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Semel, Susan F. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2009
This article presents a review of three chapters in "Part III, Section F: Inquiring into Curriculum" of "The SAGE Handbook of Curriculum and Instruction" (F. M. Connelly, M. F. He, J. I. Phillion, Eds.; Sage Publications, 2008). These chapters ["Reenvisioning the Progressive Tradition in Curriculum" (David T. Hansen,…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Social History, Educational Change, Autobiographies
Semel, Susan F.; Sadovnik, Alan R. – Teachers College Record, 2008
Background/Context: The contemporary small-school movement traces its roots to the alternative schools of the 1960s and the development of small urban schools in the 1980s. However, the small-school movement has its roots in the progressive movement of the early twentieth century. Although there is a significant amount of research on the early…
Descriptors: Small Schools, Progressive Education, Educational History, Private Schools
Semel, Susan F. – 1992
The Dalton School, an independent, progressive school on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, was founded in 1919 by Helen Parkhurst. She established a child-centered school that attempted to incorporate the concept of a democratic community within the boundaries of an educational program. The school's innovative program became known as the Dalton…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Educational History, Educational Innovation, Educational Philosophy

Semel, Susan F.; Sadovnik, Alan R. – Peabody Journal of Education, 1995
Examines fundamental tensions between the individual and community as manifested in the philosophy and practice of three progressive New York City Schools. The historical case studies of private progressive education demonstrate a tension between liberal and communitarian dimensions of progressive education, a tension implicit in progressive…
Descriptors: Community, Democratic Values, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education