Religion and Education
Religious development in children and adults alike have been research areas that have historically been of interest to those involved in the developmental psychology arenas such as theorists of religious development, religious educators, and designers of religious education curricula in various settings. However, religious development did not receive a great deal of consideration during the early phases of growth in the psychology or the schools of human behavior and development. Even though the work of Sigmund Freud has been extremely influential in education and psychoanalysis, there are many other eminent psychologists who have made greater strides for humankind by trying to understand the planning and teaching aspects of religious education. This paper, therefore, aims to discuss three such prominent individuals: Jean Piaget, Erik Erikson and Jerome Bruner.
Ironically, behaviorism and psychoanalysis entail some aspects of atheistic presuppositions and therefore create many psychologists who are leaning more towards the agnostic side of God, religion and the supernatural. Religious thinking and associated behaviors were not always as accepted as some other psychological considerations such as hypnosis or psychoanalysis. Historically, psychoanalytical theory only studied religious experience in the sense of religiously motivated pathological scenarios that may seem more abundant in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Jean Piaget, Erik Erikson and Jerome Bruner were pioneers in the sense that they attempted to explain religious phenomena from more of a psychoanalytical perspective. Each in their own right have contributed, created or subscribed to developmental theories that changed the preparation or philosophic principles regarding the religious educational process.
Erik Erikson was a German born educator, author and American psychoanalyst. His overall importance to the psychology can be assessed by the fact that a branch of the Harvard...
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