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Bibliography: Peace Education (Part 114 of 226)

Ahluwalia, Pal, Ed.; Atkinson, Stephen, Ed.; Bishop, Peter, Ed.; Christie, Pam, Ed.; Hattam, Robert, Ed.; Matthews, Julie, Ed. (2012). Reconciliation and Pedagogy. Postcolonial Politics. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group Reconciliation is one of the most significant contemporary challenges in the world today. In this innovative new volume, educational academics and practitioners across a range of cultural and political contexts examine the links between reconciliation and critical pedagogy, putting forward the notion that reconciliation projects should be regarded as public pedagogical interventions, with much to offer to wider theories of learning. While ideas about reconciliation are proliferating, few scholarly accounts have focused on its pedagogies. This book seeks to develop a generative theory that properly maps reconciliation processes and works out the pedagogical dimensions of new modes of narrating and listening, and effecting social change. The contributors build conceptual bridges between the scholarship of reconciliation studies and existing education and pedagogical literature, bringing together the concepts of reconciliation and pedagogy into a dialogical encounter and evaluating how… [Direct]

Sandoval, Elaine (2016). Potential Contributions of Music Education to Peacebuilding: Curricular Concerns. Journal of Peace Education, v13 n3 p238-251. This article examines the potential role of music education in peacebuilding, specifically concentrating on issues of structural, indirect violence often unwittingly perpetuated through Eurocentric music curricula. I point out that such violence occurs not only in curricula that represent only European classical traditions, but moreover in the pedagogical practices or the "ways" in which music is represented. I draw on Walter Mignolo's work on the decolonizing project as well as David Hansen's theories of cosmopolitan education to theorize what a decolonized music education might look like. Ultimately, I turn to Mignolo's encouragement of pluriversal cosmopolitanism to develop my own ideas of what a cosmopolitan music education might look like, how it contributes to decolonizing, and thus how it might foster peacebuilding at the levels of both structure and the individual student…. [Direct]

Liongson, Raymund L. (1989). Education for Development and Peace. Social Education, v53 n4 p246-49 Apr-May. Discusses issues of development and a peaceful world from the perspective of a Filipino educator. Reveals much about what students are taught about developing nations. Explores the role of education in the promotion of development and the attainment of peace. (KO)…

Thaman, Konai Helu (2010). Teacher Capacities for Working towards Peace and Sustainable Development. International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education, v11 n4 p353-364. Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to highlight the importance of values and beliefs rooted in "non-Western" cultures in implementing global education initiatives such as education for sustainable development (ESD) at the regional and local levels. This is because many of these initiatives are often derived from "Western" cultures and values. Also to reaffirm the importance for educators to respect and use local and indigenous ways of life and knowledge systems in order to make teaching and learning more relevant and meaningful for Pacific students; and to advocate for the development of teachers' capacities to better contextualize their teaching and create more culturally inclusive learning environments. Design/methodology/approach: Informed by the findings of her research on cultural values, educational ideas and teachers' role perception in Tonga, plus her work as the UNESCO Chair in Teacher Education and Culture at the University of South Pacific, the… [Direct]

Urbain, Olivier (2016). A Statement of Values for Our Research on Music in Peacebuilding: A Synthesis of Galtung and Ikeda's Peace Theories. Journal of Peace Education, v13 n3 p218-237. Recent years have seen a growing interest in research linking musicking and peacebuilding, and the establishment of the Min-On Music Research Institute (MOMRI) in 2014 in Tokyo follows this trend. Its mission statement is: "To pursue a multidisciplinary investigation of the potential application of music in peacebuilding activities," in short, "music in peacebuilding." In this article, I attempt to define the values that inspire the MOMRI team in our collective research. I present a synthesis of two conceptual frameworks that offer a vision for peacebuilding: Johan Galtung's "Transcend method" for the nonviolent and creative transformation of conflicts and Daisaku Ikeda's "philosophy of peace" that places the protection of human dignity at the center of all endeavors. The result of this new synthesis is the articulation of four major value concepts that can help us explore the links between music and peacebuilding, namely "Inner… [Direct]

