When I refer to schools in the five essays on education that
comprise While There's Time, I have elementary and secondary
schools in mind. I approached this writing from the perspective of
an insider, so to speak, as I have worked extensively in the field
of education, first as a high school teacher and now as a professor
of education in a university. These essays were prompted by
dissatisfaction and a desire. Increasingly over the last few years,
I have felt uncomfortable with the conventional wisdom in my field
about how students ought to be educated. It just didn't set right
with me. Labels vary for the mainstream thinking in the profession,
but let's call it a progressive or neo-Deweyian (after the
philosopher John Dewey) approach. Some might refer to it simply as
modern education. Even though its advocates marshal compelling
arguments in support of this set of ideas and practices (what they
are will be spelled out in the essays), I was finding in my work in
schools that it wasn't getting good enough results with students in
the classroom, and that in any case it simply didn't fit me as a
person or as a professional: my values, my hopes for schools and
students and this society. So I felt an inner push to find an
educational orientation that I could believe in more than the one
that currently dominates in the field of education to the point
that it could be called an orthodoxy, or at least find something
that complements it, adds to it. These essays represent the results
of my quest. I have concluded that the philosophical orientations
that we most need to affirm and employ as bases for constructing
school programs in our time are the very ones which are most often
dismissed byprofessional educators, namely, conservatism and
individualism. In these essays, I go into the specifics of
conservative and libertarian orientations to education, explore
what all the talk about teaching democracy in the schools is about,
contrast sports and schools as settings, and use the concept of
personal authenticity in a discussion of the work of teaching. What
holds these five essays together is that they all are grounded in a
conservative rather than liberal and individual-centered rather
than collectivist frame of reference. These essays are
self-contained enough to be read out of order, although I did line
them up in the way that I think best presents my argument. I hope
what I offer here informs the debate in this country over the best
route to take in educating our children. I wrote this book with
both general readers and professional educators in mind. For
general readers, I hope what is here will provide them with a
better understanding of how professional educators come at their
work, and thereby enable them to deal with school people more
effectively and give them some things they can take into account
when determining what ought to go on in their children's education,
or in schools generally. For people in the profession who read this
book--teachers and administrators, those in training to become
teachers, and so on--I believe these writings will provide them
with a clearer understanding of the predominant thinking in their
field; a good way to understand anything is to compare it with
something that contrasts with it. I would presume, and hope, that
for some educators and educators-to-be this book will provide them
with ideas they can use to guide their work. Much ofwhat follows is
expressed in the first person. I thought that if I brought myself
into this book it would encourage readers to bring themselves into
it. I would like readers to see these writings as my half of a
conversation. I want them to respond critically to what I have
written and extend it, take it farther than I have been able
to--and I don't think they have to be active in the field of
education to be able to do that. I want readers to decide how, if
at all, what I write changes the way they look at things, and what
they are going t
General
Imprint: |
X Libris
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
August 2005 |
Authors: |
Robert Griffin
|
Dimensions: |
229 x 152 x 11mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback - Trade
|
Pages: |
184 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-4134-9657-4 |
Categories: |
Books >
Social sciences >
Education >
General
|
LSN: |
1-4134-9657-1 |
Barcode: |
9781413496574 |
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