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  1. “Improving and Embellishing the Wilderness”: Spreading the Gospel of Proper Land Use, New Harmony, Indiana, 1814–1824.Paul J. Ramsey - 2014 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 50 (2):146-166.
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  • The history of education in the 1980s.Brian Simon - 1982 - British Journal of Educational Studies 30 (1):85-96.
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  • Enlightenment and Education in Eighteenth Century America: A Platform for Further Study in Higher Education and the Colonial Shift.Joshua Owens - 2011 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 47 (6):527-544.
    The prolific educational discussions of America's founding generation have led to extensive treatments surrounding the nature of early-national education in recent scholarship. Republican educational models Jefferson, Rush, and Webster have been scrutinized and praised as the forerunners to modern American higher education. Where these treatments are remiss, however, is in clearly identifying the fundamental shift in educational purpose between 1740 and 1780. Higher education classrooms were inundated with both Enlightenment and Evangelical literature, resulting in new arenas of student autonomy, thus (...)
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  • An Essay In The Aid Of Writing History: Fictions Of Historiography.Sol Cohen - 2004 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 23 (5):317-332.
    In what follows I explore the question of fictionality in history writing. First, I venture into the unfamiliar genre of ego-histoire and make my own professional training in the tenets of positivist or realist historiography an object of theoretical reflection and critical analysis. Then as a way of dealing with the literary dimension of written history, I make a canonical work in history of education an object of rhetorical analysis. Finally, as another way of coming to terms with the “fictions (...)
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  • Democracy and teaching.Jonas F. Soltis - 1993 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 27 (2):149–158.
    ABSTRACT Different concepts of democracy are considered as they reflect deep problems in modem democratic societies such as the lack of participation by citizens, the loss of a sense of community, and excessive individualism. Three models of teaching, the executive, the therapist, and the liberationist, are then explored with regard to what students may learn about being a member of a democratic society when they are treated differently by such teachers. It is argued that while each model has its positive (...)
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