De Guzman, Sylvia; Fortunato, Barbara (2011). Adventures in Advocacy: Real World Strategies for Education in Asia. Asia South Pacific Association for Basic and Adult Education In the face of compelling challenges, the Asia South Pacific Association for Basic and Adult Education (ASPBAE), the Global Campaign for Education (GCE), as well as the national education coalitions in Asia, have levelled up efforts in the past five years to advance the right of all citizens to quality education and learning opportunities throughout their lives. Their vehicle was a global programme called the Real World Strategies (RWS) that built capacities of multiple stakeholders in advocating for Education for All (EFA). Despite enormous difficulties, the national education coalitions, with the help of their partners and allies, have successfully spearheaded education advocacy campaigns, in the process garnering substantial gains and valuable lessons. Education is indeed a most important and effective tool that a person can use to fight poverty, discrimination and all forms of exclusion. It arms them not just with knowledge, but also with the ability, strength and confidence to… [PDF]

Vongalis-Macrow, Athena (2006). Rebuilding Regimes or Rebuilding Community? Teachers' Agency for Social Reconstruction in Iraq. Journal of Peace Education, v3 n1 p99-113 Mar. Non-government organisations (NGOs) are playing an increasingly significant role in post-conflict situations as donor funding pours into rebuilding programs. Donor funding supports the development of a range of humanitarian and civic programs such as peace restoration, civic reconstruction and peace-keeping. This article is a case study of the rebuilding of the education system in post-conflict Iraq that contextualises the activities sanctioned by new regime and aid agencies in post-conflict Iraq. While the war and crisis in Iraq continues to fuel great debate, a full political discussion falls outside the scope of this paper. Instead, the intention is to unpack the way that the dominant regime rehabilitates the education system in a seemingly apolitical way. Attempts to rebuild the Iraqi education system appear to be a case of the separation of political rehabilitation and social reconstruction. As the need for the new regime to assert political legitimacy grows, an institution such… [Direct]

Figel, Jan (2009). A Life of Learning for All. Adults Learning, v20 n5 p16-17 Jan. With the financial crisis and its fallout dominating the news headlines, there is a tendency to focus excessively on quick, short-term solutions. Urgent action is, of course, required–hence the recovery plan announced by the European Commission in November–but, in this time of crisis, people also need to make sure that they do not lose sight of the longer term: they must not forget the cement that binds together Europe's communities of peoples and values. The author believes that "education" is that long-term cement. Education unites. With more education, people can achieve a more "human" twenty-first century, and set societies on a stable path to peace and prosperity, by ensuring that learning is within the grasp of everyone, and throughout their lives too. Europe is committed to education. The stated policy aim for this decade–the famous "Lisbon Strategy"–is for the European Union to become a "knowledge-based society". Clearly, knowledge… [Direct]

Green, Andy; Little, Angela W. (2009). Successful Globalisation, Education and Sustainable Development. International Journal of Educational Development, v29 n2 p166-174 Mar. This article examines the role of education in "successful globalisation" and how this links with agendas for sustainable development. In the first part "successful globalisation" is defined as economic growth combined with equality and social peace. Japan and the East Asian tiger economies–particularly South Korea and Taiwan–have been uniquely successful in the last half century in achieving both rapid economic growth over long periods and relative income equality and social cohesion. A host of factors have been responsible for this, including fortuitous geo-political circumstances and good timing. However, education has also played a major role. The article, based on a review of international and national research literatures, analyses how far China, India, Kenya and Sri Lanka have managed to develop their own forms of successful engagement with the global economy and what part education policy has played. In the second part we relate our concept of successful… [Direct]

Munoz, Alexander; Rasheed, Rebeen A. (2016). Higher Education and Peacebuilding–A Bridge between Communities?. Journal of Peace Education, v13 n2 p172-185. As the Syrian civil war enters its fifth year, with over four million refugees and no solution in the near future, the international community must better consider long-term planning in regards to the plight of refugees and services to support them, not just short-term emergency responses. Critically, higher education is all too often ignored when addressing refugee crises, pushed aside in favor of primary education, and effectively disempowering those best suited to eventually rebuild and reconstruct after war's end. This paper examines the often less considered aspect of refugee access to higher education, using Duhok, located in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, as a case study, and hypothesizing that refugees' inclusion in Duhok's local higher education system can serve as an invaluable peacebuilding tool, bridging host and refugee communities, while empowering refugees to promote peacebuilding and development. We chose to focus on higher education because we agree with the idea… [Direct]

