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Showing 1 to 15 of 41 results
Labaree, David F. – Education and Culture, 2014
In this 2013 John Dewey Society Lecture I examine the history and the structure of the American system of higher education. I argue that the true hero of the story is the evolved "form" of the American university and that all the things we love about it, like free speech, are the side effects of a structure that arose for other purposes.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Philosophy, Educational Attitudes, Freedom of Speech
Cavanaugh, Shane – Education and Culture, 2014
Feelings of awe, wonder, and appreciation have been largely ignored in the working lives of scientists and, in turn, science education has not accurately portrayed science to students. In an effort to bring the affective qualities of science into the classroom, this work draws on the writings of the sublime by Burke, Kant, Emerson, and Wordsworth…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Science Education, Aesthetics, Scientists
Heybach, Jessica A.; Sheffield, Eric C. – Education and Culture, 2014
In this article, we first suggest that contemporary school policies and practices represent a utopia-gone-wrong. In striving for an unattainable educational utopia--that is, all students will be proficient in math and reading by 2014--current polices and their resulting practices have brought a classic dystopian turn--the dehumanization of…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Educational Theories, Educational Experience, Educational Policy
Vannatta, Seth C. – Education and Culture, 2014
The proper goal of an introductory logic course, teaching critical thinking, is best achieved by maintaining the principle of continuity between student experiences and the curriculum. To demonstrate this I explain Dewey's naturalistic approach to logic and the process of inquiry, one which presents the elements of traditional logic in the…
Descriptors: Test Coaching, Teaching Methods, Test Content, Introductory Courses
Celik, Rasit – Education and Culture, 2014
Creating a democratic nation-state and sustaining its progress was seen by the founders of the Republic of Turkey as necessary to achieving the goal of becoming a distinguished member among developed civilizations. The founders conceived of education as a main instrument in disseminating this new ideology and ensuring the emergence of a culture of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ideology, Educational Philosophy, Educational Development
Waks, Leonard J. – Education and Culture, 2014
In his books "Public Opinion" and "The Phantom Public," Walter Lippmann argued that policy leaders should deny the public a significant role in policymaking. Public opinion, he argued, would inevitably be ill-informed, self-interested and readily manipulated. In "The Public and its Problems," Dewey countered Lippmann…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Social Sciences, Community, Social Theories
Misco, Thomas – Education and Culture, 2014
This paper focuses on the primary problem of the public, as advanced in "The Public and its Problems," which Dewey described as the need to improve "methods of debate, discussion, and persuasion" for the purposes of "perfecting the process of inquiry" (Dewey, 1927/1954, p. 208). I first situate these modes of…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Social Studies, Democracy, Inquiry
Stark, Jody L. – Education and Culture, 2014
In its broadest sense, pragmatism could be said to be the philosophical orientation of all action research. Action research is characterized by research, action, and participation grounded in democratic principles and guided by the aim of social improvement. Furthermore, action research is an active process of inquiry that does not admit…
Descriptors: Action Research, Educational Theories, Inquiry, Social Science Research
Oliverio, Stefano – Education and Culture, 2014
The paper tackles the fundamental question of whether democracy has by now been turned into a meaningless liturgy of a past religion and proposes a Deweyan answer which points to the need to fully realize modernity in order to bring into existence a genuine democracy. By deploying an archaeological reading of "The Public and Its…
Descriptors: Democracy, Social Theories, Role of Education, Educational Theories
Shuffelton, Amy B. – Education and Culture, 2014
This article considers the 2012 Chicago Teachers Strike in light of John Dewey's "The Public and Its Problems." It engages Dewey's conceptualization of practical reason to challenge the educational reform movement's commitment to technocratic decision-making.
Descriptors: Teacher Strikes, Educational Change, Educational Policy, Activism
Goura, Tairou; Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah L. – Education and Culture, 2013
The Republic of Togo, like many African former colonies, has struggled to create a system of vocational education that will aid its efforts to move beyond the status of a satellite to Western economies. We incorporate postcolonial, Deweyan and feminist perspectives to understand how lingering colonialism and neo-colonial forces have hampered…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Vocational Education, Foreign Policy, Feminism
Ek, Andrew; Macintyre Latta, Margaret A. – Education and Culture, 2013
A prospective teacher and a teacher educator enter into a yearlong conversation seeking greater curricular physicality and materiality within its enactment. Dewey's (1938) temporal educative relation of teaching and learning as an ever-present process is helpful, asking both parties to dwell mindfully at the intersections of teaching/learning…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Teacher Educators, Teacher Education Curriculum, Educational Philosophy
Day, Michael; Harbour, Clifford P. – Education and Culture, 2013
Adult education scholars have not yet examined the connections between the philosopher, John Dewey, and the lecturer on adult education, Everett Dean Martin. These scholars generally portray Dewey as indifferent to their field. However, Dewey's correspondence with a New York newspaper editor in 1928, recommending Martin's The Meaning of…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Educational Philosophy, Reflection
Shook, John – Education and Culture, 2013
Interpretations of John Dewey's political theory grasp his respect for public deliberation, but typically overlook his ethical justification for democracy. Dewey gave two primary reasons why democracy is superior to other forms of government. First, a public educated in the tools of social intelligence can be more effective at managing their…
Descriptors: Ethics, Democracy, Citizen Participation, Philosophy
Lake, Danielle L. – Education and Culture, 2013
While the U.S. health care system is failing to serve many of its citizens, agreeing on what is wrong as well as on how to fix the system seems impossibly optimistic. Leonard Fleck attempts to do just this--to diagnose the problems and to address these problems through dialogue. Dewey's philosophy supports the direction of Fleck's work,…
Descriptors: Ethics, Health Services, Philosophy, Problems

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