Assuring Quality for the Social Studies in Our Schools

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Hoover Institution Press, Stanford University, 1987 - Education - 126 pages
The social studies curriculum in the elementary and secondary schools of the United States is the basic core for conveying to new generations the concepts, values, and abilities that will allow our society to survive and prosper. In the 1950s, Paul Hanna's concern over the adequacy of courses being taught and the lack of a cohesive structure that would inspire the values of a democratic nation led him to advocate a standard national curriculum for social studies to be used throughout the public school system. This book contains reprints of arcticles by Hanna written from 1957 to 1965, presenting his ideas on such a curriculum and stating his recognition of the potential dangers of a federally dictated school curriculum.

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Contents

SOCIETYCHILDCURRICULUM
2
DESIGN FOR A NATIONAL CURRICULUM
31
EDUCATING TODAYS YOUTHTOMORROWS CITIZENS
47
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About the author (1987)

Paul Robert Hanna was a Professor of Education, author of books and journals, in the educational field, and leader in elementary education. As an associate professor at Stanford University Hanna taught and developed a wide variety of courses. He founded the Stanford International Development Education Center (SIDEC), and worked as a senior researcher in the Hoover Institution in his last years to generate the Hanna Collection. Hanna wrote over eighty educational essays, sixteen books and several yearbooks before he died at age 85, on April 8, 1988.

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