Akengin, Hamza; Sargin, Sevil; Sirin, Ahmet; Tuncel, Gul (2009). A Comparative Study on Value Ranking of the Turkish Teaching Department Students in Two Universities. College Student Journal, v43 n4 p1191-1203 Dec. Value is a subjective concept that answers the private reasons of making choices of individuals between the various alternatives in their lives. In this study, determining of two university's female and male student's value understandings is aimed. This study is limited by 294 students who received education on "Turkish Teaching" at University of Marmara in Istanbul and University of East Mediterranean in Northern Cyprus. Descriptive model is preferred as method in this research. Rokeach Values Survey was used to collect the data in the study. The Rokeach Values Survey is a 36 item questionnaire that was designed to measure specific belief systems or value orientations which relate to 18 end states of existence (terminal values) followed by 18 modes of conduct (instrumental values). Terminal values are family security, a world at peace, wisdom, salvation, a sense of accomplishment, inner harmony, social recognition, freedom, a world of beauty, true friendship, pleasure,… [Direct]

Bretherton, Diane; Miletic, Tania (2016). Discussing Conflict in Contemporary China. Journal of Peace Education, v13 n2 p136-152. The research suggests there is a gap in the peace studies and conflict resolution literature, with little representation or understanding of Chinese perspectives. In a project to address this gap, the researchers conducted interviews individually with 30 participants identified as "emerging leaders," who came from diverse universities and parts of the Peoples' Republic of China. This paper reports on the language used by young emerging leaders to talk about conflict, the main concepts that were discussed and what meanings may be communicated in the context of contemporary China. The research method was developed in collaboration with Chinese academics, was elicitive and dialogic, used context-grounded vignettes of conflict scenarios and aimed to build a foundation for deepening dialogue and engagement. The findings are important theoretically for a more inclusive peace and conflict studies literature and have practical implications for the way in which relationships with… [Direct]

Nygren, Thomas (2016). Thinking and Caring about Indigenous Peoples' Human Rights: Swedish Students Writing History beyond Scholarly Debate. Journal of Peace Education, v13 n2 p113-135. According to national and international guidelines, schools should promote historical thinking and foster moral values. Scholars have debated, but not analysed in depth in practice, whether history education can and should hold a normative dimension. This study analyses current human rights education in two Swedish senior high school groups, in classes meant to promote what has been described as conflicting ideals of historical thinking and empathy as caring. Content analysis of students' exam essays shows intertwined relationships between critical thinking and judgements. The results also highlight how students care that people are treated unjustly; can identify different perspectives; link the past to the present and the future; and use corroboration of information to get the best grade. This analysis shows that the students focus on historical empathy as caring rather than sourcing and corroboration. However, all students combine normative judgements with the complicated act of… [Direct]

Tibbitts, Felisa L. (2016). Women's Human Rights Education Trainers in Turkey: Situated Empowerment for Social Change. Journal of Peace Education, v13 n1 p41-59. This article presents evidence of the links between human rights education and social change by analyzing the long-term effects on 88 trainers engaged in a non-formal adult training program sponsored by a women's human rights group in Turkey, Women for Women's Human Rights–New Ways. In this article, I show the transformative impacts of carrying out human rights education on the trainers themselves: in their identity; knowledge, skills, and attitudes; and behaviors in their family and in the workplace. This article extends the treatment of an emerging question within social change theory–that of the long-term influence on activists brought about by their very engagement in these activities. At the same time, because the activists are trainers associated with a human rights education program that infuses critical pedagogy with a feminist perspective, this qualitative case study provides the opportunity to explore "situated empowerment" on trainers in both their personal and… [Direct]

Aslan, Canan; G√ºldenoglu, Bilge Nur Dogan; Karag√ºl, Sedat; Kepenekci, Yasemin Karaman (2016). Analysing the Subject of Peace in Award-Winning Children's and Adolescent Novels in Turkey. Journal of Peace Education, v13 n1 p60-78. The purpose of this study is to reveal how the concept of peace is addressed in the national award-winning novels written for secondary school students within the Republic of Turkey. Data for this study was obtained from child and youth literature award organizations, associations and publishers within Turkey. Each group which was researched has been awarding literature prizes for at least five years. Books which were researched were chosen from the award lists from these organizations for the five-year period of 2009-2013. All of the books were utilized in the analyses and all books in this study were examined as written instruments. The data for this research was evaluated through qualitative research methodology using content analysis. For this research, the main category–peace–was analysed based on five sub-categories including; "having human rights", "having cooperation, sharing and solidarity", "not having prejudice and stereotypes", "having… [Direct]

