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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 25 results
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Heiden, Bruce – Academic Questions, 2013
In a recent article in "Academic Questions" political scientists Robert Maranto and Matthew C. Woessner have suggested a program to reform their discipline and enhance its social utility. They encourage researchers to engage with consequential social issues and educate the public, while admonishing political scientists to resist partisan advocacy…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disciplines, Political Science, Educational Research, Ideology
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Solway, David – Academic Questions, 2013
One of the main factors implicated in the atomization of contemporary life, both as cause and effect, is the brunt and tenor of modern liberal education. For it cannot be denied that liberal education in the classic sense has severed its mandate to instruct and enlighten from the archive of the past and has been replaced by the concept of…
Descriptors: General Education, Foreign Countries, Educational History, Intellectual History
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Capaldi, Nicholas – Academic Questions, 2012
Since the seventeenth century, there have been two narratives about modernity in general and America in particular. The author uses the term "narrative" to include (a) facts, (b) arguments, and most important, (c) a larger vision of how one sees the world and chooses to engage the world. The first and originalist narrative is the Lockean Liberty…
Descriptors: Democracy, Social Problems, Global Approach, World Views
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Flynn, Daniel J. – Academic Questions, 2012
In this article, the author talks about "A Crucible Moment: College Learning & Democracy's Future." There is a moment within "A Crucible Moment: College Learning & Democracy's Future" when the report gets it right. The academics tackle a National Governors Association study that envisions colleges as job training centers. The authors of "A…
Descriptors: Job Training, Social Responsibility, Democracy, Politics of Education
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Grabar, Mary – Academic Questions, 2012
The agenda of "A Crucible Moment: College Learning & Democracy's Future," "commissioned," "funded," and "nurtured" by the U.S. Department of Education, is nothing less than an attempt to implement a "transformation" of America by "transform[ing] current academic norms about what counts as scholarship." The author suggests that people may remember…
Descriptors: Federal Government, Educational Policy, Educational Principles, Educational Objectives
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Hamilton, Neil W. – Academic Questions, 2012
This "crucible moment" in which democratic capitalism finds itself does not call for more government mandates to dictate progressive activism in higher education. Rather, this crucible moment calls higher education on its own initiative to focus on the moral foundation that both democracy and capitalism require. The foundation of democratic…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Ethics, Free Enterprise System, Social Systems
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Schaub, Diana – Academic Questions, 2012
A "civic recession" is as worrisome as an economic recession. "A Crucible Moment: College Learning & Democracy's Future" (The National Task Force on Civic Learning and Democratic Engagement, 2012) should be praised for acknowledging the peril and seeking to rebuild the "depleted civic capital." Welcome, too, is the report's conviction that…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Civics, Democracy, Citizenship
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Mead, Lawrence M. – Academic Questions, 2010
Most members of the National Association of Scholars worry about the politicization of the university. Academia gives undue preference to racial minorities in student admissions and faculty appointments. Teaching and research is often slanted toward minority grievances and Third World claims against the United States. However, critics have largely…
Descriptors: Political Science, College Faculty, Politics of Education, Scholarship
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Seaton, James – Academic Questions, 2010
Mainstream cultural studies, it seems, is unwilling to take art of any kind seriously, whether popular or classic. Richard Posner is not far wrong in suggesting that the aim of cultural studies "is to knock literature off its pedestal and find vehicles easier than literary works for making political points." To respond fully to literature and art…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Popular Culture, Art Education, Literary Criticism
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Campbell, Douglas G. – Academic Questions, 2009
This article presents the author's interesting experiences relating to the ideological indoctrination taking place on college campuses. The author suggests that the philosophical and ethical foundations of both the United States and the modern American university are being undermined by the ideology of collectivism, with its dogmatic hatred of…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Educational Philosophy, Foundations of Education, Ideology
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Reedy, Jeremiah – Academic Questions, 2007
An article by Lois Roman, which appeared in the December 25, 2005 issue of the "Washington Post" under the title "Literacy of College Graduates Is on Decline: Survey's Finding of a Drop in Reading Proficiency Is Inexplicable," gives the results of a study conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics. According to the story "Only 31…
Descriptors: Cultural Literacy, College Graduates, Reading Ability, Communication Skills
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Curtler, Hugh Mercer – Academic Questions, 2007
A lot of people probably believe that a liberal education is a broad education that exposes students to a variety of academic disciplines. This once translated, in many universities, to a "General Studies" core requirement consisting mostly of introductory courses to various disciplines that were loosely related to one another around general…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, General Education, Intellectual Freedom, Cultural Pluralism
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Nieli, Russell – Academic Questions, 2007
Small programs can make a big difference on college campuses. At Duke University, a few dedicated people, with the support of college administrators, exploited the all-too-evident liabilities of curriculum fragmentation, political correctness, and the lack of direction felt by undergraduate students to create intellectually valuable and…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Higher Education, Political Attitudes, College Curriculum
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Jackson, Robert L. – Academic Questions, 2007
The motivation and methodology for measuring intelligence have changed repeatedly in the modern history of large-scale student testing. Test makers have always sought to identify raw aptitude for cultivation, but they have never figured out how to promote excellence while preserving equality. They've settled for egalitarianism, which gives rise to…
Descriptors: Standardized Tests, Psychometrics, Educational Testing, Liberal Arts
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Booker, Michael J. – Academic Questions, 2007
Plato wrote that higher order thinking could not start until the student had mastered conventional wisdom. The American educational establishment has turned Plato on his head with the help of a dubious approach to teaching developed by one Benjamin Bloom. Bloom's taxonomy was intended for higher education, but its misappropriation has resulted in…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Classification, Thinking Skills, Teaching Methods
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