The Philosophy of Education: An Introduction

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2010-05-04
Publisher(s): Bloomsbury Academic
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Summary

Unlike many other texts on the subject, The Philosophy of Education: An Introduction is fundamentally about the activity of philosophising and not about (mostly long-dead) philosophers. With this goal in mind, contributors have been selected who are capable of bringing the Philosophy of Education to life for the reader. All are respected as philosophers in their own right, and they write in an accessible and engaging manner. The chapters are not position statements that express one viewpoint at the expense of others; rather, they provide an overview of a topic, including reference to central concepts and discussion of major debates. Each chapter - explains and summarises the main concepts and discussions in a particular area of debate - includes extracts from philosophical writing, followed by questions that guide the reader to engage critically and actively with the text - refers, where appropriate, to current events or topics - ends with a bibliographic section that guides the reader towards further reading, and suggests next steps and more challenging sources, or counter-pointed arguments. The Philosophy of Education: An Introduction is primarily for students studying education studies and teacher education. It will also appeal to practising teachers who wish to engage with philosophical approaches to contemporary educational issues, and to educationalists who are looking for a succinct guide to philosophical perspectives on educational theory and practice. Book jacket.

Author Biography

Richard Bailey is a writer and theorist on education and sport. A former teacher in both Primary and Secondary Schools and a teacher trainer, he has been a Professor at Canterbury, Roehampton and most recently Birmingham Universities.

Table of Contents

List of Contributorsp. ix
Acknowledgementsp. xi
Introductionp. 1
What Is the Philosophy of Education?p. 4
What is philosophy? What is education?p. 5
Writing philosophy of educationp. 10
The standard pattern (perhaps)p. 10
Different types of philosophical thesisp. 12
Some worked examplesp. 15
Conclusion: the practical importance of philosophyp. 18
Further readingp. 19
Does Education Need Philosophy?p. 21
Introductionp. 21
Recent history of philosophy in educational studiesp. 22
Nuffield Reviewp. 24
Doing philosophyp. 26
Educational aimsp. 28
Culture and communityp. 29
Learning and teachingp. 30
Provisionp. 32
Conclusionp. 32
Further readingp. 33
Useful websitep. 34
What Is Education For?p. 35
Introductionp. 35
What is 'education' and must an educator have an aim?p. 36
Knowledge for its own sakep. 38
Education for workp. 39
Education for well-beingp. 42
Further readingp. 46
What Should Go on the Curriculum?p. 48
Introductionp. 48
What could go on the curriculum?p. 49
The academic curriculump. 51
The vocational curriculump. 54
The virtue-based curriculump. 57
Conclusionp. 59
Further readingp. 59
Can We Teach Ethics?p. 60
Introduction: to do and to bep. 60
A lack of agreement on what is goodp. 61
Historical changes in moral thinkingp. 64
Further readingp. 72
Useful websitesp. 73
Do Children Have Any Rights?p. 74
Introductionp. 74
The choice theory of rightsp. 75
The interest theoryp. 76
Why might children not have rights?p. 78
Children's interestsp. 81
Conclusion: so, do children have rights?p. 83
Further readingp. 84
Useful websitesp. 85
Can Schools Make Good Citizens?p. 86
Introductionp. 86
What is a citizen?p. 87
Conceptions of citizenshipp. 87
Making citizensp. 91
Sites of citizen learningp. 93
Conclusionp. 97
Further readingp. 97
Useful websitesp. 98
Should the State Control Education?p. 99
Introductionp. 99
The argument from autonomyp. 102
Parents and communities versus the statep. 103
Marketizing educationp. 107
Challenging the statep. 109
The Escuela Moderna, 1904-1907p. 110
Marxist positionsp. 111
Conclusionp. 112
Further readingp. 112
Educational Opportunities - Who Shall We Leave Out?p. 113
Introductionp. 113
Educational opportunityp. 114
Equality of resourcesp. 116
Equality of outcomep. 116
Equality of opportunityp. 117
What is meritocracy?p. 118
Desert and merit - who deserves provision?p. 118
Who would you reward?p. 119
Is it acceptable to be inegalitarian?p. 120
Are you elitist?p. 120
Inclusion and the field of 'special education'p. 121
The nature of differencep. 122
Conclusionp. 123
Further readingp. 123
Useful websitesp. 124
Should Parents Have a Say in Their Children's Schooling?p. 125
Introductionp. 125
Arguments in favour of parental rightsp. 126
Arguments against parental rightsp. 130
Conclusionp. 135
Further readingp. 135
What's Wrong with Indoctrination and Brainwashing?p. 136
Introductionp. 136
The problem of indoctrinationp. 138
Demarcating indoctrinationp. 140
The apparent inevitability of indoctrinationp. 143
Conclusion: so, what's wrong with indoctrination?p. 145
Further readingp. 145
Useful websitesp. 145
Reading the Philosophy of Educationp. 147
Introductionp. 147
Further readingp. 157
Useful websitep. 157
Writing the Philosophy of Educationp. 158
Plato and dialoguep. 159
Talking philosophyp. 161
Philosophy and literaturep. 163
Further readingp. 166
Referencesp. 167
Useful Websitesp. 175
Indexp. 17
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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