This article addresses the ways in which education systems responded to the aftermath of World War I with respect to education for nationalism and internationalism. It does so by drawing on theories of internationalism and through an analysis of the writings of Daniel Prescott, an American scholar who toured European schools in the middle of the 1920s. Influenced by his experience of frontline warfare as a volunteer driver in France in 1917, Prescott travelled in Austria, Czechoslovakia, England, France, Germany and Switzerland from September 1926 to June 1927 hoping to see education systems being more internationalist and less chauvinist. He interviewed prominent educationists and observed and interviewed teachers in schools, sending regul...
This article explores the impact of World War I on Australian university communities, its contributi...
"This book is an elaboration of a syllabus for a course in the history of education published in 191...
This article explores the impact of World War I on Australian university communities, its contributi...
The aftermath of the First World War saw manifold efforts to (re-)construct an international communi...
During the interwar period, a number of organisations started to look into education as part of an a...
This essay is an attempt to introduce into the discourse of Foreign Language Education the concept a...
Daniel Laqua Mentions of student activism inevitably conjure up images of 1968 – a year in which pro...
In the aftermath of the two world wars, strong international networks and organisations manifested t...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University, 1936. This item was digitized by the Internet Archive
This article examines Dewey’s views on the concept of nationalism and how it should be taught in sch...
This article examines Dewey’s views on the concept of nationalism and how it should be taught in sch...
In this historical study, the author offers a reading of Dewey’s Democracy and Education in the cont...
peer reviewedThis article advocates for a particular understanding of curriculum history that enable...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to restore the history of internationalism to our understandin...
This article explores the impact of World War I on Australian university communities, its contributi...
This article explores the impact of World War I on Australian university communities, its contributi...
"This book is an elaboration of a syllabus for a course in the history of education published in 191...
This article explores the impact of World War I on Australian university communities, its contributi...
The aftermath of the First World War saw manifold efforts to (re-)construct an international communi...
During the interwar period, a number of organisations started to look into education as part of an a...
This essay is an attempt to introduce into the discourse of Foreign Language Education the concept a...
Daniel Laqua Mentions of student activism inevitably conjure up images of 1968 – a year in which pro...
In the aftermath of the two world wars, strong international networks and organisations manifested t...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University, 1936. This item was digitized by the Internet Archive
This article examines Dewey’s views on the concept of nationalism and how it should be taught in sch...
This article examines Dewey’s views on the concept of nationalism and how it should be taught in sch...
In this historical study, the author offers a reading of Dewey’s Democracy and Education in the cont...
peer reviewedThis article advocates for a particular understanding of curriculum history that enable...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to restore the history of internationalism to our understandin...
This article explores the impact of World War I on Australian university communities, its contributi...
This article explores the impact of World War I on Australian university communities, its contributi...
"This book is an elaboration of a syllabus for a course in the history of education published in 191...
This article explores the impact of World War I on Australian university communities, its contributi...