Claude Code Plugins

Community-maintained marketplace

Feedback

learning-pedagogical-traditions

@pauljbernard/content
0
0

Adapt instructional design to regional pedagogical traditions including Confucian, Socratic, Guru-shishya, Ubuntu, and Indigenous approaches. Apply culturally-appropriate teaching methodologies. Use when designing for specific cultural contexts. Activates on "pedagogical tradition", "teaching philosophy", or "cultural pedagogy".

Install Skill

1Download skill
2Enable skills in Claude

Open claude.ai/settings/capabilities and find the "Skills" section

3Upload to Claude

Click "Upload skill" and select the downloaded ZIP file

Note: Please verify skill by going through its instructions before using it.

SKILL.md

name learning-pedagogical-traditions
description Adapt instructional design to regional pedagogical traditions including Confucian, Socratic, Guru-shishya, Ubuntu, and Indigenous approaches. Apply culturally-appropriate teaching methodologies. Use when designing for specific cultural contexts. Activates on "pedagogical tradition", "teaching philosophy", or "cultural pedagogy".

Learning Pedagogical Traditions

Adapt instructional design to honor and leverage regional pedagogical traditions and cultural teaching philosophies.

When to Use

  • Designing for specific cultural contexts
  • International school curriculum
  • Culturally responsive teaching
  • Cross-cultural education programs
  • Respecting indigenous pedagogies

Major Pedagogical Traditions

1. Confucian Tradition (East Asian)

Philosophy: Respect for teachers, cultivation of virtue, lifelong learning

Characteristics:

  • Teacher as moral authority
  • Emphasis on memorization and mastery
  • Exam-oriented learning
  • Collectivist classroom culture
  • Respect for elders and hierarchy
  • Repetition and practice valued

Teaching Methods:

  • Lecture and demonstration
  • Repetitive practice
  • Group study
  • Moral education integrated

Regions: China, Korea, Japan, Vietnam, Singapore

2. Socratic Method (Western)

Philosophy: Knowledge through questioning, critical thinking, individual reasoning

Characteristics:

  • Teacher as facilitator
  • Questioning and dialogue
  • Critical thinking emphasis
  • Individualist orientation
  • Student voice encouraged
  • Debate and discussion valued

Teaching Methods:

  • Socratic questioning
  • Class discussions
  • Debates
  • Independent research

Regions: North America, Western Europe

3. Guru-Shishya (South Asian)

Philosophy: Mentor-disciple relationship, holistic development, spiritual + academic

Characteristics:

  • Deep personal relationship with teacher
  • One-on-one or small group instruction
  • Holistic education (mind, body, spirit)
  • Apprenticeship model
  • Oral tradition emphasis
  • Character development integrated

Teaching Methods:

  • Direct transmission from guru
  • Observation and imitation
  • Storytelling and parables
  • Practical demonstration

Regions: India, Nepal, Tibet, Southeast Asia

4. Ubuntu (African)

Philosophy: "I am because we are" - community-based learning, collective wisdom

Characteristics:

  • Community-centered
  • Collective responsibility
  • Oral tradition
  • Intergenerational learning
  • Practical, experiential
  • Relationship-focused

Teaching Methods:

  • Storytelling and proverbs
  • Community gatherings
  • Peer learning
  • Elders as teachers
  • Hands-on, place-based learning

Regions: Sub-Saharan Africa

5. Indigenous Pedagogies

Philosophy: Connection to land, holistic learning, community knowledge, seven generations thinking

Characteristics:

  • Place-based education
  • Experiential, hands-on learning
  • Storytelling as primary method
  • Spirituality integrated
  • Intergenerational knowledge transfer
  • Observational learning

Teaching Methods:

  • Land-based learning
  • Storytelling and oral history
  • Seasonal and cyclical learning
  • Elder guidance
  • Learning by doing

Regions: Indigenous communities worldwide

Adaptation Strategies

Matching Pedagogy to Culture

Confucian Context:

  • ✓ Structured, organized lessons
  • ✓ Clear learning sequences
  • ✓ Practice and repetition opportunities
  • ✓ Group work with defined roles
  • ✗ Avoid challenging teacher directly
  • ✗ Limit open-ended "no right answer" activities

Socratic Context:

  • ✓ Open questions for discussion
  • ✓ Critical thinking activities
  • ✓ Independent projects
  • ✓ Student choice and voice
  • ✗ Avoid rote memorization emphasis
  • ✗ Don't expect deference to authority

Ubuntu Context:

  • ✓ Collaborative learning
  • ✓ Community connections
  • ✓ Storytelling and oral traditions
  • ✓ Peer teaching
  • ✗ Avoid excessive individualism
  • ✗ Don't ignore community wisdom

Hybrid Approaches

Combining Traditions:

  • Respect foundational philosophy of primary culture
  • Layer in complementary methods
  • Avoid cultural conflicts
  • Be explicit about pedagogical choices

CLI Interface

# Adapt to pedagogical tradition
/learning.pedagogical-traditions --content "math-unit/" --tradition "Confucian" --region "China"

# Multiple traditions (e.g., international school)
/learning.pedagogical-traditions --content "course/" --traditions "Socratic,Confucian" --balance "60-40"

# Indigenous pedagogy
/learning.pedagogical-traditions --content "science-unit/" --tradition "Indigenous" --nation "Lakota" --place-based

# Comparison analysis
/learning.pedagogical-traditions --analyze --traditions "Confucian,Socratic,Ubuntu" --topic "mathematics-instruction"

Output

  • Culturally-adapted instructional design
  • Pedagogical approach recommendations
  • Teaching method modifications
  • Cultural considerations guide
  • Hybrid approach specifications

Composition

Input from: /curriculum.design, /curriculum.develop-content Works with: /learning.cultural-adaptation, /learning.international-standards Output to: Culturally-responsive curriculum

Exit Codes

  • 0: Pedagogical adaptation complete
  • 1: Tradition not recognized
  • 2: Content conflicts with tradition