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Jennings, Ann S. – Art Education, 1977
Author states that "...potential /of lifelong education in the arts/ for helping to add to and define meaning in human life would be vastly expanded if it...were treated as a basic skill in constant need of refurbishing." (Author/RW)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Coordination, Educational Cooperation, Educational Needs
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Proefriedt, William – Teachers College Record, 1983
The author traces the self-fufillment movement from the 1960s to present and discusses three resulting educational reform attempts with respect to this movement: (1) humanistic education; (2) values education; and (3) career education. (JMK)
Descriptors: Career Education, Change Agents, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education
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Cangelosi, Andrew – Journal of Humanistic Education and Development, 1982
Proposes confluent education as an effective method for educating the whole student in special education. Describes the process involving changes to the present curriculum, with the most significant variable being the teacher created atmosphere. Concludes that confluent education requires an atmosphere of trust and self-exploration. (JAC)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Educational Objectives, Elementary Education, Holistic Approach
Sklare, Gerald – Humanist Educator, 1980
Values clarification may be one of the tools counselors and psychological educators can use to help males determine their own value preferences. Research on values clarification over varying time sequences needs to determine if the spacing of values clarification strategies has an effect. (Author)
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Counselor Role, High School Students, Humanistic Education
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Seif, Elliott – Social Studies Journal, 1980
Postulates that good citizens resemble self-actualized persons and that a goal of citizenship education should be to aid in the development of these traits. Offers nine examples of ways educators can promote good citizenship through humanistic education approaches. (CK)
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Classroom Environment, Elementary Secondary Education, Humanistic Education
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Maslow, Abraham – Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 1979
In two 1969 articles, Maslow considers the dichotomy between humanistic and professional education, between education for personal growth and education for skill and competence. He expresses uneasiness at the trend toward Esalen-type teaching, which emphasizes students' feelings and interests at the expense of instructional content. (SJL)
Descriptors: Competence, Essays, Higher Education, Humanistic Education
Clute, Monte D. – Colorado Journal of Educational Research, 1976
Teacher education should produce teachers capable of facilitating the development of humane people, working for individual self-fulfillment, giving priority to the needs and purposes of the learner, and developing respect for and skills to participate in a democratic society. (MB)
Descriptors: Democratic Values, Educational Attitudes, Educational Objectives, Educational Philosophy
Nel, J. F. – 1984
This paper describes the philosophy and development of the Extracurricular Centres for Highly Gifted Children in Transvaal, South Africa. The centers' concepts of "gifted" and "highly gifted" are defined, and characteristics of gifted children are listed. The centers offer enrichment and acceleration classes in subjects outside…
Descriptors: Acceleration (Education), Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Enrichment Activities
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Houts, Paul L. – National Elementary Principal, 1975
Theodore Sizer is author of "Places for Learning, Places for Joy" and headmaster at Phillips Academy. Earlier, he was dean of the Faculty of Education at Harvard. (IRT)
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Experiential Learning
Lacy, Grace – 1979
The author contends that a comprehensive approach to differentiating instruction for the gifted must involve values, feelings, personal growth, and interpersonal relations so the gifted child is free to realize his optimum potential. The paper describes some of the major adjustment problems faced by the gifted as well as some approaches to…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Elementary Secondary Education, Ethics, Gifted
Patterson, Cecil H. – 1977
This chapter reviews selected materials in psychology that are related to the nature of man and his development and that are relevant to a humanistic system of education. Humanistic is used to indicate a concern with the learner as a whole person rather than simply as a disembodied intellect or repository of cognitive processes. In reviewing the…
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Educational Theories, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Development
Greenberg, Gilda M. – Humanist Educator, 1978
This course was designed to explore traditional and contemporary theories and research as they relate to male and female roles in Western and non-Western cultures. Readings, discussions, exercises, and attitude surveys were used to combine cognitive and affective learning. Student evaluations and informal follow-up have been positive. (Author/JEL)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Course Objectives, Females, Humanistic Education
Schwarberg, Helene – School Shop, 1977
While preparing students for jobs is an important goal of vocational education, helping students to develop a process of values clarification is also necessary. An analysis of education for self-realization, the values clarification approach, is presented for vocational educators. (MF)
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Decision Making Skills, Humanistic Education, Secondary Education
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Williams, A. J.; Foster, L. E. – Journal of Educational Thought, 1979
This article examines statements about humanistic education, basing its critique on both style and content. Part One attempts to locate humanistic education in the context of reformist movements in education and psychology. Part Two considers the movement's self-explanation and attempts to divine assumptions underlying its various justifications.…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Objectives, Educational Principles, Fundamental Concepts
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Ryan, Mark B. – Change, 1980
Traditionally, the goals of a liberal arts education have been expressed in terms of "self-actualization,""self-realization," and other terms implying self-fulfillment. The reality is that focus on measurable "achievements" tends to put students out of touch with the functioning of their own psyches. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Curriculum, College Students, General Education, Higher Education
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