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Schools of Tomorrow (1915)

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  1. Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Instrumentalism beyond Dewey.Jane S. Upin - 1993 - Hypatia 8 (2):38 - 63.
    Charlotte Perkins Gilman and John Dewey were both pragmatists who recognized the need to restructure the environment to bring about social progress. Gilman was even more of a pragmatist than Dewey, however, because she addressed problems he did not identify-much less confront. Her philosophy is in accord with the spirit of Dewey's work but in important ways, it is more consistent, more comprehensive and more radical than his instrumentalism.
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  • How John Dewey's theories underpin art and art education.Patricia F. Goldblatt - 2006 - Education and Culture 22 (1):17-34.
    : John Dewey believed every person is capable of being an artist, living an artful life of social interaction that benefits and thereby beautifies the world. In Art as Experience, Dewey reminds his readers that the second Council of Nicea censored the church's use of statutes and incense that distracted from prayer. Dewey, in an interesting turnabout, removes dogma from the church, but lauds the sensory details that enable higher understanding of human experience. Dewey evokes a paradox: the appreciation and (...)
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  • “Our school system is trying to be agrarian”: educating for reskilling and food system transformation in the rural school garden.Sarah E. Cramer, Anna L. Ball & Mary K. Hendrickson - 2019 - Agriculture and Human Values 36 (3):507-519.
    School gardens and garden-based learning continue to gain great popularity in the United States, and their pedagogical potential, and ability to impact students’ fruit and vegetable consumption and activity levels have been well-documented. Less examined is their potential to be agents of food system reskilling and transformation. Though producer and consumer are inextricably linked in the food system, and deskilling of one directly influences the other, theorists often focus on production-centered and consumption-centered deskilling separately. However, in a school garden, the (...)
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  • Ilmiölähtöisen oppimiskokonaisuuden suunnitteluun ohjaavan mallin kehittäminen ILO-suunnitteluprosessin malliksi opettajaopiskelijoiden opetusharjoittelussa.Sirkku Lähdesmäki - 2021 - Dissertation, University of Jyväskylä
    The purpose of this educational development study was to use qualitative methods to model the principles of guidance for the design of a Phenomenon-Based Learning (PhenoBL) entity and to produce a model for teacher education that guides the design of the PhenoBL entity. The theoretical approach to research is hermeneutic-pragmatic and encapsulates an experience-based learning perception. In this study, learning was understood as a communal process of active study of the real phenomena of everyday life and the experiences formed through (...)
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  • Historiographic Perspectives of Context and Progress During a Half Century of Progressive Educational Reform.Ellen Durrigan Santora - 1999 - Education and Culture 16 (1):2.
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  • Review: Dewey: A Beginner's Guide. [REVIEW]Raymond D. Boisvert - 2010 - Education and Culture 26 (2):11.
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  • The Establishment Of The Standard History Ofphilosophy of Education and Suppressed Traditions of Education.Daniel Tröhler - 2004 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 23 (5):367-391.
    History of education emerges during the course of the nineteenth century in Germany and is marked by four features. It is educational, and not scientific in nature, because it was written primarily for teacher education and training; it is national, or even nationalistic; it is oriented almost exclusively towards German philosophy; and it is indebted to Lutheran Protestantism. This model of pedagogical historiography leaves its mark on the historiographies that emerged later in England, France, and the United States. Taking the (...)
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  • Shaping and Being Shaped by Environments for Learning Science.Elizabeth Cavicchi - 2017 - Science & Education 26 (5):529-556.
    Environments of learning often remain unnoticed and unacknowledged. This study follows a student and myself as we became aware of our local environment at MIT and welcomed that environment as a vibrant contributor to our learning. We met this environment in part through its educational heritage in two centennial anniversaries: John Dewey’s 1916 work Democracy and Education and MIT’s 1916 move from Boston to the Cambridge campus designed by architect William Welles Bosworth. Dewey argued that for learning to arise through (...)
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  • Educationally Recovering Dewey in Curriculum.William H. Schubert - 1987 - Education and Culture 7 (1):2.
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  • The Teacher and Society: John Dewey and the Experience of Teachers.Melia L. Nebeker - 2002 - Education and Culture 18 (2):3.
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