedagogical method because it's suitable for children with special educational needs. Her pedagogical work began with children with intellectual disabilities. The Montessori development method has not yet occurred in conductive education. With our research, we wanted to broaden the use of the Montessori method in the practice of special education and development pedagogy. We wanted to confirm the similarity and difference of the holistic approach of the two doctor-pedagogues. It's explicable with Pető's holistic approach, why didn't entrust the development of perception, speech, motion, and communication difficulties to people working in different places and time. We introduced the Montessori conductive educational practice experimentally in the semesters of 2000-2003 and 2007-2008, in accordance with the student's college education. The purpose of the program was to demonstrate the practical application of the elements of the two methods and their coordinated operation.

  • THE MOTIVATING EFFECT OF THE FLOW EXPERIENCE IN THE COURSE OF ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION AT THE SPECIAL NEEDS STUDENTS WITH CP, INSIDE ECO-SCHOOL FRAMEWORKS
    103-107
    Views:
    198

    According to today's social norms, within the framework of an eco-school, our aim is to educate students who can recognize environmental hazards and are able to prevent the deepening of the environmental crisis. We have assumed that the possibilities of environmental education outside the classroom can be integrated into the complex system of conductive education, even for children with special needs. I would like to highlight those activities that trigger the flow experience for our students, helping create an internal motivation for all activities that serve the interests of environmental education. The changes also show in the increased number of such programs. Even though we are a segregated school, environmental education is still very decisive in our institution and we try to convey this view outside our walls.

  • CHILD CONCEPTION AND CHILDHOOD NARRATIVES IN THE LIGHT OF CRITICAL PEDAGOGY, CHILDHOOD SOCIOLOGY AND NARRATIVE PSYCHOLOGY
    41-52
    Views:
    176

    In my thesis I attempt to define the basic concepts of the historical research of child conception and child perception, I try to emphasize the significance of narratives of childhood, and I point to the connection between the child conception, child perception, and the narratives. In the Hungarian pedagogical press, there aren’t yet carefully developed definitions, theoretical approaches regarding the researches of child conception and child perception, and that’s why we have to review that subject.  My study contains three main parts. In the first chapter I review the connections between the everyday pedagogical attitudes or perspectives and the child ideologies, then I analyze the relationship between the development-based pedagogy and the everyday pedagogical discourses, but I attempt to define the contemplative pedagogical attitude too. In chapter II I outline the concepts of child conception (child image) and child perception, and I point the relation between these concepts and the narratives of childhood. The last chapter is a summary with practical aspects, but I don’t show the paradigms of childhood history. In my theoretical overview, I try to answer that question: what kind of resources, components we can find in the different pedagogical views, and how to do these works under our researches. In my view, the child ideologies determine the pedagogical discourses of the different ages, and instead of the totalizing child conception of development-bases pedagogy we try to find new paradigms, e. g. the narrative psychology, the critical pedagogy and the new childhood-sociology, therefore these paradigms are more efficient for the child-rearing practices and our researches. Namely, we can’t vocalize the children’s perspective by the comparison to the adult gauge, therefore we prefer the contemplative, narrative methods, which leave open the frame of interpretation (reference).

  • EVERYDAY ACTIVITIES TO HELP INTEGRATION IN PETHŐ INSTITUTE IN HUNGARY AND ABROAD
    49-64
    Views:
    145

    This paper will present András Pető, the father of the conductive pedagogy, his method, and his institute. His new rehabilitation method gave a chance to motor disordered children and adults to learn how to adjust to society and cope with daily challenges in spite of their physical disadvantage. He established his institute after World War II in 1945, and the institute was named after him and became nationally and internationally well-known as Pető Institute.

  • THE ILLUMINATION OF THE PROGRESSIVE APPROACH OF THE PETŐ METHOD ON THE BASIS OF THE CRITERIA OF CONSTRUCTIVE PEDAGOGY
    83-100
    Views:
    128

    The study describes the Pető Method based on the principles of Constructive Pedagogy. The study focuses on the importance of the rehabilitation group because of two reasons: Firstly, it helps children to integrate into the mainstream basic and secondary education later successfully. Secondly, the common goal and the feeling of togetherness has a great motivation effect on the individuals as well as the members of the group. Therefore the study also highlights the neurological aspects of motivation. Last but not least, the areas of constructive lifestyle are being reported and those tasks that need to be solved in the near future to make the inclusion process even more effective for people with motor disabilities.

  • The Discourse on Hygiene in Relation to the Role of Public Teachers in the ’Néptanítók Lap’ between 1922–1924
    7-17
    Views:
    31

