9780306406652-0306406659-Stability and Change: Innovation in an Educational Context

Stability and Change: Innovation in an Educational Context

ISBN-13: 9780306406652
ISBN-10: 0306406659
Author: Karen Seashore Louis, Sheila Rosenblum
Publication date: 1981
Publisher: Plenum Pub Corp
Format: Hardcover 352 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780306406652
ISBN-10: 0306406659
Author: Karen Seashore Louis, Sheila Rosenblum
Publication date: 1981
Publisher: Plenum Pub Corp
Format: Hardcover 352 pages

Summary

Stability and Change: Innovation in an Educational Context (ISBN-13: 9780306406652 and ISBN-10: 0306406659), written by authors Karen Seashore Louis, Sheila Rosenblum, was published by Plenum Pub Corp in 1981. With an overall rating of 4.0 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Stability and Change: Innovation in an Educational Context (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.5.

Description

Nearly a century ago, Emile Durkheim founded the sociology of educa tion on the French cultural and structural premise that the function of educators is to transmit culture from one generation to the next. The clarity of his vision was aided by the era, the place, and the actors in the learning environment. His was an era when the relatively seamless web of western culture, although ripping and straining, was still intact. The place, post-Napoleonic France, was vertically stratified and elaborately structured. And the teachers had reason to think they were agents of authority, whereas most students, during school hours at least, behaved as if they were the objects of that authority. Underlying the very notion of a sociology of education, then, was a visible and pervasive aura of a system and order that was culturally prescribed. Scholars of American education have yearned for such systems before and since Durkheim. Every European and English model has been emulated in a more or less winsome manner, from the Boston Latin School of the 1700s to the Open Education programs of the 1960s. In the last quarter century of research, it has begun to dawn on us, however, that no matter how hard American educators try, they do not build a system.

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