
Critical Issues in Education: Dialogues and Dialectics
McGraw Hill Higher Education (Publisher)
8th Edition
Published on 16. July 2012
Book
Paperback/Softback
464 pages
978-0-07-802437-5 (ISBN)
Description
There is a great need for critical thinking in schools, and by teachers. Current educational reform efforts emphasize student testing on basic information and rote memorization. What is lost is education that involves critical thinking, creativity, and consideration of alternatives. The essential framework for this book is the stimulation of critical thinking-to include dialogue and dialectic approaches. "Critical Issues in Education" includes opposing sides of the issues presented and illustrates, through competing essays on each topic, how critical thinking, dialogue, and dialectic approaches improve understanding and the evaluation of available evidence and reasoning.
More details
Edition
8th Revised edition
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United States
Publishing group
McGraw-Hill Education - Europe
Target group
College/higher education
Edition type
Revised edition
Illustrations
Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 163 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
Weight
581 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-07-802437-5 (9780078024375)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Jack L. Nelson a professor of education at Rutgers, obtained his doctorate from the University of Southern California. He is experienced teacher in schools at the elementary, secondary, undergraduate, and graduate levels; his university teaching experience includes California State University, Los Angeles; the State University of New York at Buffalo; San Jose State University; and Cambridge University. Nelson has been a visiting scholar at the University of California, Berkeley; Stanford University, University of Colorado; and Curtin University and the University of Sydney in Australia. Critical Issues in Education is his sixteenth book; he has also published about 150 articles and reviews. He is listed in Who's Who in America and Contemporary Authors. Stuart B. Palonsky is professor of education and director of the Honors College at the University of Missouri-Columbia. A former public school teacher in New York and New Jersey, Palonsky earned his doctorate at Michigan State University. His publications include 900 Shows a Year, an ethnographic study of high school teaching from a classroom teacher's perspective. In addition, Palonsky has published numerous articles and reviews in educational and social science journals, and has presented scholarly and professional papers on educational issues at national association conferences.
Content
Foreword Preface 1 Introduction: Critical Issues and Critical Thinking Part One WHOSE INTERESTS SHOULD SCHOOLS SERVE?: JUSTICE AND EQUITY 2 Family Choice in Education: Public Interest or Private Good 3 Financing Schools: Equity or Privilege 4 Privatization, Commercialization, and the Business of School: Competing or Complementary Interests 5 Religion and Public Schools: Free Expression or Separation 6 Gender Equity: Eliminating Discrimination or Accommodating Difference 7 New Immigrants and the Schools: Unfair Burden or Business as Usual Part Two WHAT SHOULD BE TAUGHT?: KNOWLEDGE AND LITERACY 8 Standards-Based Reform: Real Change or Badly Flawed Policy 9 The Academic Achievement Gap: Old Remedies or New 10 Values/Character Education: Traditional or Liberational 11 Multicultural Education: Democratic or Divisive 12 Technology and Learning: Enabling or Subverting Part Three THE SCHOOL COMMUNITY: INDIVIDUALS AND ENVIRONMENTS 13 Discipline and Justice: Zero Tolerance or Discretionary Practices 14 Violence and Bullying in Schools: School Treatable or Beyond School Control 15 Inclusion and Disability: Common or Special Education 16 Teacher Unions and School Reform: Advocate or Adversary 17 Academic Freedom and Censorship: Teacher Rights or Responsibilities Index