•  22
    Editor’s Note
    Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines 18 (2): 8-8. 1998.
  •  55
    Philosophy and Children’s Religious Experience
    Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 45 125-135. 2008.
    Philosophy serves to determine and clarifying the meaning of experience, and to make experience more meaningful, in both of the senses that Dewey distinguished: to broaden the range and amplify the value of qualities we experience, and to multiply their relevant ties to other experiences. Children’s experience is replete with philosophical meaning, and in facilitating children’s search for meaning, we are obliged to lead them in the directions that we ourselves have found most fruitful, though w…Read more
  •  82
    Introduction
    Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines 19 (2): 4-10. 2000.
  •  54
    Ethics Education and the Practice of Wisdom
    Teaching Ethics 9 (2): 105-130. 2009.
  •  14
    The Status of Rational Norms:: a Pragmatist Perspective
    Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 21 (1): 53-64. 2001.
    Cultural conservatives urge curricula for critical thinking and character education as means of shoring up rational and moral truths. Cultural critics challenge not only the objectivity of the standard curricula but the very norms of objectivity used to justify it. A pragmatist account of rational and other norms leaves most of those norms intact but makes their status provisional.
  •  37
    Gregory reports on a study by researchers from Ohio State and Pennsylvania State Universities that evaluated nine programs of classroom discussion. The programs were evaluated on their evidence of discourse features that have been shown in research literature to characterize quality discussions. Two programs, Philosophy for Children and Collaborative Reasoning, were found to provide the richest opportunities for individual and collective reasoning, due to the way teachers in these programs mod…Read more
  •  35
    Introduction
    with David Kennedy
    Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines 19 (2): 4-10. 2000.
  •  1
    A Behavioral Pedagogy For The Community Of Inquiry
    Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 19 (1): 29-37. 1999.
    The concepts of inquiry, reasonableness, open-mindedness, critical thinking, creativity, caring, self-correction and democracy, as they relate to the community of philosophical inquiry practiced in Philosophy for Children, are analyzed in terms of behaviors, procedures and habits.
  •  33
    Practicing Democracy
    International Journal of Applied Philosophy 18 (2): 163-176. 2004.
    In pragmatist social theory communities faced with significant troubles or opportunities inquire after their advantage and reconstruct their habits and their environments. Three programs of philosophical practice—Socratic Dialogue, the Philosophy Café and Philosophy for Children—cultivate citizenly virtues necessary for this process. They facilitate dialogue and open-ended inquiry, give practice in cognitive and social skills, and institute shared authority. However, certain factors limit the pr…Read more
  •  42
    Introduction: Ethics Education as Philosophical Practice
    Teaching Ethics 15 (1): 19-34. 2015.
    John Dewey wrote of moral education as growth from impulsive behavior to a “reflective morality,” involving the pursuit of ends-in-view identified through practices of critical reflection and social interaction. The essays in this section explore a variety of such practices as a philosophical approach to K–12 ethics education. The essays draw on, and contribute to three educational movements that aim for particular kinds of reflective consciousness and agency. Socratic Pedagogy engages students …Read more
  •  41
    Ethics Education as Philosophical Practice in advance
    Teaching Ethics 9 (2): 105-130. 2009.
    Ethics education in post-graduate philosophy departments and professional schools involves disciplinary knowledge and textual analysis but is mostly unconcerned with the ethical lives of students. Ethics or values education below college aims at shaping students’ ethical beliefs and conduct but lacks philosophical depth and methods of value inquiry. The «values transmission» approach to values education does not provide the opportunity for students to express doubt or criticism of the proffered …Read more
  •  242
    Towards a Feminist Philosophy of Education
    with Ann Sharp
    Thinking: The Journal of Philosophy for Children 19 (2-3): 87-96. 2009.
    The writings of Simone Weil support a feminist philosophy of education that locates freedom in self-determined creative work within contexts of necessity. In particular, Weil’s discussion of Force, the Good, Work, Method and Time provide criteria for a feminist philosophy of education, in terms of educational ends and means. Philosophy for Children is relevant to each of these themes, in various ways.