The Educational Imagination: On the Design and Evaluation of School ProgramsIn this book, Eisner provides a conceptual framework that shows the different ways in which the aims of education can be regarded and describes their implications for curriculum planning and teaching practices. This book provides a "context" in whic h teachers can critically examine prevailing assumptions and both current and proposed practices. An analysis and overview of leading ideas in the field explores American education as it has developed from the turn of the century to the present. Introduction of unique concepts in educational planning include such ideas as eductional connoisseurship--the art of appreciating what is educationally significant, and educational criticism--the use of art critism as a means of describing, interpret ing, and evaluating teaching. |
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Page 26
... curricu- lum for a class or a child . Whatever the conception of curriculum — and each of the two conceptions described has important consequences for the way in which one thinks about educational planning — it is clear that a school 26 ...
... curricu- lum for a class or a child . Whatever the conception of curriculum — and each of the two conceptions described has important consequences for the way in which one thinks about educational planning — it is clear that a school 26 ...
Page 31
... curricu- lum ; one could formulate a curriculum designed to train bigots , burglars , or murderers , but within the context of this book and my purposes the qualifi- cation that the consequences are intended to be educational is ...
... curricu- lum ; one could formulate a curriculum designed to train bigots , burglars , or murderers , but within the context of this book and my purposes the qualifi- cation that the consequences are intended to be educational is ...
Page 136
... curriculum planning . The Content of the Curriculum Because goals seldom prescribe the content that can be used to achieve them , attention to the selection of content is always an important curricu- lum consideration . If a curriculum ...
... curriculum planning . The Content of the Curriculum Because goals seldom prescribe the content that can be used to achieve them , attention to the selection of content is always an important curricu- lum consideration . If a curriculum ...
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achievement activities aesthetic aims artistic asked aspects assessment attention behavior believe Bill Brach's Bryson City cational classroom cognitive conception connoisseurship course create criteria criterion-referenced tests Critical Theory culture curricu curricula curriculum development curriculum materials curriculum planning dents describe designed Dewey e. e. cummings educa educational criticism educational evaluation educational practice educational psychology educational research Eisner Elliot W emphasis evaluation example experience expression forms formulated Forrister Forrister's Full Metal Jacket function Gebhart goals high school human ideas ideology images important individual inquiry instruction intellectual John Dewey kind language learning major means objectives outcomes particular performance Porro problems Progressivism questions regarded requires riculum school districts scientific sense skills social specific Stanford Stanford University structure Swain County tasks taught teachers teaching theory tion tional tive understand values York