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Kimball, Bruce A. – Teachers College Record, 1985
A review is presented of the differences between Matthew Arnold's and Thomas Huxley's views on liberal education. (CB)
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Philosophy, General Education, Scientific Attitudes

Taylor, Carl C. – Rural Sociology, 1985
Discusses conditions in the field of sociology including new opportunities to serve in large governmental programs, criticism of sociology as a science, and sociologists' difficulties in communicating and applying knowledge. Offers suggestions for developing a science of sociology. (LFL)
Descriptors: Intellectual Disciplines, Intellectual History, Personal Narratives, Scientific Attitudes

White, Sheldon H. – Developmental Psychology, 1992
As an undergraduate at Williams College, G. Stanley Hall learned a theistic developmental psychology from Mark Hopkins. As president of Clark University, Hall initiated a program of questionnaires that contributed to a scientific vision of childhood and adolescence. Hall treated this vision as a moral philosophy. (BC)
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Child Development, Developmental Psychology, Developmental Stages

Nelson, Richard; Watras, Joseph – Journal of Thought, 1981
A review of the scientific movement in education in the early twentieth century: its origins in the scientific management and industrial efficiency theories of Frederich Taylor; its effects on administrative organization and educational research; and the reactions of its critics, who favored the child-centered school. (SJL)
Descriptors: Administrative Principles, Educational History, Educational Research, Educational Theories

Baker, Lee D. – Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, 1999
As early as 1887, the anthropologist Franz Boas began to combat scientific racism and the insistence that blacks were of lower intelligence than whites. Throughout his career, Boas guided anthropology to a consensus that people of color were not racially inferior and that they possessed unique and historically specific cultures. (SLD)
Descriptors: Anthropology, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Differences, History
Jansen, Sue Curry – 1989
This paper builds upon the poetics of scientific discourse which provide extraordinary insights into the workings of the scientific imagination and into the ways it is both colonized and liberated by the medium of social and ideological transfer--metaphor. The paper examines what constructivism is teaching us about the role metaphor plays in…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Discourse Analysis, Feminism, Imagination
Burris, Beverly H.; Heydebrand, Wolf V. – New Directions for Higher Education, 1981
The structure of educational control in the United States is said to have evolved from theocratic to professional to bureaucratic forms, and finally to a tightly integrated form of technocratic control heralded by new forms of technology, sophisticated types of administration, and the Supreme Court decision concerning Yeshiva. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Bureaucracy, College Administration, Court Litigation

Schott, Thomas – Knowledge: Creation, Diffusion, Utilization, 1992
Examines the extent to which scientific research in the former Soviet Union was endogenous and the degree to which it was integrated into the scientific world system during the 1970s and 1980s. Autarchy, self-reliance, and distinctiveness in scientific traditions are discussed; the center-periphery concept is examined; and results of a survey of…
Descriptors: Cooperation, Foreign Countries, Influences, Science and Society

Antler, Joyce – Teachers College Record, 1982
The history of New York City's Bank Street College (established in 1916 as the Bureau of Educational Experiments) is traced. The school was a laboratory for innovative teaching and fostered progressive educational practices and psychological child development research. (FG)
Descriptors: Child Development, Early Childhood Education, Educational Innovation, Educational Psychology

Appel, Stephen W. – Journal of Negro Education, 1989
Examines the construction of racial scientific discourse within the milieu of an extremely racially segregated society. Traces the influence of capitalism, racism, Social Darwinism, eugenics, and "racial science" on the pedagogy of modern apartheid in South Africa. Finds evidence of pervasive effects of "scientific" ideas on…
Descriptors: African History, Apartheid, Black Education, Colonialism
Layton, Edwin T., Jr. – 1986
In examining the history of American engineering, this book emphasizes professionalism, social responsibility, and ethics. It explains how some engineers have attempted to express a concern for the social effects of technology and to forge codes of ethics which could articulate the profession's fundamental obligation to the public. The document's…
Descriptors: Business, Civil Engineering, Engineering, Engineering Education

Hultberg, John – Science Communication, 1997
Addresses the work of British writer, C. P. Snow, and examines the differences in scientific and literary cultures. Discusses post-World War II professionalization of science and the rebellious literary culture; the scientific revolution; the lack of communication between the two cultures; the generalization of science through sociology; the need…
Descriptors: Authors, Comparative Analysis, Cultural Influences, Culture Conflict