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Woolley, Isolde
In Defence of the Human in Education
Series: Europäische Hochschulschriften / European University Studies / Publications Universitaires Européennes - Volume 1024
Year of Publication: 2012
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2012. 260 pp.
ISBN 978-3-631-63349-6 pb.
(Softcover)
ISBN
978-3-653-01302-3
(eBook)
Weight: 0.350 kg, 0.772 lbs
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Discipline
Book synopsis
The title incorporates the assumption that the 'human' in education is being threatened by certain processes. The guiding questions are: What are these processes and what constitutes the 'human' in education? Which activities characteristically performed by human beings are so central that they seem definitive of a life that is truly human and which changes or transitions in educational thinking are compatible with the continued existence of a being as a member of human kind and which are not? It is argued that the present debate on education is still dominated by the language of performance and global economic comparison. Educational practice must and will have to help the individual through a confluence of insights in his/her journey through life to form independent judgement.
Contents
Contents: The crisis in education: What crisis? - Education: Working towards a definition with the Human in mind - Education for authenticity, self-determination, autonomy and judgement - The re-introduction of common sense and craftsmanship, the concept of human dignity and the non-conformist element in education.
About the author(s)/editor(s)
Isolde Woolley, Mag. Dr., teaches English Language and Literature at the Kirchliche Pädagogische Hochschule - Edith Stein (KPH-ES) and the Meinhardinum in Stams (Austria). She worked and studied for fourteen years in England and still shares her time between England and Austria.
Series
European University Studies. Series 11: Education. Vol. 1024
