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Critical Lessons

Critical Lessons

Critical Lessons

What our Schools Should Teach
Nel Noddings, Stanford University, California
May 2006
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Adobe eBook Reader
9780511190056
$39.00
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Adobe eBook Reader
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Paperback
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Hardback

    How can schools prepare students for real life? What should students learn in high school that is rarely addressed today? Critical Lessons recommends sharing highly controversial issues with high school students, including “hot” questions on war, gender, advertising, and religion.

    • No other book focuses squarely on self-understanding within critical thinking
    • Raises many controversial issues about what should be included in high school and college curricula
    • Expands on a topic that was briefly discussed in last book, Happiness and Education

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Drawing on historical and pedagogical studies, literary analysis, and primary-source materials, Noddings provides a wide-ranging argument for the discussion of race, class, gender, consumerism, mass communications, the family, and the workplace in the curriculum.[...] This volume is likely to become an important resource for future scholarship."
    --Library Journal

    "Most readers of education-policy books like this expect the author to tell them what to think. But Noddings rarely advocates for any controversial position; instead, she gives teachers suggestions on how to begin provocative conversations, and offers ideas to keep these conversations safe, civil, and engaging. Most public-school graduates will find Critical Lessons a provocative course in their post- secondary education."
    --Greater Good Magazine

    "This book engages the reader from the introduction to the final pages[...]The author, past president of the John Dewey Society, moves through each of the chapters discussing key topics such as war, people, parenting, nature, propaganda, gender, and religion, relating them all to critical thinking and self-understanding. She weaves a complex book that is superbly written and combines literature, psychology, theology, philosophy, and liberal education."
    --H.B. Arnold, University of the Pacific, Choice

    "It is refreshing to read a volume written by an individual who has the understanding and experience to offer a well-reasoned, if radical, plan for curricular reform in public secondary schools[...]Critical Lessons should be required reading for every student in teacher education programs."
    --Jean Shepherd Hamm, Feminist Teacher

    See more reviews

    Product details

    May 2006
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9780511190056
    0 pages
    0kg
    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • Acknowledgments
    • Introduction
    • 1. Learning and self-understanding
    • 2. The psychology of war
    • 3. House and home
    • 4. Other people
    • 5. Parenting
    • 6. Animals and nature
    • 7. Advertising and propaganda
    • 8. Making a living
    • 9. Gender
    • 10. Religion
    • 11. Preparing our schools
    • Notes
    • Bibliography.
      Author
    • Nel Noddings , Stanford University, California

      Nel Noddings is Lee L. Jacks Professor of Education, Emerita, at Stanford University. She is past president of the Philosophy of Education Society and of the John Dewey Society. In addition to fourteen books - among them are Caring: A Feminine Approach to Ethics and Moral Education, Women and Evil, The Challenge to Care in Schools, Educating for Intelligent Belief or Unbelief, and Philosophy of Education - she is the author of some 200 articles and chapters on various topics ranging from the ethics of care to mathematical problem solving. Her latest books are Starting at Home: Caring and Social Policy, Educating Moral People: A Caring Alternative to Character Education and Happiness and Education (Cambridge University Press, 2003). Noddings spent 15 years as a teacher, administrator, and curriculum developer in public schools. She served as a mathematics department chairperson in New Jersey and as Director of the Laboratory Schools at the University of Chicago. At Stanford, she received the Award for Teaching Excellence three times, most recently in 1997. She also served as Associate Dean and as Acting Dean at Stanford University for four years.