You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Italian. Click [show] for important translation instructions.
Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Italian Wikipedia article at [[:it:Riforma Gentile]]; see its history for attribution.
You may also add the template {{Translated|it|Riforma Gentile}} to the talk page.
The Gentile Reform of 1923 was a reform of the Italianeducational system through a series of normative acts (royal legislative decrees of 31 December 1922, n. 1679, 16 July 1923, n. 1753, 6 May 1923, n. 1054, 30 September 1923, n. 2102 and 1 October 1923, n. 2185), by the neo-idealist philosopherGiovanni Gentile, minister of education in Benito Mussolini's first cabinet. It officially recognized 21 universities in Italy.
Results
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (April 2009)
The compulsory age of education was raised to 10 years (only elementary education), and was somewhat based on a ladder system: after the first five years of primary instruction, one could choose the scuola media, which would give further access to the "liceo" and other secondary instruction, or the avviamento al lavoro, which was intended to give a quick entry into the low strata of the workforce.
Gentile created the liceo classico (intended to be the peak of secondary education, with the goal of forming the future upper classes[citation needed]), the only secondary school that gave access to all types of university. Gentile also created technical, commercial and industrial institutes.
Philosophy became the most important matter of teaching in the Italian liceo classico. Philosophy courses were given in its last three years. According to the actual idealism, the teaching of history and of philosophy began to be covered by a unique common professor. Similarly, it was instituted a unique five-years laurea in history and philosophy, intended as two disciplines linked in a hermeneutic circle.[1] The Gentile reform abolished any curriculum and syllabus defined by the Italian government at a national level, giving a full freedom of education to the philosophy teachers.[2] The secondary school Matura started to be regulated by a national exam program to which any scholastic institute should be compliant.[2] Scholastic manuals were substituted by a lecture and critical debate on the Latin and ancient Greek philosophical texts.[2] Philosophy acquired an ancillary role above all the other teaching matters of the Italian liceo classico. It was not intended as a set of contents in terms of historical notions, authors and works, but as a discipline capable to educate scholars to use the reason and their free-thinking, to develop a critical and systematic spirit which could enable them to order, unify and practically derive all their knowledge from a unitarian principle.[3] Philosophy was identified as the principal trait of the Italian national identity and spirit,[4] as well as a form of thought centered on the teacher, typically a male who practically lived and exchanged his mental habit along with his scholars.[5][6] Gentile's concerns on the philosophy teaching were expressed in the writings titled L'insegnamento della filosofia nei licei (1901), Per l'insegnamento della storia della filosofia (1916) and Difesa della filosofia (1921).[2]
^ abcdGaiani, Alberto (2014). Il pensiero e la storia: l'insegnamento della filosofia in Italia (in Italian). CLEUP. pp. 35–37, 43–45. ISBN9788867872626. OCLC898471003.