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Butts, R. Freeman – International Journal of Social Education, 1993
Maintains that the world is nearing the end of a great age of democratic revolutions. Asserts that civic or citizenship education is in danger of being sidetracked by the national educational reform movement. Argues that "CIVITAS," a civic education curriculum framework, provides a model for effective citizenship education. (CFR)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Citizenship Education, Citizenship Responsibility, Civics
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Butts, R. Freeman – Educational Leadership, 1980
A set of ten value concepts for a democratic political community that schools should seek to exemplify are divided into those that primarily promote desirable cohesive and unifying elements and those that primarily promote desirable pluralistic and individualistic elements. (Author/MLF)
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Curriculum Development, Democratic Values, Elementary Secondary Education
Butts, R. Freeman – Phi Delta Kappan, 1979
The choice that a voucher proposition offers is between weakening the public schools still further by encouraging flight from them and strengthening the public schools by recalling them to their historic purpose of promoting the ideals of the democratic civic community. (Author)
Descriptors: Citizenship Responsibility, Educational Vouchers, Elementary Secondary Education, Private School Aid
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Butts, R. Freeman – American Journal of Education, 1988
To revitalize the civic mission of education, schools must teach the morality of citizenship. Civic morality must be the first priority in the liberal and professional education of teachers and administrators. The core of all curriculum must stress the obligations and rights of democratic citizenship. (VM)
Descriptors: Citizenship, Civics, Civil Liberties, Curriculum
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Butts, R. Freeman – Social Education, 1979
Presents three reasons to be concerned about citizenship education: the argument from history, the need to counteract the mood of pessimism and alienation concerning government and schooling and to redirect educational priorities, and the signs which indicate that the present is the time for a revival of civic learning. (Author/KC)
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Citizenship, Civics, Educational History
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Butts, R. Freeman – Social Studies Review, 1981
Examines how the section on values in the 1981 "California History/Social Science Framework" points the way and direction for educating students to become good citizens. The author discusses 10 basic ideas or value-oriented claims that he thinks could be used as an intellectual framework to guide the designing of civic education…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Curriculum Development, Democratic Values, Elementary Secondary Education
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Butts, R. Freeman – Liberal Education, 1982
The core curriculum of a civic liberal education should combine the values of a stable cultural pluralism and political unity. Students should undertake scholarly and critical study of the underlying civic principles and values necessary for generating an informed and effective citizenry. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, College Curriculum, Core Curriculum, Curriculum Development
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Butts, R. Freeman – Journal of Teacher Education, 1993
Teacher education must produce teachers who can ensure that schooling generates future good citizens. The paper examines regional and national reform, the civic foundations of education, and the need for dedicated, well-trained people to enter public service committed to public good. A description of CIVITAS, a citizenship project, is included.…
Descriptors: Citizenship Responsibility, Civics, Democratic Values, Educational Change
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Butts, R. Freeman – Educational Foundations, 1993
This response to Tozer's position paper agrees that the social foundations of education (SFE) is distinct from foundations of education. The paper describes the development of SFE, explaining that the prime task of foundations is to prepare teachers to promote values that define contemporary American values. (SM)
Descriptors: Citizenship Responsibility, Cultural Influences, Democratic Values, Education Courses