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Showing 166 to 180 of 257 results Save | Export
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Trautmann, Fredrick – Central States Speech Journal, 1975
Explores the ancients' perspective of speech communication as an art bonded by common origins, techniques and processes. Suggests that a contemporary aesthetic approach to the speech field should be considered. (MH)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Ancient History, Communication (Thought Transfer), Educational Strategies
Macdonald, Michael H. – 1990
European studies can provide a solution to several of the issues raised in Allan Bloom's "The Closing of the American Mind." European studies pursue the academic quest for what is truth, what is goodness, and what is beauty. In seeking to answer these questions, the Greeks were among the first to explore many of humanity's problems and…
Descriptors: Christianity, Cultural Influences, European History, French Literature
Byrum, C. Stephen – 1984
The Greek concept of techne can aid in understanding technological society and the way it can generate a separation of business and personal lives. As used by the early Greeks, techne mean the knowledge required to get the job done. The "manager" of today epitomizes this early concept. He is trained to get the job done efficiently,…
Descriptors: Citizenship Responsibility, Educational Needs, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethics
Valencia Community Coll., Orlando, FL. – 1984
This teacher's guide was developed for the first of four courses in Valencia Community College's Interdisciplinary Studies Program, a 2-year core general education curriculum which chronologically examines the major developments in the evolution of human knowledge. The guide provides an introductory overview of the semester's topic (i.e., the…
Descriptors: Art, Communication Skills, Course Content, Course Objectives
Popkewitz, Thomas S. – 1984
One of the most important myths in education is that of progress. The idea derives from a specifically Western messianic tradition and contains the belief in the growth and the development of an organism. That belief emerges from Greek and Hebraic thought, is modified in Christian theology, and then is secularized in science. The persistence and…
Descriptors: Christianity, Culture, Development, Evolution
Wiseman, Douglas C. – 1977
Since the Middle Ages, sport has survived because of its masochistic and sadistic components. The Greeks, who organized athletic contests into the Olympic Games in 776 B.C., emphasized the relationship between the mind and the body and fair competition, rather than putting emphasis on winning or losing. The Romans preferred the spectacle of…
Descriptors: Athletics, Competition, Futures (of Society), Greek Civilization
Hartsock, Nancy C. M. – 1978
The source of contemporary attitudes toward sexuality, power, and politics is found in the literature of the ancient Greeks, specifically, Plato's "Republic" and "Symposium," Aristotle's "Politics," and the plays of Aeschylus and Aristophanes. The "Symposium" can be read as an account of how sexuality can be…
Descriptors: Classical Literature, Females, Greek Civilization, Greek Literature
Head, J. G. – 1976
Students are graduating from the public school system with little, if any, mythological background. If we are to graduate educated and informed human beings, we must not persist in pursuing our traditional unorganized attempts at teaching mythology. The appreciation of contemporary allusions to mythologies is dependent on a systematized approach.…
Descriptors: Biblical Literature, Classical Literature, Course Descriptions, Course Objectives
Sotiroff, G. – 1969
Listed in this pamphlet are 22 place and personal names of Slavic origin which appear in Greek and Roman documents. Following a brief introduction in which the criteria for selection of these names is given, a section discusses the inconsistent systems of transliteration employed by classical authors. Then, the actual annotated listing of names…
Descriptors: Classical Languages, Classical Literature, Diachronic Linguistics, Etymology
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Masciantonio, Rudolph – Classical Outlook, 1976
Classical Greek, using innovative curriculum materials, is being taught in seven secondary schools of Philadelphia. The principles of structural linguistics and the direct method of language teaching are used and the approach is aural-oral. The course aims at making students aware of the influence of Hellenic heritage in our world. (CFM)
Descriptors: Audiolingual Methods, Classical Languages, Classical Literature, Cultural Enrichment
Lloyd, Charles – 2001
This paper discusses the reinvention of an existing course, Ancient Greek Civilization, to introduce undergraduates to current scholarship by inviting them to participate in the controversies which both divide and determine the discipline of classical studies. The paper states that the course is based on the philosophy in Gerald Graff's book,…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Cultural Context, Greek Civilization, Higher Education
Law, Vivien – 2003
This book examines the history of western linguistics over a 2,000-year timespan, from its origins in ancient Greece up to the crucial moments of change in the Renaissance that lay the foundations of modern linguistics. The book explores how ideas about language over the centuries have changed to reflect changing modes of thinking. Twelve chapters…
Descriptors: Christianity, Diachronic Linguistics, Grammar, Greek Civilization
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Lieberman, Samuel – Classical Outlook, 1971
Descriptors: Ancient History, Classical Languages, Classical Literature, Cultural Context
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Sichel, Betty A. – Educational Theory, 1983
Homer's epic poetry illustrates correspondence between society's needs and the values stressed in education, while Socrates' thought uncovers contradictions between social and educational values and seeks a new form of correspondence. Examples from the Epics and Plato's early dialogues trace changing educational attitudes among the Classical…
Descriptors: Classical Literature, Educational Attitudes, Educational History, Educational Philosophy
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Singer, Peter – PS: Political Science and Politics, 1999
Addresses the question: How do the modern theories of international relations account for the origins of the Peloponnesian War? Creates an historical fiction of Athenians debating the war's origins. (CMK)
Descriptors: Ancient History, Greek Civilization, Higher Education, Persuasive Discourse
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