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Holowchak, M. Andrew – History of Education, 2018
Because of the political reforms demanded by his political philosophy, Jefferson was always focused on instantiating a "system" of education to edify all persons according to their needs and to prevent those governing at every level from lusting after power and fame instead of governing in pursuance of the interests of the general…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational History, Change Agents, Universities
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Holowchak, M. Andrew – Democracy & Education, 2015
This essay is a reply to Brian Dotts's "Beyond the Schoolhouse Door," which focuses on the need of a system of general education in Jefferson's writings on educative reform. [For Dotts' "Beyond the Schoolhouse Door: Educating the Political Animal in Jefferson's Little Republics," see EJ1061579.]
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Educational Needs, Essays, Reader Response
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Holowchak, M. Andrew – Democracy & Education, 2014
This essay is a reply to James Carpenter's "Thomas Jefferson and the Ideology of Democratic Schooling." In it, I argue that there is an apophatic strain in the essay that calls into question the motivation for the undertaking.
Descriptors: Reader Response, Democracy, Democratic Values, Citizenship Education
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Holowchak, M. Andrew – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2013
Plato noticed a sizeable problem apropos of establishing his republic--that there was always a ready pool of zealous potential rulers, lying in wait for a suitable opportunity to rule on their own tyrannical terms. He also recognized that those persons best suited to rule, those persons with foursquare and unimpeachable virtue, would be least…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Public Service, Altruism, Government (Administrative Body)
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Holowchak, M. Andrew – Democracy & Education, 2013
Jefferson's republicanism--a people-first, mostly bottom-up political vision with a moral underpinning--was critically dependent on general education for the citizenry and higher education for those who would govern. This paper contains an analysis of Jefferson's general philosophy of education by enumerating some of its most fundamental…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Attitudes, Political Attitudes, Elementary Education