Recent research into Edith Stein’s educational philosophy highlights her balanced approach to education, which sought to integrate children’s intellectual, ethical, emotional, and spiritual development within a Christian framework. Despite the increasing secularisation of education already present during her lifetime, Stein emphasised the necessity of God in education, stressing not only the combined social and spiritual development of children but also their relationship with nature as part of God’s creation. Her work remains highly relevant today, particularly in fostering ecological empathy and resisting the reduction of education to the mere acquisition of competencies or the preparation of children for their future roles as citizens and consumers. Burwood’s research on the evolution of social categorisation in history and social studies textbooks in Canada and Switzerland reveals how feminist ideologies integrated into public education since the 1960s have simultaneously marginalized Christian spirituality and encouraged over categorisation. The resulting paradigm shift has created gaps in pedagogical materials that continue to neglect the interconnectedness of children’s social and spiritual development, as well as their relationship with the natural world. Conversely, the binary thinking still ingrained in many academic debates – such as the essentialist/constructivist divide – also continues to filter down to school education, perpetuating dualistic conceptions which oversimplify the human condition. Stein’s Christian-based educational philosophy offers a potential antidote to such challenges, advocating for a person-centered, yet spiritually grounded approach to pedagogy, which simultaneously resists both rigidly binary and unnecessarily complex categorisations, while continuing to promote the holistic development of children.
Justin Burwood (Tue,) studied this question.