Critical Issues in Education
An Anthology of Readings
Edited by:
May 2006 | 328 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Eugene Provenzo, a nationally recognized scholar in the foundations of education, has edited this collection of significant interdisciplinary documents relevant to western traditions of education. He will also provide commentary and analysis throughout in the form of original essays and head notes. After a brief essay on classical and pre-modern education, he will focus on modern and post modern ideas. The book is weighted toward the modern and post-modern because most instructors give these periods the most attention. This book will include selections from theorists ranging roughly from Dewey, Montessori and William James through such important present day writers as William Pinar, Bell Hooks, Lisa Delpit, and Henry Giroux. The book will appeal to undergraduate and graduate instructors and students from a wide range of foundational courses. Individual scholars will also be interested in adding this volume to their shelves.
Preface
Introduction: Educational Thought in Western Culture
PROLOGUE
George S. Counts
“Orientation” (1934)
Vaclav Havel
“The Need for Transcendence in the Postmodern World” (1994)
PART I: THE AIMS OF EDUCATION
John Dewey
“My Pedagogic Creed” (1897)
National Education Association
Cardinal Principles of Secondary Education (1918)
Nel Noddings
“A Morally Defensible Mission for Schools in the 21st Century” (1997)
PART II: SOCIETY AND EDUCATION
Thomas Jefferson
Selection from Notes on the State of Virginia (1781)
Benjamin Rush
On The Mode Of Education Proper In A Republic (1786)
Horace Mann
Selections from Report No. 12 of the Massachusetts School Board (1848)
George S. Counts
Selection from Dare the Schools Build a New Social Order (1932)
PART III: COMPULSORY SCHOOLING, EDUCATION, AND THE TRANSMISSION OF CULTURE
General Court of Massachusetts
Massachusetts Compulsory School Law (1852)
Paul Goodman
Selection from Compulsory Mis-Education (1964)
Jules Henry
“Vulnerability in Education,” (1966)
Paulo Freire
“The Banking Model of Education” (1970)
Ivan Illich
Selection from Deschooling Society (1970)
PART IV: SEXUALITY AND EDUCATION
Mary Wollstonecraft
Selection from A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792)
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
The Seneca Falls Declaration (1848)
Alice Paul
Equal Right Amendment (1921)
Congress of the United States
Title IX (1972)
Patti Lather
“The Absent Presence: Patriarchy, Capitalism, And The Nature of Teacher Work” (1987)
Paul H. Cottell, Jr.
“A Queer Youth” (1996)
Wendy Bradford, Colin Noble, and Ted Wragg
“How and Why Boys Under-Achieve” (2000)
PART V: RACE, MULTICULTURALISM, AND EDUCATION
General Assembly of the State of North Carolina; General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Virginia; and the General Assembly of Alabama
Laws Prohibiting the Education of Slaves (1830-1832)
Booker T. Washington
"Industrial Education for the Negro” (1903)
W. E. B. Du Bois
The Talented Tenth (1903)
James Baldwin
A Talk to Teachers (1963)
Congress of the United States of America
“Education for All Handicapped Children” (1975)
Henry Giroux
“Border Pedagogy in the Age of Postmodernism” (1988)
PART VI: SOCIAL CLASS AND EDUCATION
Robert Rosenthal and Lenore Jacobson
Selection from Pygmalion in the Classroom (1968)
Jean Anyon
“Social Class and the Hidden Curriculum of Work” (1980)
bell hooks
“Crossing Class Boundaries” (2000)
PART VII: TECHNOLOGY AND EDUCATION
Douglas Engelbart
Augmenting Human Intellect (1962)
C. A. Bowers
How Computers Contribute to the Ecological Crisis (1990)
Jean-François Lyotard
The Field: Knowledge in Computerized Societies (1979)
“The text is flexible for a variety of approaches in a number of different classes and maintains a comprehensive stance toward the range of historical, contemporary, and modern educational thought.”
DePauw University
"Found it stimulating and relevant."
College of the Holy Cross
we are using this as a recommended resource for all MS Curriculum & Instruction students
College Of Education, Concordia University
July 31, 2014
I might use this in the future with a graduate level foundations of education class. I like the articles that are chosen and it would be a great supplement to class.
Education Division, Carthage College
July 26, 2012