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Bibliography: Peace Education (Part 115 of 226)

Robertson, Craig (2016). Musicological Ethnography and Peacebuilding. Journal of Peace Education, v13 n3 p252-265. Based on my PhD research with an inter-religious choir in Sarajevo, Bosnia Herzegovina, this paper discusses my interdisciplinary methodologies and suggests how this approach might be applied to future peacebuilding efforts. The use of ethnographic methods in research is an attempt to comprehend a social scene in a way that is as close as possible to the understanding of those within the scene. Normally, the data collected is linguistic in nature, although the visual and gestural, embodied data are increasingly included. There is very little consideration of the aural in this form of research. Even when the audio is considered, it is often described in written language rather than considered it to be data in and of itself, thereby creating a translation issue. In my own research in Sarajevo, I have made the case for sound and music as ethnographic data, since it is a means of experiencing and expressing tacit cultural understanding within and without a particular social group. This… [Direct]

Bray, Mark (2008). The WCCES and Intercultural Dialogue: Historical Perspectives and Continuing Challenges. International Review of Education, v54 n3-4 p299-317 Jul. The World Council of Comparative Education Societies (WCCES) has been strongly concerned with intercultural dialogue since the Council was created in 1970. Indeed advancement of education \for international understanding in the interests of peace, intercultural cooperation, mutual respect among peoples and observance of human rights\ is one of the goals built into the WCCES Statutes. This paper begins with a focus on the origins and goals of the WCCES, noting in particular links with the mission of UNESCO. The paper then considers dimensions of evolution in the work of the WCCES in the domain of intercultural dialogue. It underlines the growth of the WCCES and the continuing challenges for securing balanced representation of voices and perspectives…. [Direct]

Astley, Jeff, Ed.; Francis, Leslie J., Ed.; Robbins, Mandy, Ed.; Selcuk, Mualla, Ed. (2012). Teaching Religion, Teaching Truth: Theoretical and Empirical Perspectives. Religion, Education and Values. Volume 1. Peter Lang Oxford Religious educators today are called upon to enable young people to develop as fully-rounded human beings in a multicultural and multi-faith world. It is no longer sufficient to teach about the history of religions: religion is not relegated to the past. It is no longer sufficient to teach about the observable outward phenomena of religions: religion is not restricted to practices, artefacts, and buildings observable in the outside world. It is also necessary to take seriously what religions believe about themselves, and what religions believe about other religions. Seen from the inside, religions deal in the currency of truth. For the religions themselves, truth matters. Truth-claims can lead to harmony and peace, but they may also engender discord and violence. What ultimately counts is how one set of truth-claims confronts or embraces the truths claimed by other, different voices. Therefore those who teach religion cannot avoid dealing with the theology of religions. In this… [Direct]

MacMillan, Meredith (2010). Let's Hold Hands: A Project Connecting Children around the World. Young Children, v65 n6 p64-67 Nov. The story of the Let's Hold Hands dolls began in Korphe, a village in northern Pakistan. In 1933, after a failed attempt to climb K2, a weak, exhausted American mountaineer named Greg Mortenson staggered into Korphe. The villagers cared for him and helped him regain his strength. To repay their kindness, he vowed to return to help build the village a school. Mortenson's account of these experiences is detailed in the best-selling book "Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Promote Peace…One School at a Time." Its popularity inspired two versions of the story for younger readers. Author/illustrator Susan L. Roth, who illustrated this "Young Children" issue's cluster of articles about education around the globe, coauthored the book and created colorful collages to accompany the text. To represent the children of Korphe and other characters, Susan cut out paper dolls and dressed them using paper and fabric scraps and other found materials. This undertaking… [Direct]

Berlin, Lawrence N.; Nasser, Ilham; Wong, Shelley (2011). Examining Education, Media, and Dialogue under Occupation: The Case of Palestine and Israel. Critical Language and Literacy Studies. Multilingual Matters This book is an in-depth examination of education and media under occupation. The contributors to this volume engage dialogue to explore these domains and their roles and functioning under occupation while keeping an eye toward resolution, using the on-going conflict between Palestine and Israel as the focus. The uniqueness of this collection is not limited to the willingness of its authors to investigate topics that have often been left out of the mainstream, but that they actually enter into dialogue with one another. Education and media are exemplified as domains that can either maintain the status quo of oppression when used by policymakers and governments to do so or can be utilized as mechanisms for change and peacemaking. These contradictory roles are highlighted throughout this book by multiple voices. Part 1: Education, contains the following chapters: (1) Palestinian Education under Occupation: Successes and Challenges (K. Shakhshir); (2) The Healing Power of Stories:… [Direct]

