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Tao Xingzhi

Tao Xingzhi (Chinese: 陶行知; pinyin: Táo Xíngzhī; Wade–Giles: T'ao Hsing-chih; October 18, 1891 – July 25, 1946), was a renowned Chinese educator and reformer in the Republic of China mainland era. He studied at Teachers College, Columbia University and returned to China to champion progressive education. His career in China as a liberal educator was not derivative of John Dewey, as some have alleged, but creative and adaptive. He returned to China at a time when the American influence was zesty and self-confident, and his very name at that time (zhixing) meant "knowledge-action," reflecting the catch-phrase of the Neo-Confucian philosopher Wang Yangming which implied that once knowledge (zhi) had been obtained, then action (xing) would be easy.[1]

Tao Xingzhi
(T'ao Hsing-chih)
陶行知
Chinese educator
BornOctober 18, 1891
DiedJuly 25, 1946(1946-07-25) (aged 54)
NationalityChinese
Alma materColumbia University

Biography

 
Tao Xingzhi with John Dewey in Shanghai in 1919. Front row from left: Shi Liangcai, Dewey's wife Alice and Dewey. Back row from left: Hu Shih, Jiang Menglin, Tao and Zhang Zuoping.

Returning from study in the United States at University of Illinois and Columbia University, in 1917, he joined Nanking Higher Normal School and then National Southeastern University (later renamed National Central University and Nanking University), and he turned to "life education."[note 1] He then also returned to his humble roots. "Originally," he wrote to his beloved younger sister, "I was a common Chinese, but gradually through ten years of life as a student, I developed a foreign, aristocratic tendency." Shanghai, the capital and center of modern/foreign China, he now found "vulgar, rushed, and crowded." Then "suddenly, like the Yellow River breaking its dikes..., I woke up [juewu, the Buddhist term for satori] to the fact that I was being robbed of my Chineseness." He took to wearing a traditional scholar's gown, and turned to mass education. He then reversed his name to the more well-known form, xingzhi, that is, "action-knowledge," directly implying that (Chinese) action/praxis will produce (Chinese) knowledge. He denounced "false intelligentsia" (wei zhishi jieji) for drawing on second hand, foreign experience of which they had no authentic knowledge.

 
From left, Xu Zhimo, Zhu Jingnong, Cao Chengying, Hu Shih, Wang Jingwei, Tao Xingzhi, Ma Junwu, Alice Dewey and Chen Weizhe in Hangzhou in September 1924.

In December 1921, Cai Yuanpei, Tao, and other educationists founded the National Association for the Advancement of Education (Zhong-Hua jiaoyu gaijin hui) and he was elected as secretary-general. Through the society the educationists promoted the forming of modern education system in China.

In August 1923, Tao and Y.C. James Yen organized the National Association of Mass Education Movements (MEM). At the height of its literacy campaign in the 1920s, Yen estimated that the MEM had taught five million students with more than 100,000 volunteer teachers. Tao went on to become the nation's leading promoter of rural teacher's education. In March 1927, Tao founded the Xiaozhuang Normal College in Nanjing to train teachers and educators, who were then sent to staff rural schools that Tao was establishing in rural China.[2] This teacher's college produced a number of innovative techniques such as the "little teacher model", which encouraged pupils to teach their family what had they had just learned in school, and the "each one teach one" technique of organized teaching networks. The school was closed in 1930 by the Nationalist government for political reasons.[3][4]

 
Statute of Tao Xingzhi in his birthplace, She County, Anhui

In the 1930s Tao wrote children's literature, started the Life Education Association, and started a Work Study Movement. He was in the United States when war with Japan broke out in 1937, but returned to China, where he was made a member of the People's Political Council. In 1939, he moved to Beibei, just outside Chongqing, to found the Chongqing Yucai Middle School (School for Nourishing Talent). Tao received monthly stipends from Feng Yuxiang and Zhang Zhizhong, both fellow Anhui natives. A leader of one of the two CCP cells at Tao's school later recalled that Tao and his patron, Feng gave help to party workers when they were hunted by the secret police, and that Tao professed interest in Mao Zedong's "On New Democracy." One of the pupils at the school was Li Peng, the adopted son of Zhou Enlai and future premier of China.[5]

In 1946, after the Yucai School was harassed by the political police, he moved back to Shanghai. Fearing that he would meet the same fate as other intellectuals assassinated by right wing Nationalists, he worked frantically, leading to exhaustion and death. Zhou Enlai rushed to his home and called him a "non-Party Bolshevik." Tao's reputation was high for the next few years, but in the early 1950s he came under attack as a "bourgeois liberal." In the 1980s, the "Tao Xingzhi Study Society" was founded by Song Enrong, who edited a multivolume edition of Tao's writings.

