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Gildea, Robert – Oxford Review of Education, 1976
The 19th-century mutual education for boys and girls was introduced in Britain from France. It is discussed in the context of economic development, social divisions, and historical traditions. (ND)
Descriptors: Economic Development, Educational Change, Educational History, Elementary Education

Titley, E. Brian – Oxford Review of Education, 1983
The Irish educational system in the period following Irish independence was heavily influenced by the Rev. Timothy J. Corcoran. Rejecting any sort of child-influenced curriculum, he called for a rigid classics-based education based on Catholic dogma with maximum emphasis on memorization and repetition rather than on inquiry. (IS)
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Comparative Education, Conventional Instruction, Educational History

Lane, N. R.; Lane, S. A. – Oxford Review of Education, 1986
Maintains that teaching strategies which seek to develop reasoning skills in children, especially those using a "collaborative inquiry approach," must be based on enhancing children's self esteem. Inadequate teacher training and the predominate "authority/knowledge-based" view of education are identified as major reasons for…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Discussion, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education

Thomas, Gary – Oxford Review of Education, 1986
Argues that technology now offers the opportunity for neutralizing the conflicting demands of child-centered, progressive, humanistic education with the back-to-basics demands voiced in recent years. Analyzes why education has had difficulty in responding to the potential of new technology. (JDH)
Descriptors: Back to Basics, Conventional Instruction, Educational Change, Educational Methods