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Education Quote by John Dewey

"The belief that all genuine education comes about through experience does not mean that all experiences are genuinely or equally educative"

About this Quote

Dewey’s line is a warning shot at the sloppy way “learning by doing” gets used as a slogan. He’s often reduced to the patron saint of hands-on education, but here he’s drawing a bright boundary: experience isn’t automatically instructive, and some “experiences” are actively anti-educational. The key move is his double filter - “genuinely” and “equally.” He’s not arguing for elitism; he’s arguing for design. Education, for Dewey, is less about having events happen to you than about what those events do to your future capacity to think, choose, and connect ideas.

The subtext is a critique of both tradition and romanticism. Against rote schooling, he insists knowledge has to be lived, tested, felt. Against the romantic idea that authenticity equals wisdom, he insists that raw exposure can harden into habit, prejudice, or boredom. A chaotic classroom, a humiliating teacher, a job that trains you to obey rather than inquire - these are experiences, but they can narrow the self instead of enlarging it. Dewey’s deeper claim is ethical: society has a responsibility to curate conditions where experience accumulates into growth rather than damage.

Context matters. Writing in the wake of industrialization and amid Progressive-era reforms, Dewey is trying to build an education fit for democracy. If citizens are shaped by their environments, then schooling can’t be neutral. His point lands with a quiet severity: the measure of an educational experience is whether it opens doors or closes them.

Quote Details

TopicLearning
Source
Verified source: Experience and Education (John Dewey, 1938)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
The belief that all genuine education comes about through experience does not mean that all experiences are genuinely or equally educative. (Chapter 2 (“The Need of a Theory of Experience”), p. 25). This sentence appears at the start of Chapter 2, “The Need of a Theory of Experience,” in John Dewey’s Experience and Education. The primary work was first published in 1938 (New York: Macmillan) as part of the Kappa Delta Pi lecture series (no. 10). The page number (p. 25) is consistently reported in later reprints/editions and secondary page-numbered study guides, but pagination can vary by edition; the chapter placement is stable. The online text provided here reproduces the chapter text and contains the exact wording.
Other candidates (1)
The Routledge International Handbook of Education, Religi... (James Arthur, Terence Lovat, 2013) compilation97.1%
... John Dewey (1938) analyses the importance of experience to the learning process ... the belief that all genuine e...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Dewey, John. (2026, February 7). The belief that all genuine education comes about through experience does not mean that all experiences are genuinely or equally educative. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-belief-that-all-genuine-education-comes-about-88/

Chicago Style
Dewey, John. "The belief that all genuine education comes about through experience does not mean that all experiences are genuinely or equally educative." FixQuotes. February 7, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-belief-that-all-genuine-education-comes-about-88/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The belief that all genuine education comes about through experience does not mean that all experiences are genuinely or equally educative." FixQuotes, 7 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-belief-that-all-genuine-education-comes-about-88/. Accessed 22 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

John Dewey

John Dewey (October 20, 1859 - June 1, 1952) was a Philosopher from USA.

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