What is Democratic Education?
A learning approach that puts equality, autonomy, and shared decision-making at its core
Democratic education is characterized by the following elements
A Community Based in Equality and Shared Responsibility
Respect breeds respect. Trust breeds trust. Compassion breeds compassion. Tolerance breeds tolerance. Listening breeds listening.
Collective Decision-Making
All members of the community, regardless of age or status, have an equal say in important decisions such as school rules, curricula, projects, hiring of staff and even budgetary matters.
Self-Directed Discovery
The children and young people choose what they learn, when, how and with whom they learn it. Learning can take place inside or outside the classroom, through play or conventional study.
The key is that learning follows students' intrinsic motivation and pursues their interests.
Realizing Children's Rights
Democratic schools are communities where Article 12 of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, which states that children have the right to have a say in matters that concern them, is fully realized.
An Ideal Breeding Ground
Democratic education provides an ideal breeding ground for developing critically thinking individuals who are collaborative problem solvers and creative flexible thinkers.
Diversity in Practice
On One Hand
A truly democratic school fits the description above, embodying these core principles in their daily practice.
On the Other Hand
There is a great diversity of democratic schools in the world regarding decision-making, conflict-resolution, governance structure, the cultural diversity in learning content and how this content is offered.
Each democratic school finds its own unique path while staying true to core democratic values.
Want to Know More?
Check out the official EUDEC website for more resources and information