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Carlin, Matthew – Educational Theory, 2021
Augusto Del Noce is widely regarded in his home country of Italy as one of the most important political philosophers of the second half of the twentieth century. Del Noce's work covers a range of topics including modernity, technology, contemporary Catholicism, secularism, eroticism, communism, fascism, and progressivism. Although Del Noce holds a…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Political Attitudes, Philosophy, Intellectual Disciplines
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Williams, Maria Patricia – History of Education, 2015
A schoolteacher from Lombardy, Saint Frances Xavier Cabrini (1850-1917), founded the Institute of Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (MSC) in 1880. It was one of the 185 female religious institutes established in Italy in the nineteenth century. In the newly unified Italy, Cabrini found opportunities to formulate progressive Catholic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Catholic Schools, Single Sex Schools, Womens Education
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Moss, Peter – Improving Schools, 2016
Loris Malaguzzi (1920-1994) was one of the great educationalists of the last century, helping to create a system of public (or municipal) schools in his home city of Reggio Emilia in Northern Italy that is, arguably, the most successful example of radical or progressive education that has ever been. The article gives an introduction to Malaguzzi…
Descriptors: Reggio Emilia Approach, Public Education, Progressive Education, Change Agents
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Burton, Fred – International Journal of Progressive Education, 2013
After 36 years of working as a progressive educator in American schools, the author notes the near absence of joy, passion, and imagination that today's students experience. He asks, "Where's wonder?" In this essay, the author makes a case for the role of wonder in learning as he reflects on his work with schools and museum educators at…
Descriptors: Museums, Reggio Emilia Approach, Progressive Education, Teaching Methods
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Bigozzi, Lucia; Tarchi, Christian; Falsini, Paola; Fiorentini, Carlo – International Journal of Science Education, 2014
In this study, a progressive-learning approach to physics, based on knowledge-building pedagogy, was compared to a content-centered approach in which explanations, experiments, and discussions are centered on the transmission of knowledge. Forty-six students attending the first year of high school participated in this study over a whole school…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Secondary School Science, High Schools, Physics
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Kellner, Douglas – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2013
I argue that 2011 witnessed a series of challenges to neoliberalism on a global scale perhaps not seen since the political upheavals of 1968, and that media spectacle provided the form of a series of global insurgences from the North African Arab Uprisings to the Occupy movements. Crises of neoliberalism also generated movements in Italy, Spain,…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Foreign Countries, Activism, Global Approach
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Allemann-Ghionda, Cristina – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2000
After World War II, American scholars rewrote Italian school syllabi and textbooks to replace Fascist ideology with democratic ideas. John Dewey's progressive ideas were influential, until a restorative backlash of the Cold War almost eliminated them from policy documents. Since the sixties, however, Dewey's pedagogical thinking has regained…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Democratic Values, Educational History, Foreign Countries
Edwards, Carolyn, Ed.; Gandini, Lella, Ed.; Forman, George, Ed. – 1998
This collection of essays and interviews documents the unique approach to early childhood education taken by schools in the Reggio Emilia region of Italy. Howard Gardner and David Hawkins provide reflections in chapters that begin the book. The book is then divided into four major parts. Part I includes an introduction by Carolyn Edwards and…
Descriptors: Art Education, Community Role, Creative Development, Curriculum Development
Ward, Colin – 1993
Two analogies illustrate differences in educational philosophy: the child as clay to be molded by teachers to conform to predetermined standards, and the child as a flower, tended by the teacher so that it may blossom in its own way. Case studies of delinquent children have shown that some children are able draw upon inner resources and…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Creativity, Education Work Relationship, Educational Environment
Edwards, Carolyn, Ed.; And Others – 1993
This collection of 18 essays and interviews documents the unique approach to early childhood education taken by schools in the Reggio Emilia region of Northern Italy for the last 30 years. The book is divided into four major parts. Part I includes an introduction by Carolyn Edwards and others, and the essay, "What Can We Learn From Reggio…
Descriptors: Art Education, Community Role, Creative Development, Curriculum Development
Rutkowski, Edward, Ed. – Journal of the Midwest History of Education Society, 1987
Presented in seven parts, titles in part 1 of these conference papers are: "The Uses of Educational History" (Eisele); "The Modern Assault on Public Schools" (Romanish); and "Human Rights and Education" (Padavil). In part 2, the paper titles are: "Jane Addams' Hull-House" (Colky); "Educational Policy…
Descriptors: Administrative Policy, Administrator Attitudes, Adult Education, Catholics