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Philosophical Documents in Education 3rd edition [Minkštas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, aukštis x plotis: 235x178 mm, weight: 531 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-May-2007
  • Leidėjas: Pearson
  • ISBN-10: 0205553842
  • ISBN-13: 9780205553846
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, aukštis x plotis: 235x178 mm, weight: 531 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-May-2007
  • Leidėjas: Pearson
  • ISBN-10: 0205553842
  • ISBN-13: 9780205553846
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Philosophical Documents in Education, 3/e masterfully argues that students can better understand and practice their profession by reading, contemplating, and discussing the great philosophic tradition in education.  An edited anthology of 18 primary source materials in educational philosophy, this book provides a wide range of both historical and contemporary viewpoints.  Works by philosophers of numerous perspectives-including Catharine Macaulay, Hannah Arendt, Cornel West, Maxine Greene, Paulo Freire, Kieran Egan, Jane Roland Martin, and Parker J. Palmer-expose readers to philosophical views from diverse populations and convictions.  With fresh perspectives, a comprehensive and contextualizing introduction, and updated pedagogy including revised timelines and new chapter questions, this revered resource is more vital than ever for today's teachers.

Daugiau informacijos

Philosophical Documents in Education, 3/e masterfully argues that students can better understand and practice their profession by reading, contemplating, and discussing the great philosophic tradition in education.  An edited anthology of 18 primary source materials in educational philosophy, this book provides a wide range of both historical and contemporary viewpoints.  Works by philosophers of numerous perspectives-including Catharine Macaulay, Hannah Arendt, Cornel West, Maxine Greene, Paulo Freire, Kieran Egan, Jane Roland Martin, and Parker J. Palmer-expose readers to philosophical views from diverse populations and convictions.  With fresh perspectives, a comprehensive and contextualizing introduction, and updated pedagogy including revised timelines and new chapter questions, this revered resource is more vital than ever for today's teachers.
Preface

Acknowledgments

 

Introduction

1. Socrates and Plato

    Time Line for Socrates

    Time Line for Plato

    Introduction

    Note

From Plato's Apology (ca. 399 BC)

From Plato's The Republic (ca. 366 BC)

    Book V1

    Book V11

    Questions


2. Aristotle.

    Time Line for Aristotle

    Time Line for His Writings

    Introduction

    Notes

From Nichomachean Ethics (ca. 330 BC)

    Book 1

    Book 11

    Book X

    Questions


3. St. Augustine

    Time Line for St. Augustine

    Introduction

From Confessions (ca. 400)

    Book 1

    Book III

From Concerning the Teacher (ca. 389)

    Internal Light, Internal Truth

    Words Do Not Always Have the Power Even to Reveal the Mind of the
Speaker

    Christ Teaches within the Mind. Mans Words are External and Serve Only
to Give Reminders

    Questions


4. Erasmus

    Time Line for Erasmus

    Introduction

    Notes

From The Praise of Folly (1509)

Letter from Erasmus to Ulrich von Hutten (1516)

From On the Right Method of Instruction (1518)

    1. Thought and Expression Form the Two-Fold Material of Instruction

    2. Expression Claims the First Place in Point of Time. Both the Greek and
Latin Languages Needful to the Educated Man

    3. The Right Method of Acquiring Grammar Rests upon Reading and Not
upon Definitions and Rules

    Questions


5. John Locke

    Time Line for Locke

    Introduction

    Notes

From Some Thoughts Concerning Education (1693)

    Questions


6. Jean-Jacques Rousseau.

    Time Line for Rousseau

    Introduction

From Emile (1762)

    Questions

7. Catharine Macaulay

    Time Line for Macaulay

    Introduction

    Notes

From Letters on Education (1790)

    No Characteristic Difference in Sex

    Coquettry

    Benevolence

    Questions

 

8. John Dewey.

    Time Line for Dewey.

    Introduction

    Notes

My Pedagogic Creed (1897)

    Article I- What Education Is

    Article II- What the School Is

    Article III- The Subject-Matter of Education

    Article IV- The Nature of Method

    Article V- The School and Social Progress

From Democracy and Education (1916)

From Experience and Education (1938)

    Questions

9. Hannah Arendt

    Time Line for Arendt

    Introduction

    Notes

From Between Past and Present

    The Crisis in Education

        Part I

        Part II

        Part III

        Part IV

    Questions


10. Maxine Greene

    Time Line for Greene

    Introduction

    Notes

From The Dialectic of Freedom (1988)

    Questions


11. Jane Roland Martin

    Time Line for Martin

    Introduction

    Note

From Reclaiming a Conversation: The Ideal of the Educated Woman (1985)

    Redefining the Educational Realm

    Educating Our Sons

    Toward a Gender-Sensitive Ideal

    Questions

12. Cornel West

    Time Line for West

    Introduction

    Notes

From Prophetic Thought in Postmodern Times (1993)

    The Value of the Age of Europe  

    The End of the Age of Europe and the Rise of the United States

    The Decolonization of the Third World

    Economic and Social Decline

    The Ravages of the Culture of Consumption

    Questions


13. Paulo Freire

    Time Line for Freire

    Introduction

    Notes

From Pedagogy of the Oppressed (1972)

    Questions


14. Nel Noddings

    Time Line for Noddings

    Introduction

    Notes

From The Challenge to Care in Schools:  An Alternative Approach to Education
(1992)

    The Debate in Ethics

    Questions

 

15. Kieran Egan

    Time Line for Egan

    Introduction

    Notes

From Teaching as Story Telling (1986)

    Introduction

    Story Rhythm

    Binary Opposites

    Affective Meaning

    Metaphors, Analogs, and Objectives

    Conclusion

    Questions

 

16. Matthew Lipman

    Time Line for Lipman

    Introduction

    Notes

Do Elementary School Children Need Philosophy? (1994)

From Philosophy Goes to School (1988)

    Did Plato Condemn Philosophy for the Young?

    Philosophical Inquiry as the Model of Education

    What Is It to Be Fully Educated?

    Converting Classrooms into Communities of Inquiry

From Philosophy in the Classroom (1977)

    Guiding a Classroom Discussion

    The Role of Ideas in a Philosophical Dialogue

    Questions

 

17. Gareth Matthews

    Time Line for Matthews

    Introduction

From The Philosophy of Childhood (1994)

    A Philosophers View of Childhood

From Philosophy and the Young Child (1980)

    Puzzlement

Review of ArnoldLobels Frog and Toad Together (1985)

    Questions

 

18. Parker J. Palmer

    Time Line for Palmer

    Introduction

    Notes

From The Courage to Teach (1998)

    The Hidden Wholeness:  Paradox in Teaching and Learning

    Thinking the World Together

    When Things Fall Apart

    The Limits and Potentials of Self

    Paradox and Pedagogical Design

    Practicing Paradox in the Classroom

    Holding the Tensions of Opposites

    Questions

                                                 

 Index