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Some Nineteenth-Century Views on the University Curriculum

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Extract

Many contemporary disputes about higher education have their origins in the nineteenth century, and it may well be the case that closer attention to these earlier controversies would help to clarify our own thinking on what are basically the same problems. My purpose here is to follow the fortunes of the family of concepts and theories relating to the university curriculum to bring out both the persistence of the problems and the varying strategies which have been adopted in the attempts to resolve them. Questions of this nature can never be finally answered but it is most important that they be constantly discussed. One of the most striking features of current talk about the universities is the absence of any widespread awareness of the historical background to the debate: the extensive nineteenth century literature on higher education has been largely forgotten and traditional issues are canvassed in a manner which suggests that they are a product of the mid-twentieth century.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1965, University of Pittsburgh Press 

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References

Notes

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6. I am indebted to Dr.Clark, Kitson for drawing my attention to the importance of this factor.Google Scholar

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