•  72
    Critical theory and curriculum practice in STS education
    Journal of Business Ethics 8 (2). 1989.
    The STS education movement is identified and related to the critique of technology of the 1960s–1970s. The critics of technology included the system of education in their critiques. There is a practical tension or contradiction in attempting to develop their insights within the curriculum routines of the schools and colleges. This tension is explored under six categories: reductive knowledge, socialization of technical modes of thinking, technicalized processes of learning, the loss of meaning, …Read more
  •  265
    Encounter: The educational metamorphoses of Jane Roland Martin
    with Jane Roland Martin
    Education and Culture 23 (1): 73-83. 2007.
  •  66
    Rereading
    Education and Culture 23 (1). 2007.
    : This article provides a close reading of Democracy and Education, situated in the context of Dewey's work prior to and during World War I, to illuminate the close tie between Dewey's overriding concerns during this period and today's educational concerns. The analysis suggests two projects for contemporary democratic educators
  •  68
    Rethinking technology
    with Dr Carl Mitcham
    Science and Engineering Ethics 1 (1): 88-90. 1995.
  •  73
    Listening from Silence: Inner Composure and Engagement
    Paideusis: Journal of the Canadian Philosophy of Education Society 17 (2): 65-74. 2008.
    The Indian-America philosopher Sri Chinmoy Ghose has distinguished between outer silence, inner silence, and innermost silence. In this paper I explore these distinctions and their educational relevance. My main conclusions are that (a) a deep inner silence, undistracted by questions or other thoughts, is at the root of one paradigm kind of good listening in education, and (b) what Chinmoy refers to as “innermost silence” is the moral virtue of receptivity to others that sustains inner silence, …Read more
  •  100
    John Dewey presented The Public and Its Problems in a series of lectures in 1926, shortly after Walter Lippmann published two influential works, Public Opinion and The Phantom Public . In those works, Lippmann had denied that broad publics should share in determining public policy. He argued that the policy issues were far removed from the lives of ordinary citizens, whose collective opinion, as a result, would inevitably be ill-informed, self-interested and readily manipulated.Dewey countered t…Read more
  • Philosopher and Social Responsibility in Technological Society
    Proceedings of the Heraclitean Society 17