    The Covid epidemic has highlighted that the health care system alone is not enough to tackle a pandemic affecting a large population. In addition to medical and public health activities, there is also a need for educational activities in the education subsystem, involving the professionals involved. This is why it is important to look at the issue of health education in schools from a historical perspective, given the epidemics of our time. In the turbulent social and political environment following the First World War, public health was a less favoured area for policy-makers, while the physical and psychological trauma of soldiers returning from the war and the health of those left behind was a serious problem. The virulent Spanish flu, which affected millions of families across Europe, the devastating tuberculosis in our country, but especially the diphtheria and influenza, which were dangerous for children, posed a serious challenge to the scientific and educational scene in Hungary. The spread of a healthy lifestyle and education was not helped by the environment of schools (attitude of the maintenance staff, quality of the built environment, sociocultural tradition of the rural population, rapid spread of urban life). The alternative health approach and the life reform movement, although sporadically emerging in the period, did not appear in the mainstream of pedagogy, and health education progressed slowly, while, for example, child mortality, which is also linked to the health-conscious behaviour of parents, was blatantly high. The appointment of Kuno Klebelsberg as minister (1922) can be seen as a paradigm shift, as he is not only exposed as a minister with considerable experience in state administration, but also as a conceptual cultural politician who understood the challenges of education and popular education at the micro and macro levels. In our research, we analysed the relevant issues of the People's Teachers' Journal - a standard-setting publication of the Ministry of Education and Religious Affairs, which serves as a guide for teachers in practice - using qualitative thematic content analysis. The selected period: 1922–1924. Our questions are: how is the situation of school health reflected in the journal? What roles and tasks do and would policy-makers delegate to the folk teachers? What extracurricular tasks do they assign to teachers in the field of health education? Are there any patterns in the discourse in relation to school leaders? How have the teachers' organisations received it and what suggestions have they made to policy-makers and practitioners?

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT, 2017. Vol. 3. (3.)
    1-113
    Views:
    80

    Special Treatment, 2017. Vol. 3. (3.) - full text

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT, 2021. Vol. 7. (4.)
    1-118
    Views:
    210

    Special Treatment, 2021. Vol. 7. (4.) - full text

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT, 2016. Vol. 2. (3.)
    1-104
    Views:
    107

    Special Treatment, 2016. Vol. 2. (3.) - full text

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT, 2023. Vol. 9. (2.)
    1-162
    Views:
    152

    Journal of Special Treatment, 2023. Vol. 9. (2.) - full text

  • THE POSSIBILITIES OF MUSEUM PEDAGOGY AND TALENT DEVELOPMENT IN A VIRTUAL MUSEUM
    89-99
    Views:
    377

    The present study compares the real and the virtual museums from viewpoints of foundation and operating, visitor experiences, safety and security, and museum services. At the end of the study, there are examples of the pedagogical (e.g. talent developmental) possibilities of a Virtual Museum from the aspect of education, development of cognitive abilities and personality, and the methodological development and the incentive of achievement.

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT, 2015. Vol. 1. (2.)
    1-103
    Views:
    86

    Special Treatment, 2015. Vol. 1. (2.) - full text

  • AXIOLOGICAL ISSUES COMMON TO SOCIAL PEDAGOGY AND SOCIAL WORK – HUNGARIAN TRANSLATION
    103-109
    Views:
    182

    An attempt to find issues common to social pedagogy and social work should include the reference to the basic determinants of these forms of social activity. The fundamental assumptions of both pedagogy and social work are based on values. In the axiological dimension of accompanying a person in their development values related to human dignity, self-fulfillment and social functioning must be taken into account. It needs to be highlighted that some areas of modern pedagogy still lack the reference to the axiological assumptions. This may result in inappropriate educational attitudes as well as deficiencies in the social dimension of human life. There seems to be a serious lack of axiological references in the field of social work. It is particularly noticeable in the case of attempts to counteract domestic violence. Emphasis given to values that constitute social pedagogy and social work may help to strengthen the relationship between these scientific disciplines and forms of social activity. Defining basic values, presenting ways how to implement them, and overcome anticipated difficulties may result in attitudes based on the recognition of human dignity as well as on the multidimensional nature of life. Academic education which prepares students to professionally implement social support is a crucial element of the relationship between pedagogy and social work.

  • Special Treatment, 2024. Vol.10.(2)
    1-107
    Views:
    19

    Journal of Special Treatment, 2024.Vol.10.(2) - full text

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT, 2021. Vol. 7. (2.)
    1-138
    Views:
    278

    Special Treatment, 2021. Vol. 7. (2.) - full text

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT, 2021. Vol. 7. (3.)
    1-119
    Views:
    200

    Special Treatment, 2021. Vol. 7. (3.) - full text

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT, 2018. Vol. 4. (4.)
    1-107
    Views:
    134

    Special Treatment, 2018. Vol. 4. (4.) - full text

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT, 2016. Vol. 2. (4.)
    1-114
    Views:
    90

    Special Treatment, 2016. Vol. 2. (4.) - full text

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT INTERDICIPLINARY JOURNAL, 2023. Vol. 9. (1.)
    1-210
    Views:
    173

    Special Treatment Journal, 2023. Vol. 9. (1.) - full text

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT, 2018. Vol. 4. (2.)
    1-98
    Views:
    120

    Special Treatment, 2018. Vol. 4. (2.) - full text

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT, 2015. Vol. 1. (1.)
    1-108
    Views:
    160

    This is the full text of 2015/1 of the Journal of Különleges Bánásmód /Special Treatment/.

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT, 2020. Vol. 6. (2.)
    1-139
    Views:
    210

    Special Treatment, 2020. Vol. 6. (2.) - full text

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT JOURNAL, 2024. Vol. 10.(SI)
    1-183
    Views:
    66

    Journal of Special Treatment, 2024. Vol.10.(Special Issue) - full text

  • SPECIAL TREATMENT, 2017. Vol. 3. (4.)
    1-95
    Views:
    107

    Special Treatment, 2017. Vol. 3. (4.) - full text