This chapter provides a reconstruction of Dewey’s approach to citizenship education based on his books and articles written between 1885 and 1945. It is argued that Dewey’s views regarding citizenship education coincide with his views on democracy and on teaching and learning and are closely related to his general philosophy. In the chapter, extensive attention is given to the development of Dewey’s thinking on citizenship education: first through highlighting core elements of the book Democracy and Education and then through discussing relevant aspects of both his earlier work and later work. For Dewey, education and democracy are organically connected: Democracy is a condition for education and education is a condition for democracy. In s...
This paper uses Dewey’s seminal Democracy and Education (1916) as a key text to investigate the conc...
Democracy is a fairly new concept in human history. The new management model created with the demand...
The bases of the political art of John Dewey or his new practice of democratic citizenship are revie...
This chapter provides a reconstruction of Dewey’s approach to citizenship education based on his boo...
In the literature on citizenship education, frequent references are made to Dewey. However, educatio...
In this paper, the author (re)considers Dewey’s ideas about the role of education in developing demo...
Dewey was perhaps the foremost theorist and advocate of participatory democracy as an ethical ideal ...
The present article aims at reconstructing and analyzing the reasons that led the American educator ...
Citizenship education has long been regarded as one of the central purposes of a publically funded e...
This paper describes John Dewey’s attitude regarding the potential for the social studies as a vehic...
Today’s social and political context is filled with environmental elements that both support and wor...
The purpose of this study was to explain the foundations of political and social education in John D...
America’s foremost educational philosopher, John Dewey, addressed the question “Why do schools exist...
To the best of my knowledge; no one has ever exploited the relationship between Democracy and Educat...
“Since it is one that can have no end till experience itself comes to an end, the task of democracy ...
This paper uses Dewey’s seminal Democracy and Education (1916) as a key text to investigate the conc...
Democracy is a fairly new concept in human history. The new management model created with the demand...
The bases of the political art of John Dewey or his new practice of democratic citizenship are revie...
This chapter provides a reconstruction of Dewey’s approach to citizenship education based on his boo...
In the literature on citizenship education, frequent references are made to Dewey. However, educatio...
In this paper, the author (re)considers Dewey’s ideas about the role of education in developing demo...
Dewey was perhaps the foremost theorist and advocate of participatory democracy as an ethical ideal ...
The present article aims at reconstructing and analyzing the reasons that led the American educator ...
Citizenship education has long been regarded as one of the central purposes of a publically funded e...
This paper describes John Dewey’s attitude regarding the potential for the social studies as a vehic...
Today’s social and political context is filled with environmental elements that both support and wor...
The purpose of this study was to explain the foundations of political and social education in John D...
America’s foremost educational philosopher, John Dewey, addressed the question “Why do schools exist...
To the best of my knowledge; no one has ever exploited the relationship between Democracy and Educat...
“Since it is one that can have no end till experience itself comes to an end, the task of democracy ...
This paper uses Dewey’s seminal Democracy and Education (1916) as a key text to investigate the conc...
Democracy is a fairly new concept in human history. The new management model created with the demand...
The bases of the political art of John Dewey or his new practice of democratic citizenship are revie...