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"Scarcely yet a people": State policy in citizenship education, 1947-1982Sears, Alan Murray 11 1900 (has links)
The constitutional division of powers in Canada assigns no
authority to the federal state in the area of education. In
spite of this, the Canadian state has used its constitutional
authority to act in the national interest to justify substantial
activity in public education at all levels. One area of
particular interest to the state is the education of Canadian
citizens. This thesis examines state policy in citizenship
education between 1947 and 1982. It focuses on the Department
of the Secretary of State, particularly the Canadian Citizenship
Branch, and addresses three questions: 1) What conception of
citizenship formed the basis for state policy in citizenship
education? 2) How did the state formulate citizenship education
policy? and 3) What means did the federal state use to implement
citizenship education policy given that education is an area of
provincial jurisdiction?
Throughout this period the state was preoccupied with
questions of national unity and therefore the focus of its
policy in citizenship education was the construction and
propagation of a national ideal in which all Canadians could
find their identity as citizens. The policy was consistent with
an elitist conception of citizenship in that it excluded most
Canadians from the process of constructing the national identity
and relegated citizen participation to largely apolitical
voluntary activities.
Although the Department of the Secretary of State was rhetorically committed to scientific policy making, the process
was driven not by social science research but by attempts to
secure and extend bureaucratic territory in relation to both
other government departments and voluntary organizations working
in the citizenship sector. In the complex interplay among the
interested parties the Department was sometimes a leader and
sometimes a follower in the policy making process.
State citizenship education policy was implemented through
official agreements with the provinces as well as more direct
means which bypassed provincial authorities. Bilingualism in
Education programs are the best example of the former, while
training programs for teachers, the production and dissemination
of materials, and attempts to use voluntary organizations as
surrogates for the state are examples of the latter.
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"Scarcely yet a people": State policy in citizenship education, 1947-1982Sears, Alan Murray 11 1900 (has links)
The constitutional division of powers in Canada assigns no
authority to the federal state in the area of education. In
spite of this, the Canadian state has used its constitutional
authority to act in the national interest to justify substantial
activity in public education at all levels. One area of
particular interest to the state is the education of Canadian
citizens. This thesis examines state policy in citizenship
education between 1947 and 1982. It focuses on the Department
of the Secretary of State, particularly the Canadian Citizenship
Branch, and addresses three questions: 1) What conception of
citizenship formed the basis for state policy in citizenship
education? 2) How did the state formulate citizenship education
policy? and 3) What means did the federal state use to implement
citizenship education policy given that education is an area of
provincial jurisdiction?
Throughout this period the state was preoccupied with
questions of national unity and therefore the focus of its
policy in citizenship education was the construction and
propagation of a national ideal in which all Canadians could
find their identity as citizens. The policy was consistent with
an elitist conception of citizenship in that it excluded most
Canadians from the process of constructing the national identity
and relegated citizen participation to largely apolitical
voluntary activities.
Although the Department of the Secretary of State was rhetorically committed to scientific policy making, the process
was driven not by social science research but by attempts to
secure and extend bureaucratic territory in relation to both
other government departments and voluntary organizations working
in the citizenship sector. In the complex interplay among the
interested parties the Department was sometimes a leader and
sometimes a follower in the policy making process.
State citizenship education policy was implemented through
official agreements with the provinces as well as more direct
means which bypassed provincial authorities. Bilingualism in
Education programs are the best example of the former, while
training programs for teachers, the production and dissemination
of materials, and attempts to use voluntary organizations as
surrogates for the state are examples of the latter. / Education, Faculty of / Graduate
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An Investigation of the Effectiveness of Physics First in MaineO'Brien, Michael James January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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'Nobly and well' : secondary school teaching in Ireland 1878-2010Walsh, Brendan John January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Vernacular language-learning in early modern EnglandGallagher, John James January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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The teaching of French in English primary schools 1960-1982 : a philosophical and institutional approach to its emergence and declineBayley, Susan Nancy. January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
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Teaching to transform: The legacy of African American scholar -activists in higher educationCollins, Barbara J 01 January 2000 (has links)
In this qualitative research study, I examined the autobiographies, oral narratives and life stories of twelve African American scholar-activists (including myself) who have used higher education as a vehicle for teaching and learning, as a tool for personal transformation and as an ingredient for social change. The research questions that the study was designed to address were: How have African Americans used scholarship as a means for personal and social transformation? What is the role and responsibility of scholar-activists who choose to root their genius in the academy? What lessons can be learned about how to use higher education for the purposes of transformation? Through a contextual analysis involving the personal lives of selected scholar-activists, I learned about the power that higher education has to shape identity and influence actions. This study also highlights how African American culture and spirit are components of research, teaching and activism; celebrates some of the contributions that African Americans have made to higher education; identifies five dimensions of teaching and transformation; and posits seven ways that higher education can contribute to the process of transformation.
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The teaching of French in English primary schools 1960-1982 : a philosophical and institutional approach to its emergence and declineBayley, Susan Nancy January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
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A history of manual training in Queensland: 1885-1970Waltisbuhl, Alan Stewart Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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A history of manual training in Queensland: 1885-1970Waltisbuhl, Alan Stewart Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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