Book contents
- Educating for Democracy
- Educating for Democracy
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Citizen, the Most Important Office in a Democracy
- 2 Educating for the Office of Citizen
- 3 Reflection as an Educational Aim of the New Patriot
- 4 The Humanities
- 5 The Humanities
- 6 STEM and the Democratic Aims of Mathematics Education
- 7 STEM and the Democratic Aims of Science Education
- 8 The Expressive Curriculum
- 9 Democratic Education and Moral Growth
- Index
2 - Educating for the Office of Citizen
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 April 2023
- Educating for Democracy
- Educating for Democracy
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Citizen, the Most Important Office in a Democracy
- 2 Educating for the Office of Citizen
- 3 Reflection as an Educational Aim of the New Patriot
- 4 The Humanities
- 5 The Humanities
- 6 STEM and the Democratic Aims of Mathematics Education
- 7 STEM and the Democratic Aims of Science Education
- 8 The Expressive Curriculum
- 9 Democratic Education and Moral Growth
- Index
Summary
Abstract: Democratic ideas and habits do not arise automatically; they have taken centuries to develop, and stitching democracy together after its fault lines have been exposed, as they recently have been in the United States, is a long-term affair. Citizenship education requires contributions from an extended curriculum – math and science, art, and the humanities, as well as social studies and civics – focused on the specific needs of rising citizens. One place to begin is by taking the idea of citizenship as an office seriously and then asking what kind of education is needed to make that office effective in advancing democratic culture.
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- Educating for Democracy , pp. 20 - 34Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023