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Showing 16 to 30 of 175 results
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
Oral, Sevket Benhur – Education and Culture, 2013
In this article, it is argued that fulfilling teaching and educative experiences go hand in hand. Not only is it possible to be fully alive as a teacher, it is also essential for educative experience to unfold in students. To substantiate the claim made here, an analysis of what I would like to call the ideal of teaching as consummatory experience…
Descriptors: Instruction, Educational Experience, Philosophy, Experience
Rodriguez, Victor J. – Education and Culture, 2013
From 1915 to 1923, the pedagogy of John Dewey became an important pillar of anarchist and socialist projects of education in Mexico. These radical experiments were based on the belief in an open-ended world amenable to the intervention of a new subject of modernity whose unconstrained operations created rather than disrupted social order.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Instruction, Educational History, Educational Experiments
Garrison, Jim – Education and Culture, 2013
Educators frequently fret over how to bridge the gap between theory and practice. In an important sense, it is a false problem. Theory is simply the thoughtful, reflective phase of good practice. We will approach Dewey's philosophy as one of continuous creation and re-creation or even more precisely, social co-creation, that requires making…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Theory Practice Relationship, Educational Practices, Educational Theories
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
Frank, Jeff – Education and Culture, 2013
In this paper I raise and respond to the question: Is John Dewey's understanding of growth sufficiently responsive to problems associated with race and racism? I begin with a discussion of Dewey's essay "Racial Prejudice and Friction," and show that Dewey lets a major objection to his response to racism and prejudice stand…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Race, Racial Bias, Moral Development
Waddington, David I. – Education and Culture, 2013
This paper brings to light the ideas of a pioneering but largely forgotten social critic, C. E. Ayres. In his first book, "Science: The False Messiah" (1927), which was written in consultation with John Dewey, Ayres advanced a forceful and original critique of science and technology. He argued that technological change was occurring at a…
Descriptors: Criticism, Science and Society, Technological Advancement, Educational Attitudes
Keall, Cherilyn – Education and Culture, 2013
In this paper, I argue that John Dewey's view of human nature entails that culture is a necessary but not sufficient condition for freedom. A surprising corollary of this argument is that, if left to run its natural course, culture in fact tends not to enable but rather to preclude freedom. Hence, there are specific cultural practices--habits…
Descriptors: Freedom, Cultural Influences, Philosophy, Habit Formation
Kim, Sang Hyun – Education and Culture, 2013
While the ideas of Western democracy and individualism are increasingly popular and influential in Korean society, the traditional Korean understanding of authority has been challenged, especially in Korean schools. In this essay, the author first tries to analyze some important educational problems in contemporary Korea as it relates to the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Power Structure, Educational Philosophy, Asian Culture
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
Freeman-Moir, John – Education and Culture, 2012
With strikingly resonance William Morris and John Dewey independently imagined what utopian education might plausibly be. Neither remotely thought of utopia as a perfectly ordered society, but rather as a process. Each understood education functionally in terms of how it fits with art, work, and democracy within a holistic conception of utopia.…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Democracy, Holistic Approach, Social Environment
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

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