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  1. The paideia proposal.Mortimer Adler - 2004 - In David J. Flinders & Stephen J. Thornton (eds.), The Curriculum Studies Reader. Routledge.
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  • The false promise of the paideia : A critical review of the paideia proposal.Nel Noddings - 2004 - In David J. Flinders & Stephen J. Thornton (eds.), The Curriculum Studies Reader. Routledge.
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  • Teaching Ethics in the High Schools.Shane Ralston - 2008 - Teaching Ethics 9 (1):73-86.
    Should ethics be taught in the high schools? Should high school faculty teach it themselves or invite college and university professors (or instructors) into the classroom to share their expertise? In this paper, I argue that the challenge to teach ethics in the high schools has a distinctly Deweyan dimension to it, since (i) Dewey proposed that it be attempted and (ii) he provided many valuable resources with which to proceed. The paper is organized into four sections. In the first, (...)
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  • (1 other version)John Dewey and American democracy.Robert Brett Westbrook - 1991 - Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
    This book will do a great deal to make Dewey more available and plausible, and to help his writings shape the imagination of a new generation of Americans.
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  • (2 other versions)The Issue in the Higher Learning.Robert Maynard Hutchins - 1933 - International Journal of Ethics 44 (2):175.
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  • The Revolution in Education.Vernon Mallinson, Mortimer J. Adler & Milton Mayer - 1959 - British Journal of Educational Studies 7 (2):171.
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  • John Dewey and the High Tide of American Liberalism.Alan Ryan - 1995 - W.W. Norton.
    "When John Dewey died in 1952, he was memorialized as America's most famous philosopher, revered by liberal educators and deplored by conservatives, but universally acknowledged as his country's intellectual voice. Many things conspired to give Dewey an extraordinary intellectual eminence: He was immensely long-lived and immensely prolific; he died in his ninety-third year, and his intellectual productivity hardly slackened until his eighties." "Professor Alan Ryan offers new insights into Dewey's many achievements, his character, and the era in which his scholarship (...)
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  • The Life and Mind of John Dewey.George Dykhuizen & Harold Taylor - 1975 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 11 (1):60-63.
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  • A Second Look in the Rearview Mirror: Further Autobiographical Reflections of a Philosopher at Large.Mortimer Jerome Adler - 1992 - Free Press.
    "Fifteen years ago, when I was only seventy-five years old, I wrote my autobiography prematurely... ". So begins the second autobiography of Mortimer Adler, the Chairman of the Board of Editors of the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Among other things, he discusses the enormously controversial second edition of Great Books of the Western World and his involvement with the Aspen Institute.
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  • Powers of the mind: the reinvention of liberal learning in America.Donald Nathan Levine - 2006 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    It is one thing to lament the financial pressures put on universities, quite another to face up to the poverty of resources for thinking about what universities should do when they purport to offer a liberal education. In Powers of the Mind, former University of Chicago dean Donald N. Levine enriches those resources by proposing fresh ways to think about liberal learning with ideas more suited to our times. He does so by defining basic values of modernity and then considering (...)
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