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Fallace, Thomas – Educational Researcher, 2018
This historical study explores how educators in the United States responded to the rise of fascism between the World Wars. By considering and then ultimately rejecting the fascist approach to education and philosophy, American educators defined democratic education in contrast to fascist/totalitarian approaches to education by rejecting…
Descriptors: Authoritarianism, Educational History, Democracy, Propaganda
Fallace, Thomas; Fantozzi, Victoria – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2015
A century ago, John Dewey and his daughter Evelyn published "Schools of To-morrow" to nearly universal acclaim. However, over the course of the 20th century, critics of Dewey have drawn upon "Schools of To-morrow" to accuse him of being an uncritical disciple of French philosopher, Jean Rousseau, of being opposed to the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Intellectual History, Social Environment, School Segregation
Fallace, Thomas – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2012
In this historical study, the author traces the evolution of Dewey's vision for a democratic curriculum. Prior to 1916, Dewey was a linear historicist, meaning that he conceptualized culture as moving linearly through three distinct stages--savagery, barbarianism, civilization--that corresponded with stages of child development. Dewey's suggested…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Cultural Pluralism, Democracy, Educational History
Was There Really a Social Efficiency Doctrine? The Uses and Abuses of an Idea in Educational History
Fallace, Thomas; Fantozzi, Victoria – Educational Researcher, 2013
In the historiography on curriculum reform during the progressive era, one interpretive lens has dominated the study of 20th-century reform for more than 40 years: the idea of the "social efficiency" doctrine. In this historiographical essay, the authors briefly trace the rise of social efficiency as an idea in curriculum history, identify the…
Descriptors: Historiography, Curriculum Development, Educational History, Intellectual History