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  1. How should schools respond to the plurality of values in a multi-cultural society?Les Burwood - 1996 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 30 (3):415–427.
    How should state schools respond to the plurality of values in a multicultural society? The liberal response has been that it is unacceptable to promote only the traditional, mainstream values of dominant groups and impose them on others. During the 1980s this response gradually evolved into an ideology of extreme subjectivism, commonly referred to as cultural relativism. This ideology is rejected and it is argued that the school must make crucial judgements about which values should be promoted, tolerated or condemned.
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  • How Should Schools Respond to the Plurality of Values in a Multi-cultural Society?Les Burwood - 1996 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 30 (3):415-427.
    How should state schools respond to the plurality of values in a multicultural society? The liberal response has been that it is unacceptable to promote only the traditional, mainstream values of dominant groups and impose them on others. During the 1980s this response gradually evolved into an ideology of extreme subjectivism, commonly referred to as cultural relativism. This ideology is rejected and it is argued that the school must make crucial judgements about which values should be promoted, tolerated or condemned.
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  • Becoming a moral self through a community of ethical enquiry: a study of a class group from middle to late childhood in an Irish primary school.Josephine Russell - 2005 - Dissertation, Dublin City University
    This qualitative research study examines moral responsiveness and thinking in a mixed gender class of primary school children over a period o f four and a half years. It sets out to track development in children’s moral awareness, looking at gains and losses from middle to late childhood, and focusing on cognitive skills, notions of moral rectitude, and interpersonal relationships and friendship. The first part of the study is designed to offer a theoretical background to inform interpretation of the data (...)
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  • The nature of values and their place and promotion in schemes of values education.D. N. Aspin - 1999 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 31 (2):123–143.
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  • The Nature of Values and Their Place and Promotion in Schemes of Values Education1.D. N. Aspin - 1999 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 31 (2):123-143.
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  • The use of ethical frameworks by students following a new science course for 16–18 year-olds.Michael Reiss - 2008 - Science & Education 17 (8-9):889-902.
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  • Student teachers investigating the morality of corporal punishment in South Africa.Karin Murris - 2012 - Ethics and Education 7 (1):45 - 58.
    Practitioners of education in South Africa (SA) struggle painfully between the extremes of its authoritarian and deeply religious roots that prescribe blind obedience to people in authority and their elders, and the demands of open-mindedness, critical thinking and also solidarity required for democratic citizenship. A particular pedagogy was used with some 400 student teachers to investigate philosophically the rights and wrongs of corporal punishment in schools. This article justifies the use of this particular approach to moral education ? despite its (...)
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  • Students' choices and moral growth.Joan F. Goodman - 2006 - Ethics and Education 1 (2):103-115.
    Can schools encourage children to become independent moral decision-makers, maintaining controlled environments suitable to instructing large numbers of children? Two opposing responses are reviewed: one holds that the road to morality is through discipline and obedience, the other through children's experimentation and choice-making. Circumventing these polarities, I look to distinctions within rules that may help in balancing claims of restraint and freedom. Using a pharmacological analogy, one might, in principle, justify ‘pills’ for uncontrollable and/or morally trivial behaviors, but not for (...)
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