Nanjing Xiaozhuang Normal College

The Xiaozhuang Normal College, which Tao founded in 1927 and was closed due to political reasons in 1930, was reopened in 1951, after the founding of the People's Republic of China, by Wang Dazhi, one of Tao's students and an alumnus of the college.[4][6] In 2000, the college became the Nanjing Xiaozhuang University.[4]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ T'ao Hsing-chih was a professor at Faculty of Education of Nanjing Higher Normal School which later became Normal School of Nanjing University and then after 1952 became Nanjing Normal University.

References

  1. ^ "T'ao Hsing-chih," in Howard Boorman, ed. Biographical Dictionary of Republican China Vol IV, pp. 243–248[ISBN missing]
  2. ^ (Chinese) "学校简介" Official Website of Xiaozhuang University Retrieved August 27, 2011
  3. ^ Hubert Brown, "American Progressivism in China: The Case of Tao Xingzhi," in Hayhoe and Bastid, editors, China's Education and the Industrialized World, pp. 120–138, quotes at pp. 126.[ISBN missing]
  4. ^ a b c (Chinese) "历史沿革" Official Website of Xiaozhuang University Retrieved August 27, 2011
  5. ^ Wei Dongming, "Weidadi Renmin jiaoyujia dazong shijen" (A great people's educator, poet of the masses), in Tao Xingzhi jinian wenji (Chengdu: Sichuan Peoples Publishing House, 1982), pp. 101–103[ISBN missing]
  6. ^ 敢于创新的人民教育家 2011-08-29 at the Wayback Machine, China Education News, July 19, 2003, Section 3.

Further reading

  • "T'ao Hsing-chih," in Howard Boorman, ed., Biographical Dictionary of Republican China (New York: Columbia University Press, 1970) III.243–248.[ISBN missing]
  • Stacey Bieler, "Patriots" or "Traitors"? A History of American-Educated Chinese Students (Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 2004).[ISBN missing]
  • Yusheng Yao, "Rediscovering Tao Xingzhi as an Educational and Social Revolutionary," Twentieth Century China 27.2 (April 2002): 79–120.
  • Yusheng Yao, "The Making of a National Hero: Tao Xingzhi's Legacies in the People's Republic of China," Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies 24.2 (July–September 2002): 251–281.

