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| Oxford Review of Education | 913 |
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Showing 136 to 150 of 913 results
Gibson, Howard – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
Reason is a heterogeneous word with many meanings and functions. Instrumental reasoning is the "useful but blind" variant that, for Horkheimer, presupposes "the adequacy of procedures for purposes more or less taken for granted and supposedly self-explanatory". The paper argues that the root of instrumental reasoning is to be found in Hume and…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Administration, Skills, Creativity
Hartas, Dimitra – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
Using a longitudinal, UK representative sample from the Millennium Cohort Study, the present study examined the effects of socio-economic factors on mother- and teacher-rated behaviour, and the unique and cumulative contribution of both risk and protective factors inherent in children's proximal and distal influences to behaviour during the…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Family Income, Parenting Styles, Child Rearing
Hammersley, Martyn – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
Sam Hillyard's (2010) recent article has the value of highlighting the issue of theory development in interactionism, ethnography, and the sociology of education. It also reminds of a fruitful, and unique, research programme in educational research that stretched from the early 1960s into the 1990s. However, in the author's view Hillyard's…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Development, Interaction, Ethnography
Hillyard, Sam – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
Hammersley's response (2011, this issue) to the author's article raises important points and makes useful comments. His concerns are three-fold: (1) historic; (2) textual; and (3) conceptual. In this article, the author offers some reflections on each. (Contains 1 note.)
Descriptors: Ethnography, Theories, History
Thompson, Ron – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
The characteristics, experiences and long-term prospects of young people outside the labour market and education have attracted widespread international attention in recent decades, and the specific category of young people not in education, employment or training (NEET) has been a policy concern for the UK Government since 1997. This paper…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Young Adults, Adolescents, Compulsory Education
Riley, Patrick – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
Rousseau's political philosophy presents the great legislator as a civic educator who must over time transform naturally self-loving egoists into citizens animated by a general will without destroying freedom. This is an educational process which is "denaturing" but which aims to produce autonomous adults who can ultimately say to their teacher…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Comparative Analysis, Education, Politics
Frazer, Elizabeth – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
Catharine Macaulay and Mary Wollstonecraft are linked by intellectual and political bonds; for both, education is a philosophical and political preoccupation in its own right, and also interacts with philosophical questions of morality, social power, theology, truth and human action. Macaulay's philosophical and political engagements with Hobbes,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Females, Reputation
Watts, Ruth – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
This paper examines the role of Harriet Martineau as a public educator in the light of her Unitarian upbringing and heritage. First, it explores the Unitarian contribution to educational philosophy, psychology and practice at the end of the 18th century and then subsequent developments in the 19th, singling out the work of those people who…
Descriptors: Educational Principles, Educational Philosophy, Social Change, Philosophy
Leopold, David – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
The aims of education, and the appropriate means of realising them, are a recurring preoccupation of utopian authors. The utopian socialists Robert Owen (1771-1858) and Charles Fourier (1772-1837) both place human nature at the core of their educational views, and both see education as central to their wider objective of social and political…
Descriptors: Role of Education, Educational Philosophy, Imagination, Social Environment
Ryan, Alan – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
Mill may be said either to have written rather little on education or to have written a very great deal. He himself distinguished between a "narrow" and a "wider" sense of education, the former limited to what happens in formal educational settings, the latter embracing all the influences that make us who and what we are. He wrote rather little on…
Descriptors: Reputation, Recognition (Achievement), Ethology, Democracy
Quinn, Josephine Crawley; Brooke, Christopher – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
The paper examines Edward Carpenter's 1899 essay on education that defended the value of powerful same-sex attachments, either between older and younger boys or between teachers and pupils, in the context of Victorian ideologies of same-sex affection. Linda Dowling has described how "a homosexual counterdiscourse able to justify male love in ideal…
Descriptors: Homosexuality, School Culture, Role, Individual Development
Schwartz, Laura – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
This article examines some of the conversations that took place between women's rights advocates on the subject of female education. The relationship between Victorian feminism and educational reform was a complex one, and historians have long argued over whether campaigns for women's schools and colleges can be termed "feminist". This article…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Feminism, Womens Education, Females
Sim, Jasmine B. -Y. – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
Singapore is an example of a country where there is centralised control of the school curriculum and where political leaders wield direct influence over citizenship education. Co-ordinated and sustained effort is made to transmit the salient knowledge and values, develop the "right" instincts and attitudes, to help students become believers in the…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Citizenship Education, Foreign Countries, Social Studies
Hanley, Ryan Patrick – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
The Scottish Enlightenment is celebrated for its many contributions to the natural sciences, the social sciences and the moral sciences. But for all this attention, one aspect of the Scottish Enlightenment has been almost entirely neglected: its educational theory. This paper aims to illuminate the relationship between the educational theory of…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Social Sciences, Natural Sciences, Foreign Countries
Ichou, Mathieu; Vallet, Louis-Andre – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
Over the last 45 years, two major trends have characterised French educational policies: a voluntary move towards widening access to upper secondary school and a related diversification of the diplomas available at the end of it, especially through the creation of the technological "baccalaureat" in 1968 and the vocational "baccalaureat" in 1985.…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Equal Education, Educational Trends

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