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El. knyga: International Emergence of Educational Sciences in the Post-World War Two Years: Quantification, Visualization, and Making Kinds of People [Taylor & Francis e-book]

Edited by (Univ. of Wisconsin Madison, USA.), Edited by (Univ. of Gävle & Uppsala Univ., Sweden.), Edited by (Univ. of Wisconsin Madison, USA.)
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"The book brings together contributions from curriculum history, cultural studies, visual cultures, and science and technology studies to explore the international mobilizations of the sciences related to education during the post-World War Two years. Crossing the boundaries of education and science studies therefore, it uniquely examines how the desires of science to actualize a better society were converted to the search for remaking social life that paradoxically embodied cultural differences and social divisions. The book examines how cybernetics and systems theories traveled and were assembled to make the school as social experiments and laboratories (R&D) for change. Explored are the new comparative technologies of quantification and the visualization of educational data used in the methods of mass observation. The sciences not only gave reference to the present but to the potentialities of societies and people that were embodied in the psychologies of childhood, concerns for individual development, growth and creativity; teacher education, and the quantification and assessments of educational systems. The book also explores how the categories and classifications of the sciences formed at intersections with the humanities, the arts and political practices. This informative volume will be of interest to researchers, academics, and postgraduate students in the fields of curriculum studies, the history of the social sciences, the history of education, cultural studies, as well as educators and school leaders concerned with education policy"--

The book brings together contributions from curriculum history, cultural studies, visual cultures, and science and technology studies to explore the international mobilizations of the sciences related to education during the post-World War Two years. Crossing the boundaries of education and science studies, it uniquely examines how the desires of science to actualize a better society were converted to the search for remaking social life that paradoxically embodied cultural differences and social divisions.

The book examines how cybernetics and systems theories traveled and were assembled to turn schools into social experiments and laboratories for change. Explored are the new comparative technologies of quantification and the visualization of educational data used in the methods of mass observation. The sciences not only about the present but also the potentialities of societies and people in the psychologies of childhood; concerns for individual development, growth, and creativity; teacher education; and the quantification and assessments of educational systems. The book also explores how the categories and classifications of the sciences formed at intersections with the humanities, the arts, and political practices.

This informative volume will be of interest to researchers, academics, and postgraduate students in the fields of curriculum studies, the history of the social sciences, the history of education, and cultural studies, and to educators and school leaders concerned with education policy.

Acknowledgments vii
Preface viii
About the Contributors xiv
List of Illustrations
xvii
1 How Contemporary Educational Sciences Became Reasonable: The International Emergence of Educational Sciences in the Post-World War Two Years
1(24)
Thomas S. Popkewitz
Daniel Pettersson
Kai-Jung Hsiao
PART 1 Mobilizing Science and Desires for Better Societies
25(64)
2 Science as "the Beacon" for Social Change: The Reason of Systems in American Educational Research and Development
27(24)
Thomas S. Popkewitz
3 Tactile Pedagogies in the Postwar: Cybernetics, Art, and the Production of a New Educational Rationale
51(20)
Ines Dussel
4 Science as Utopia: Infrastructures, Pedagogies, and the Prophecy of Design
71(18)
Junzi Huang
PART 2 Locationless Logics and Fabricating Differences
89(78)
5 Post-World War Two Psychology, Education, and the Creative Child: Fabricating Differences
91(18)
Catarina Silva Martins
6 Objectification of Human Nature: "Adolescent" as a Taxonomy of Postwar Taiwan Actors
109(19)
Kai-Jung Hsiao
7 The Development of the Child and National Progress: Behaviorism and Cultural Deprivation in Brazil
128(21)
Ana Laura Godinho Lima
8 The Embrace of Systems in Post-World War Two Teacher Education Research
149(18)
Sun Young Lee
PART 3 Systems, Cybernetics: Imagineering Belonging as Social Differentiation
167(75)
9 Diagrams of Feedback: Behaviorism, Programmed Instruction, and Cybernetic Planning
169(18)
Antti Saari
10 From "Threat" to "Treat": Cybernetics in the Soviet Union 1
187(20)
Tatiana Mikhaylova
Daniel Pettersson
11 School Differentiation and Re-forming Human Kinds in Swedish Welfare State Education After the Second World War
207(18)
Gun-Britt Warvik
Sverker Lindblad
Daniel Pettersson
Caroline Runesdotter
12 Quantification of an Educational System: Numbers in the Social Differentiation of Brazil
225(17)
Natalia De Lacerda Gil
Index 242
Thomas S. Popkewitz is Professor of Curriculum and Instruction and the Holtz Center for Science & Technology Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA.

Daniel Pettersson is Associate Professor in Pedagogy at the University of Gävle and Uppsala University, Sweden.

Kai-Jung Hsiao is a PhD student of Curriculum and Instruction at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA.