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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 23 results
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Kennedy, David – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2014
This article argues that children represent one vanguard of an emergent shift in Western subjectivity, and that adult-child dialogue, especially in the context of schooling, is a key locus for the epistemological change that implies. Following Herbert Marcuse's invocation of a "new sensibility", the author argues that the…
Descriptors: Child Development, Developmental Stages, Interpersonal Relationship, Adults
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White, Patricia – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2012
The article asks whether political anger has a legitimate place in a democracy, as this is a political system designed to resolve conflicts by peaceful negotiation. It distinguishes personal from social anger and political anger, to focus explicitly on the latter. It argues that both the feeling and expression of political anger are subject to…
Descriptors: Civics, Democracy, Political Attitudes, Psychological Patterns
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Harris, Suzy – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2012
In the UK, as elsewhere in the world, the global financial crisis has focused attention on the cost of public services and the need to reduce expenditure, not least in respect of higher education. This, however, raises a set of prior questions: What kind of society do we want? What is important to democratic society? What kind of higher education…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Economic Factors, Costs
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Saito, Naoko – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2011
In the practice of education and educational reforms today "meritocracy" is a prevalent mode of thinking and discourse. Behind political and economic debates over the just distribution of education benefits, other kinds of philosophical issues, concerning the question of democracy, await to be addressed. As a means of evoking a language more…
Descriptors: Democracy, Inclusion, Social Justice, Citizenship
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Gregory, Maughn – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2011
As conceived by founders Matthew Lipman and Ann Margaret Sharp, Philosophy for Children is a humanistic practice with roots in the Hellenistic tradition of philosophy as a way of life given to the search for meaning, in American pragmatism with its emphasis on qualitative experience, collaborative inquiry and democratic society, and in American…
Descriptors: Children, Philosophy, Humanism, Life Style
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Webster, R. Scott – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2009
John Dewey has been portrayed as a sort of villain in Rosenow's (1997) article which appeared in this journal, apparently because he was unfairly opposed to God and to religion, and also because he deliberately usurped religious language to "camouflage" his secular ideas. By drawing mainly upon similar sources but with some important additions, I…
Descriptors: Democracy, Religion, Religious Factors, Progressive Education
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Baldacchino, John – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2008
This article reviews "John Dewey and Our Educational Prospect, A Critical Engagement with Dewey's Democracy and Education," edited and spearheaded by David T. Hansen, with contributions by Gert Biesta, Reba N. Page, Larry A. Hickman, Naoko Saito, Gary D. Fenstermacher, Herbert M. Kliebard, Sharon Fieman-Nemser and Elizabeth Minnich. This review…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Democracy, Theory Practice Relationship, Ethics
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Engel, Stephen M. – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2007
Creating education systems that promote democratic sustainability has been the concern of political thinkers as diverse as J. S. Mill, Dewey, Benjamin Barber and Derek Bok. The classic dichotomisation of democratic theory between deliberative democrats and Schumpeterian democrats suggests that education in the service of democracy can be…
Descriptors: Universities, Educational Philosophy, Democracy, Citizenship Education
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Bredo, Eric – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2007
One source of tension within and between modern nation states derives from conflict between individual and cultural rights. Modern democracies have been built on ideas of individual liberty whose extensions to the rights of culturally distinctive groups to survival and acceptance can create normative and political conflict. Such tensions raise…
Descriptors: Freedom, Scholarship, Conflict, Democracy
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Davis, Andrew – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2007
The Common School should promote a sense of the distinctive worth of all human beings. How is the respect thus owed to every individual to be properly understood? This familiar question is explored by discussing "lookism", a form of discrimination on the grounds of appearance. The treatment is located within a wider analysis of stereotyping.…
Descriptors: Democracy, Moral Values, Educational Philosophy, Social Discrimination
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Healy, Mary – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2007
Applying a philosophical perspective to the concept of loyalty, I consider how the commodification of education may affect the ties between people. Using both theories of brand loyalty and Albert Hirschman's distinction between exit and voice, I examine how human loyalties may be formed in general and also in the field of education. I conclude…
Descriptors: School Choice, Democracy, Civics, Educational Philosophy
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Fielding, Michael – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2007
There needs to be a tighter connection than is often the case between contested theories of democracy and debates about the viability and desirability of the common school. Because radical traditions of state education take that connection much more seriously, in both theory and practice, than most dominant accounts, it is to those alternative…
Descriptors: Democracy, Political Attitudes, Educational Philosophy, Educational Objectives
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Reich, Rob – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2007
The common school ideal is the source of one of the oldest educational debates in liberal democratic societies. The movement in favour of greater educational choice is the source of one of the most recent. Each has been the cause of major and enduring controversy, not only within philosophical thought but also within political, legal and social…
Descriptors: Democracy, School Choice, Educational Philosophy, Equal Education
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Alexander, Hanan – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2007
In this essay I critique two influential accounts of rational autonomy in common schooling that conceive liberalism as an ideal form of life, and I offer an alternative approach to democratic education that views liberal theory as concerned with coexistence among rival ways of living. This view places moral agency, not rational autonomy, at the…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Democracy, Foreign Countries, Educational Philosophy
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Saito, Naoko – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2006
In the contemporary culture of accountability and the "economy" of education this generates, pragmatism, as a philosophy for ordinary practice, needs to resist the totalising force of an ideology of practice, one that distracts us from the rich qualities of daily experience. In response to this need, and in mobilising Dewey's pragmatism, this…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Education, Democracy, Accountability
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