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Egan, Kieran – Phi Delta Kappan, 1982
Argues that it is both possible and desirable to teach history to children in the elementary grades and that it would be educationally beneficial to substitute a history curriculum for the present elementary social studies curriculum. Contends that those who infer curricula from psychologists' findings are confusing concept and content. (Author/WD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Curriculum Development, Elementary Education, History Instruction

Egan, Kieran – Australian Journal of Education, 1991
Prevailing conceptions of young children's mental life represent children's thinking as confused and lacking western rationality. Instead, we should consider their mental life as a positive oral culture, and evolve a new science of early childhood education based on understanding of peoples in oral cultures. (MSE)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cultural Traits, Early Childhood Education, Educational Theories

Egan, Kieran – Childhood Education, 1997
Argues that the arts are basic to educational development, as they provide the tools and skills that are central to early language development including story, metaphor, rhyme and rhythm, binary structuring and mediation, image formation from words, affective abstraction, and others that underlie more complex learning. (Author)
Descriptors: Art, Art Activities, Art Education, Child Development
Egan, Kieran – 2002
This book sets out to prove that the progressivist tenets that have become the foundation of American education are mistaken. The author does not argue against progressivism on the basis of the usual alternatives of liberal or traditional theories of education because it is not adequately attuned to preparing students for jobs. The author sets out…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational History, Educational Methods, Educational Philosophy
Egan, Kieran – 1979
Many social studies curricula are based on John Dewey's principle that education should start from what the child knows and work outward from there. This paper suggests that social studies educators will make the pursuit of social studies knowledge more interesting if they tailor curriculum content to students' developing cognition. A three stage…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Objectives, Concept Formation, Curriculum Development
Egan, Kieran – Harvard Educational Review, 2005
In this article, Kieran Egan contests the scientific foundations of Piaget's developmental theories and the scientific basis of much educational research. In so doing, he pushes researchers and practitioners alike to rethink the centrality of Piaget's tenets to teaching and learning. Egan traces the history of the developmental literature that…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Cognitive Development, Child Development, Learning Theories

Egan, Kieran – Harvard Educational Review, 1987
The author traces oral forms of expression used in nonliterate societies and states that children, before they become literate, also depend on the spoken word for learning and communication. The author suggests that a better understanding of orality helps educators gain a fuller sense of the cognitive tasks that children undertake. (Author/CH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Communication (Thought Transfer), Cultural Context, Literacy

Egan, Kieran – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1982
Outlines a theory of cognitive development designed to be useful in defining an ideal education and discusses the practical steps for achieving educational goals. Three stages of cognitive development are proposed and their implications for curriculum content and teaching strategies are discussed. (AM)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Curriculum, Educational Objectives, Educational Theories

Egan, Kieran – NAMTA Journal, 1994
Connects the imagination with one's affective states as related to 8- to 15-year-old students' engagement in a story or narrative. Discusses particular characteristics of narratives that engage students' imagination during these years and characteristics that are imaginatively engaging but in which the narrative component is less prominent. (BB)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Affective Behavior, Age Differences, Children

Egan, Kieran – NAMTA Journal, 1993
Traces the richness of oral forms of expression used in nonliterate societies from ancient times to the present. Discusses the implications of research on orality for the early childhood curriculum and for methods of teaching young children. (BC)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Early Childhood Education, Language Acquisition, Literacy

Egan, Kieran – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1985
Preservice teachers are usually taught to organize lessons by stating objectives, organizing content and methods to teach objectives, and planning evaluation. Suggests an alternative technique that encourages teachers to think of the lesson as a good story to be told rather than as a set of objectives to be achieved. (RM)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Needs, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education

Egan, Kieran – Clearing House, 1980
With specific attention to appropriate teaching strategies, the author defines a developmental stage theory of children's interest in and psychological uses for knowledge. The four stages are: mythic (up to approximately age 9/10); romantic (ages 9/10 to 15/16); philosophic (ages 14/15 to 20/21); and ironic (adult). (SJL)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Cognitive Style, Developmental Stages
Egan, Kieran – Education Canada, 2003
All educational thinking springs from three ancient theories: education should provide skills to succeed in society; education should stimulate the search for truth through academic excellence; and education should give students opportunities to develop their potential. But these ideas are incompatible, and mixing them together has created a…
Descriptors: Academic Education, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Individual Development

Egan, Kieran – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1999
Discusses three educational ideas, demonstrating their incompatibility: (1) a focus on socialization; (2) Plato's notion that education is the process of seeking truth about reality; and (3) Jean-Jacques Rousseau's idea that the mind undergoes a developmental process and education furthers its development. Argues that education is learning to use…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Change, Educational Objectives, Educational Philosophy

Egan, Kieran – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1983
Education, as a rational business, has largely ignored children's fantasies. Rather than dismissing fantasy, as both traditional and progressive educators have, the educational task is to begin the process of linking to the real world those basic concepts which make fantasy so engaging and meaningful to children. (IS)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Style, Developmental Stages, Educational History