"Almost every educational idea worth a thought has been considered at the University of Illinois, and anything worth trying has been tested. In this history of ideas, Bill Cope and Walter Feinberg chronicle the intellectual lives of education thinkers atthe university while tracking the development of educational ideas and practices in general. Cope and Feinberg draw on conversations, narratives, and archival research that reveal how different generations explored their role in defining and carrying outthe college's multifaceted mission. Their account raises critical questions about the character of learning, the aims of teaching, and the nature of teaching as a profession. At the same time, the authors address issues that range from the role of schools in fostering individual and collective identity to the introduction of computer-mediated and online learning. Cope and Feinberg examine changes in self-understanding about fundamental ideas and chart how the college evolved from its original narrow mission of training children's schoolteachers to embracing global perspectives. A wide-ranging portrait of an institution, Arguments for Learning uses the School of Education to tell the stories of thinkers dedicated to the idea that education can change the world for the better"--
Almost every educational idea worth a thought has been considered at the University of Illinois, and anything worth trying has been tested. In this history of ideas, Bill Cope and Walter Feinberg chronicle the intellectual lives of education thinkers at the university while tracking the development of educational ideas and practices in general.
Cope and Feinberg draw on conversations, narratives, and archival research that reveal how different generations explored their role in defining and carrying out the Colleges multifaceted mission. Their account raises critical questions about the character of learning, the aims of teaching, and the nature of teaching as a profession. At the same time, the authors address issues that range from the role of schools in fostering individual and collective identity to the introduction of computer-mediated and online learning. Cope and Feinberg examine changes in self-understanding about fundamental ideas and chart how the College evolved from its original narrow mission of training childrens schoolteachers to embracing global perspectives.
A wide-ranging portrait of an institution, Arguments for Learning uses the School of Education to tell the stories of thinkers dedicated to the idea that education can change the world for the better.
Foreword Mary Kalantzis
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I. Beginnings
In the Beginning: Education at Illinois, 18671905
A School of Education and the Struggle for a Profession of Teaching,
19051917
Growing a College and Establishing a Research Tradition, 19181930
Depression, Social Crisis, and Professionalization of Education, 19311945
Part II. Defining the Discipline
What Kind of Study Is Education?
Establishing Social Foundations, 19451957
Shaping and Debating Educational Psychology, 19481966
The Foundations of Cognitive Psychology, 1963
Debating the Shape of Instruction and Assessment, 1964
Critical Thinking and Educational Inquiry, 1950
The Qualitative Turn, 1964
Part III. Equity and Diversity in Learning
Cold War Tensions, Sputnik, and New Beginnings, 19501964
Life Adjustment or Educational Wasteland? Debating Progressive Education,
19531986
Special Education and Disability Services, 1946
Racism and Education, 19481956
Growing Diversity, 1968
Part IV. Technology in Learning
Computers in the Service of Learning, 19491976
New Math and Inquiry Science, 19511976
The Cybernetics of Learning, 19491975
Going Online, 1993
New Learning, 2006
Notes
References
Index
Bill Cope is a professor in the Department of Educational Policy Studies at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. He is coauthor of Making Sense: Reference, Agency, and Structure in a Grammar of Multimodal Meaning and coeditor of e-Learning Ecologies: Principles for New Learning and Assessment. Walter Feinberg is the Charles Dun Hardie Professor Emeritus of Educational Policy Studies at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. He is the author of Educating for Democracy and Dewey and Education.