Wasted: Why Education Isn't Educating
Autor Professor Frank Furedien Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 noi 2010
Never has so much attention been devoted to education. Everyone - government ministers, social commentators and parents obsess about its problems. Yet we rarely ask why? Why is education a source of such concern? Why do many of the solutions proposed actually make matters worse?
Tony Blair's 'education, education, education' slogan placed education at the forefront of political agendas. But, perhaps the 'policisation' of education is part of the problem. Today, education is valued for its potential contribution to economic development, but it is no longer considered important for itself. Increasingly, the promotion of education has little to do with the value of learning per se or with the importance of 'being taught' about societies' achievements, so future generations have the intellectual ability to advance still further. Education has been emptied of its content.
This book is a brilliant piece of analysis. It peers into the hollowness of the education debates and, drawing on thinkers from the ancient Greeks to modern critics, it sets out what we need from our schools.
Tony Blair's 'education, education, education' slogan placed education at the forefront of political agendas. But, perhaps the 'policisation' of education is part of the problem. Today, education is valued for its potential contribution to economic development, but it is no longer considered important for itself. Increasingly, the promotion of education has little to do with the value of learning per se or with the importance of 'being taught' about societies' achievements, so future generations have the intellectual ability to advance still further. Education has been emptied of its content.
This book is a brilliant piece of analysis. It peers into the hollowness of the education debates and, drawing on thinkers from the ancient Greeks to modern critics, it sets out what we need from our schools.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781441122100
ISBN-10: 1441122109
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: black & white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1441122109
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: black & white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
As a respected social commentator, he is often in demand for articles, lectures and opinions.
Cuprins
1. What's Wrong with Education \ 2. Education without Meaning \ 3. Fiddling with the Curriculum \ 4. What's Unique about 21st Century Philistinism
Recenzii
Frank Furedi holds forth with passion and wit
Title mention from author article in The Australian, August 2009.
Same mention in Herne Bay Gazette, Faversham News and Kentish Gazette, October 2009
Well researched ... Interesting content, persuasive arguments ... Good to get the cogs in the brain ticking over
Author article in Times Educational Supplement, November 2009.
Recommended by New Statesman
Reviewed in Contemporary Review
Furedi build his case methodically and argues it carefully, if not elegantly. He supports it with quotes (shrewdly selected, sometimes repeated) from politicians and educationalists ... the analysis rings true, as does Furedi's defence of a subject-based curriculum and a philosophy of education that recognises the duty of one generation to impart a canon of knowledge to the next.
Author article in The Australian, January 2010 and Title Mention
A thought provoking read.
There is a lot of sense here, and anyone who teaches traditional subjects at A-level or lectures at a university will recognise the phenomenon of students who are exemplary in their work-related personal skills, conscientious in their environmentalism and tolerance of diversity, sensible in their eating, drinking and non-smoking - but also utterly uninterested in intellectual debate and incapable of seeing the point of simply knowing more. Furedi makes his case well.
Author article, February 2010.
Author article and title mention, alive! February/March 2010
Title mention from author article in The Australian, August 2009.
Same mention in Herne Bay Gazette, Faversham News and Kentish Gazette, October 2009
Well researched ... Interesting content, persuasive arguments ... Good to get the cogs in the brain ticking over
Author article in Times Educational Supplement, November 2009.
Recommended by New Statesman
Reviewed in Contemporary Review
Furedi build his case methodically and argues it carefully, if not elegantly. He supports it with quotes (shrewdly selected, sometimes repeated) from politicians and educationalists ... the analysis rings true, as does Furedi's defence of a subject-based curriculum and a philosophy of education that recognises the duty of one generation to impart a canon of knowledge to the next.
Author article in The Australian, January 2010 and Title Mention
A thought provoking read.
There is a lot of sense here, and anyone who teaches traditional subjects at A-level or lectures at a university will recognise the phenomenon of students who are exemplary in their work-related personal skills, conscientious in their environmentalism and tolerance of diversity, sensible in their eating, drinking and non-smoking - but also utterly uninterested in intellectual debate and incapable of seeing the point of simply knowing more. Furedi makes his case well.
Author article, February 2010.
Author article and title mention, alive! February/March 2010