External links

xingzhi, this, chinese, name, family, name, chinese, 陶行知, pinyin, táo, xíngzhī, wade, giles, hsing, chih, october, 1891, july, 1946, renowned, chinese, educator, reformer, republic, china, mainland, studied, teachers, college, columbia, university, returned, c. In this Chinese name the family name is Tao Tao Xingzhi Chinese 陶行知 pinyin Tao Xingzhi Wade Giles T ao Hsing chih October 18 1891 July 25 1946 was a renowned Chinese educator and reformer in the Republic of China mainland era He studied at Teachers College Columbia University and returned to China to champion progressive education His career in China as a liberal educator was not derivative of John Dewey as some have alleged but creative and adaptive He returned to China at a time when the American influence was zesty and self confident and his very name at that time zhixing meant knowledge action reflecting the catch phrase of the Neo Confucian philosopher Wang Yangming which implied that once knowledge zhi had been obtained then action xing would be easy 1 Tao Xingzhi T ao Hsing chih 陶行知Chinese educatorBornOctober 18 1891She County Anhui Qing EmpireDiedJuly 25 1946 1946 07 25 aged 54 Shanghai Republic of ChinaNationalityChineseAlma materColumbia University Contents 1 Biography 2 Nanjing Xiaozhuang Normal College 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBiography Edit Tao Xingzhi with John Dewey in Shanghai in 1919 Front row from left Shi Liangcai Dewey s wife Alice and Dewey Back row from left Hu Shih Jiang Menglin Tao and Zhang Zuoping Returning from study in the United States at University of Illinois and Columbia University in 1917 he joined Nanking Higher Normal School and then National Southeastern University later renamed National Central University and Nanking University and he turned to life education note 1 He then also returned to his humble roots Originally he wrote to his beloved younger sister I was a common Chinese but gradually through ten years of life as a student I developed a foreign aristocratic tendency Shanghai the capital and center of modern foreign China he now found vulgar rushed and crowded Then suddenly like the Yellow River breaking its dikes I woke up juewu the Buddhist term for satori to the fact that I was being robbed of my Chineseness He took to wearing a traditional scholar s gown and turned to mass education He then reversed his name to the more well known form xingzhi that is action knowledge directly implying that Chinese action praxis will produce Chinese knowledge He denounced false intelligentsia wei zhishi jieji for drawing on second hand foreign experience of which they had no authentic knowledge From left Xu Zhimo Zhu Jingnong Cao Chengying Hu Shih Wang Jingwei Tao Xingzhi Ma Junwu Alice Dewey and Chen Weizhe in Hangzhou in September 1924 In December 1921 Cai Yuanpei Tao and other educationists founded the National Association for the Advancement of Education Zhong Hua jiaoyu gaijin hui and he was elected as secretary general Through the society the educationists promoted the forming of modern education system in China In August 1923 Tao and Y C James Yen organized the National Association of Mass Education Movements MEM At the height of its literacy campaign in the 1920s Yen estimated that the MEM had taught five million students with more than 100 000 volunteer teachers Tao went on to become the nation s leading promoter of rural teacher s education In March 1927 Tao founded the Xiaozhuang Normal College in Nanjing to train teachers and educators who were then sent to staff rural schools that Tao was establishing in rural China 2 This teacher s college produced a number of innovative techniques such as the little teacher model which encouraged pupils to teach their family what had they had just learned in school and the each one teach one technique of organized teaching networks The school was closed in 1930 by the Nationalist government for political reasons 3 4 Statute of Tao Xingzhi in his birthplace She County AnhuiIn the 1930s Tao wrote children s literature started the Life Education Association and started a Work Study Movement He was in the United States when war with Japan broke out in 1937 but returned to China where he was made a member of the People s Political Council In 1939 he moved to Beibei just outside Chongqing to found the Chongqing Yucai Middle School School for Nourishing Talent Tao received monthly stipends from Feng Yuxiang and Zhang Zhizhong both fellow Anhui natives A leader of one of the two CCP cells at Tao s school later recalled that Tao and his patron Feng gave help to party workers when they were hunted by the secret police and that Tao professed interest in Mao Zedong s On New Democracy One of the pupils at the school was Li Peng the adopted son of Zhou Enlai and future premier of China 5 In 1946 after the Yucai School was harassed by the political police he moved back to Shanghai Fearing that he would meet the same fate as other intellectuals assassinated by right wing Nationalists he worked frantically leading to exhaustion and death Zhou Enlai rushed to his home and called him a non Party Bolshevik Tao s reputation was high for the next few years but in the early 1950s he came under attack as a bourgeois liberal In the 1980s the Tao Xingzhi Study Society was founded by Song Enrong who edited a multivolume edition of Tao s writings Nanjing Xiaozhuang Normal College EditThe Xiaozhuang Normal College which Tao founded in 1927 and was closed due to political reasons in 1930 was reopened in 1951 after the founding of the People s Republic of China by Wang Dazhi one of Tao s students and an alumnus of the college 4 6 In 2000 the college became the Nanjing Xiaozhuang University 4 See also EditMemorial of Tao XingzhiNotes Edit T ao Hsing chih was a professor at Faculty of Education of Nanjing Higher Normal School which later became Normal School of Nanjing University and then after 1952 became Nanjing Normal University References Edit T ao Hsing chih in Howard Boorman ed Biographical Dictionary of Republican China Vol IV pp 243 248 ISBN missing Chinese 学校简介 Official Website of Xiaozhuang University Retrieved August 27 2011 Hubert Brown American Progressivism in China The Case of Tao Xingzhi in Hayhoe and Bastid editors China s Education and the Industrialized World pp 120 138 quotes at pp 126 ISBN missing a b c Chinese 历史沿革 Official Website of Xiaozhuang University Retrieved August 27 2011 Wei Dongming Weidadi Renmin jiaoyujia dazong shijen A great people s educator poet of the masses in Tao Xingzhi jinian wenji Chengdu Sichuan Peoples Publishing House 1982 pp 101 103 ISBN missing 敢于创新的人民教育家 Archived 2011 08 29 at the Wayback Machine China Education News July 19 2003 Section 3 Further reading Edit T ao Hsing chih in Howard Boorman ed Biographical Dictionary of Republican China New York Columbia University Press 1970 III 243 248 ISBN missing Stacey Bieler Patriots or Traitors A History of American Educated Chinese Students Armonk NY M E Sharpe 2004 ISBN missing Yusheng Yao Rediscovering Tao Xingzhi as an Educational and Social Revolutionary Twentieth Century China 27 2 April 2002 79 120 Yusheng Yao The Making of a National Hero Tao Xingzhi s Legacies in the People s Republic of China Review of Education Pedagogy and Cultural Studies 24 2 July September 2002 251 281 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tao Xingzhi Works by or about Tao Xingzhi at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tao Xingzhi amp oldid 1083992160, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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