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Thayer-Bacon, Barbara – Education and Culture, 2012
I explore Montessori's story in terms of her initial warm reception by America to her educational research, and her later cooling off, once Dewey's student, Kilpatrick, published The Montessori System Examined and declared her work to be based on psychological theory that was fifty years behind the times. I argue that there is a troubling gendered…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Democracy, Theory Practice Relationship, Montessori Method
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Albisetti, James C. – History of Education Quarterly, 2009
The kindergarten was, in all countries but Germany, a foreign import. The most familiar aspect of its diffusion to American scholars is the spread of Froebel's teachings into England and the United States by emigrants who had left the German Confederation after the failure of the revolutions of 1848-49. Familiar as well are the propaganda efforts…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Early Childhood Education, Educational History, Protestants
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Nardi, Emma – Educational Research, 2009
In Italian secondary schools, it is not literature that is studied but the history of literature; it is not philosophy that is studied but the history of philosophy. Similarly, in higher education, history students even have to take an exam in the history of historiography. This is to say that in Italy, history plays a key cultural role. That is…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Foreign Countries, Comparative Analysis, Educational History
Hoffman, Marvin – Teachers College Press, 2007
In this volume in the "Between Teacher and Text Series", the author provides a contemporary interpretation of the 1967 text "Letter to a Teacher by the Schoolboys of Barbiana". The original text, a searing indictment of class bias in Italian schools, was released in English in 1970, and its ideas about education and…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Educational History, Teacher Student Relationship, Foreign Countries
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Allemann-Ghionda, Cristina – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2000
After World War II, American scholars rewrote Italian school syllabi and textbooks to replace Fascist ideology with democratic ideas. John Dewey's progressive ideas were influential, until a restorative backlash of the Cold War almost eliminated them from policy documents. Since the sixties, however, Dewey's pedagogical thinking has regained…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Democratic Values, Educational History, Foreign Countries
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Wolff, Richard J. – History of Education Quarterly, 1980
Examines church-state relations in educational matters in Italy from 1922 to the outbreak of World War II. Unlike Nazi Germany which could boast of nazified schools, Fascist Italy was compelled to recognize the considerable influence of Catholicism on education. (Author/KC)
Descriptors: Catholics, Church Role, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Educational History
Ryba, Raymond, Ed.; Robinson, Brian, Ed. – 1977
This publication contains a sampling of conference papers delivered at the first European Economic Community (E.E.C.) Working Conference on Economics Education held at St. Ignatius University, Antwerp in September, 1976. Invited representative participants from the nine E.E.C. countries met to discuss common problems relating to economics in upper…
Descriptors: Business Education, Comparative Education, Conference Papers, Deduction
Altbach, Philip G., Ed. – 1981
The status of student political activism in the 1970s and 1980s in such nations as the United States, Britain, India, Japan, Italy, Canada, West Germany, Greece, Zambia and Latin America is examined. The volume consists of 13 chapters written by scholars who all agree that student activism is not now at peak levels of the 1960s, yet student…
Descriptors: Activism, College Environment, College Students, Developing Nations
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Jones, Ken – European Educational Research Journal, 2005
This article makes a contribution to discussion on the neo-liberal reshaping of education in Western Europe. It argues for a greater attentiveness on the part of education researchers to collective social actors such as trade unions and social movements. Making use of concepts from Gramsci and from Poulantzas, it suggests that such actors had a…
Descriptors: Unions, Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Educational Philosophy