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Showing 1 to 15 of 40 results
Stitzlein, Sarah M. – Education and Culture, 2014
Today's social and political context is filled with environmental elements that both support and work against deep, participatory democracy. I argue that certain democratic habits should be nurtured through a supportive formative culture, especially in schools, in order to best achieve good democratic life in the present context. My aim here…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Educational Theories, Democratic Values, Habit Formation
Bullert, Gary B. – Education and Culture, 2013
Among the most controversial aspects of John Dewey's career as a public intellectual was his conflict with the Communist Party and its various front groups. John Dewey and Sidney Hook co-founded the Committee for Cultural Freedom that directly exposed that pretense of the Popular Front, which excluded the Soviet Union from the list of…
Descriptors: Conflict, Political Affiliation, Foreign Countries, Unions
Thayer-Bacon, Barbara – Education and Culture, 2012
I explore Montessori's story in terms of her initial warm reception by America to her educational research, and her later cooling off, once Dewey's student, Kilpatrick, published The Montessori System Examined and declared her work to be based on psychological theory that was fifty years behind the times. I argue that there is a troubling gendered…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Democracy, Theory Practice Relationship, Montessori Method
Baer, Stephanie A. – Education and Culture, 2012
Prospective teachers often walk into my course, Arts in the Elementary Classroom, carrying a guarded consciousness that constrains unencumbered artistic exploration. My responsibility as their instructor is to question mantras that reflect insecurity in process and make pedagogical use of their fears. Through studying the nature of these fears…
Descriptors: Holistic Approach, Fear, Elementary School Teachers, Preservice Teachers
Jackson, Jeff – Education and Culture, 2012
This essay aims to demonstrate the theoretical purchase offered by linking Dewey's educational theory with a rigorous account of dialectical development. Drawing on recent literature which emphasizes the continuing influence of Hegel on Dewey's thought throughout the latter's career, this essay reconstructs Dewey's argument regarding the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Objectives, Grades (Scholastic), Scores
Gregory, Maughn; Granger, David – Education and Culture, 2012
John Dewey was not a philosopher of education in the now-traditional sense of a doctor of philosophy who examines educational ends, means, and controversies through the disciplinary lenses of epistemology, ethics, and political theory, or of agenda-driven schools such as existentialism, feminism, and critical theory. Rather, Dewey was both an…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Well Being, Children, Ethics
Anthamatten, Eric – Education and Culture, 2012
Much of the history of philosophy has deployed the metaphor of sight over and above language of tactility and feeling. The body, the flesh, the hands and feet are seen as impediments to reason's upward journey towards the pure "light" of truth. But it is precisely these tactile points of contact with the world where knowledge and action begins and…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Human Body, Tactual Perception, Behavior Patterns
Kennedy, David – Education and Culture, 2012
The revolution that Matthew Lipman inaugurated in educational theory and practice in his Philosophy for Children program has two dimensions. The first--introducing philosophy as a subject matter in the elementary school--is based on the assumption that childhood is an appropriate stage of life to read, think, and talk about philosophical issues…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Educational Theories, Educational Practices, Elementary Schools
Oliverio, Stefano – Education and Culture, 2012
Against the backdrop of two remarks by Martha Nussbaum on Dewey and Socratic education (which can be connected with a statement by Matthew Lipman about his going beyond Dewey in a Deweyan way), the paper explores what seems to be a sort of ambivalence in Dewey's educational device. On the one hand, by recognizing children as inquirers and the…
Descriptors: Children, Educational Philosophy, Reflection, Epistemology
Tschaepe, Mark D. – Education and Culture, 2012
Dewey's conception of scientific explanation, which has been neglected by both philosophers of science and philosophers of education, facilitates overcoming the seeming divide between teaching a highly technical and specialized subject matter and encouraging students to successfully engage in the experience of being philosopher-scientists. By…
Descriptors: Science Education, Educational Philosophy, Inquiry, Teaching Methods
Kennedy, Nadia Stoyanova – Education and Culture, 2012
The paper discusses Matthew Lipman's approach to inquiry as shaped and fashioned by John Dewey's model of scientific inquiry. Although Lipman's program adopted the major aspects of Dewey's pedagogy, at least two characteristics of that program stand out as radically different--his use of relatively free-form philosophical discussions to teach…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Educational Experience, Inquiry, Critical Thinking
Bleazby, Jennifer B. – Education and Culture, 2012
The imagination has traditionally been associated with unreality and is commonly thought to be the antithesis of reason. This is a notion of imagination that can be found in Plato's writing and has influenced modern Western epistemology and educational ideals. As such, traditional schooling, which has focused on the cultivation of reason and the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Figurative Language, Reflection, Epistemology
Dorn, Charles; Santoro, Doris A. – Education and Culture, 2011
Most historical scholarship on John Dewey's 1924 educational mission to Turkey has focused on the degree to which the educator and philosopher's recommendations were actually implemented. By bringing the disciplinary lenses of history and philosophy to bear on Dewey's mission, this collaborative study differs from previous work by illuminating the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Recognition (Achievement), Reputation
Friedman, Randy L. – Education and Culture, 2011
Critics of Dewey's metaphysics point to his dismissal of any philosophy which locates ideals in a realm beyond experience. However, Dewey's sustained critique of dualistic philosophies is but a first step in his reconstruction and recovery of the function of the metaphysical. Detaching the discussion of values from inquiry, whether scientific,…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Criticism, Democracy, Ethical Instruction
Baurain, Bradley – Education and Culture, 2011
In "A Common Faith", Dewey rejects organized religion and belief in the supernatural, instead arguing for an authentically "religious" attitude which this interpretive essay analyzes in terms of four propositions: (1) Knowledge is unified. (2) Knowledge is democratic. (3) The pursuit of moral ideals requires moral faith. (4) The authority for…
Descriptors: Recognition (Achievement), Reputation, Beliefs, Educational Attitudes

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