Stuebner, Renata (2009). The Current Status of Religious Coexistence and Education in Bosnia and Herzegovina. USIPeace Briefing. United States Institute of Peace Despite 15 years of sporadic efforts, religion today in Bosnia and Herzegovina is more of a hindrance than a help to promoting peaceful coexistence among the region's various ethnic and religious groups. Polarization and extremism make religions other than one's own even more distant, strange and threatening. Physical interaction that existed before the last war is now almost completely lost because of political division. Teaching culture of religions, history of religions and a comprehensive approach to different religions have not yet started to be implemented throughout the school system. In "The Current Status of Religious Coexistence and Education in Bosnia and Herzegovina," author Renata Stuebner concludes that teaching religion and culture of religions in a way that is in accordance with democratic principles is the only hope for new generations to learn about themselves and others, and improve mutual understanding for a sustainable peace in the region. (Contains 17… [Direct]

Reedy, Frances S. (1975). Music Education Joins the Peace Corps. Music Educators Journal, 61, 5, 44-9,99,101,103-04, Jan 75. Article discussed a music education project sponsored by the Peace Corps in San Salvador. (Editor/RK)…

Corcoran, Peter Blaze; Weakland, Joseph P. (2009). The Earth Charter in Higher Education for Sustainability. Journal of Education for Sustainable Development, v3 n2 p151-158. A central challenge of sustainable development is to provide material sufficiency for the human population while preserving the integrity of Earth's biosphere. Current modes of economic production and consumption accomplish neither of these ethical imperatives. Institutions of higher education must show leadership in the transition to sustainable ways of life. The Earth Charter is a people's declaration of ethical principles for securing a just, peaceful, humane and sustainable future. The document can serve as a valuable resource for tertiary educators. The Earth Charter provides an inclusive definition of sustainability, emphasising the interrelated concepts of ecological integrity; social and economic justice; and democracy, nonviolence and peace. It can help us resolve the tension between educating for sustainability while creating learning spaces for contestation and critical inquiry. The Earth Charter also valorises the principle of intergenerational equity, challenging us to… [Direct]

Johnson, Teresa (2009). Ensuring the Success of Deploying Students: A Campus View. New Directions for Student Services, n126 p55-60 Sum. Disruption of educational pursuits due to orders for military activation is inconvenient and discouraging to students who are soldiers. Deployment was an issue at institutions of higher education during Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm in 1990 and 1991 and during the peace-keeping mission in Bosnia in 1996. Four weeks after the attacks of September 11, 2001, Operation Enduring Freedom began and student soldiers again faced the possibility that they would be deployed for active military duty. Operation Iraqi Freedom followed in March 2003. This chapter details the experiences at Appalachian State University and the attempts there to assist students through the disruptions that resulted from deployments to active duty. The lessons learned by campus personnel at Appalachian State University as they worked to meet the needs of student soldiers who were deployed during earlier conflicts provided a framework for programs and policies when students were deployed to Iraq and… [Direct]

DeVitis, Joseph L., Ed. (2013). The College Curriculum: A Reader. Adolescent Cultures, School, and Society. Volume 62. Peter Lang Publishing Group Mark Van Doren, the noted literary scholar, once remarked, "The college is meaningless without a curriculum, but it is more so when it has one that is meaningless." Many current critics of undergraduate curricula in America assent to the crucial need for programmatic renewal in our colleges and universities. They bemoan the cookie-cutter sameness in far too many of them. The oddity is that U.S. colleges have long touted their "diversity" while largely holding fast to rather traditional pathways. This illuminating volume goes beyond formulaic nuts-and-bolts recipes for constructing curriculum: it seeks to interpret and analyze the contemporary landscape of college curriculum. Yet it also hopes to heighten pedagogic horizons in more imaginative, innovative ways by presenting actual curricula from more distinctive academic offerings. This book will stimulate vitally needed "out-of-the-box" thinking about curricula among faculty, administrators, and… [Direct]

Nash, Margaret A.; Romero, Lisa S. (2012). "Citizenship for the College Girl": Challenges and Opportunities in Higher Education for Women in the United States in the 1930s. Teachers College Record, v114 n2. Background/Context: Little research has been done on higher education for women during the 1930s, even though scholars have pointed to this period as a turning point because the proportion of female students declined during this decade. The decline was only relative, however, as men's enrollments skyrocketed while women's increased more slowly. This article seeks to understand women's continually increasing numbers, rather than the relative decline in enrollment. Purpose/Objective/Research Question: During a time of economic hardship, what justifications were used to encourage women to attend college? What purposes or rationales were part of the national discourse that made it possible for ever-increasing numbers of young women to attend and graduate from college? Research Design: Our research consists of historical analysis of printed archival material from 1929-1940. Primary material was drawn from original print editions of the Readers' Guide to Periodic Literature and the… [Direct]

Clarken, Rodney H. (1989). Education, Justice and Unity: Prerequisites for Peace. The absence of peace is one of the greatest threats to the continued existence of life on this planet. This paper uses the definition of peace given by the General Conference of UNESCO at its 18th session, whereby peace is seen as a process, not an event. Education is vital to eliminating prejudice, which is the foundation of injustice, disunity, and war. The four main causes of prejudice/injustice/disunity/war are: (1) self-centeredness, (2) passion, (3) lack of morals, and (4) blind imitation. These lead to five prejudices/injustices/disunities that are the most potent causes of war: (1) racism, (2) sexism, (3) nationalism, (4) classism, and (5) religionism. Education is the primary and most effective means for eliminating prejudice, injustice, and disunity. Teachers must first recognize and attempt to eliminate their own personal prejudices, then introduce the scientific knowledge that presently exists to support the concept of the oneness and nonviolent nature of humankind. They… [PDF]

(1997). Teaching Tolerance for All: Education Strategies To Promote Global Peace. International Yearbook on Teacher Education 1995. Proceedings from the World Assembly of the International Council on Education for Teaching (42nd, Darussalam, Brunei, July 3-7, 1995). The overall theme of this proceedings, Teaching Tolerance for All: Education Strategies to Promote Global Peace, is discussed by addressing four main topics: (1) rethinking the school curriculum to teach the values of tolerance and peace; (2) empowering teachers and teacher educators to teach the values of tolerance and peace; (3) developing leaders to promote the values of tolerance and peace; and (4) consolidating international initiatives to foster the values of tolerance and peace. The proceedings covers opening and closing ceremony presentations; the Keynote Frank H. Klassen Lecture; five plenary addresses, four covering the four conference topics; and concurrent session papers. (SM)… [PDF]

Miller, Richard W. (2010). Applications of Cognitive Flexibility Theory in Cross-Cultural Training. ProQuest LLC, Ph.D. Dissertation, The University of New Mexico. An examination of American efforts to influence global peace and security through development assistance to foreign police and other security forces reveals that they have a record of mixed results. The pitfalls arising from cultural dissonance in international training programs is a significant factor in why some police reform initiatives fail. Through substantial investment of financial and human resources, U.S. Government funded police education programs deployed across a wide range of diverse and evolving nations have attempted to solidify the democratic process in often tumultuous environments. This research suggests that the traditional Western pedagogical approach that has been employed for decades in Westernized education is not sufficient for generating long-term knowledge gains in many foreign settings. The diverse value systems and expectations that sustain cultures worldwide can no longer be ignored for the sake of homogenization and attainment of an Americanized ideal of… [Direct]

Cullen, Clara (2009). The Museum of Irish Industry, Robert Kane and Education for All in the Dublin of the 1850s and 1860s. History of Education, v38 n1 p99-113 Jan. The Museum of Irish Industry in Dublin, in its short existence (1845-1867) facilitated the access of ordinary people to popular scientific education, became a "cause celebre" and was defended by popular protest when the government recommended its abolition in 1862. Its Director, Sir Robert Kane (1809-1890) was not only an advocate of popular industrial education but also had a lifelong commitment to "united" (or non-denominational) education believing that only this type of education would achieve the ultimate result of tolerance, religious peace and national prosperity in Ireland. From 1854 a Government School of Science was part of the museum's educational activities and from 1854 to 1867 the professors attached to the museum offered courses of lectures, both "popular" and formal courses, on physics, chemistry, botany, zoology and geology, and in applied science. With its exhibition collections, its laboratories and the range of educational courses… [Direct]

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