There has been across the world a resurgence of interest in 'values
education' (values education is known internationally by a number of
names) at school education, research and policy levels. In Australia
the Australian Values Education projects led to the government
initiating a number of large scale curriculum developments and
resources projects as part of its expressed policy to introduce values
education programmes in all schools. UNESCO has its own values
education programme, entitled Living Values that functions in 84
countries. In the United Kingdom, the introduction of the National
Curriculum in England has led to a major effort to develop what is
variously described as a 'moral' or 'ethical' perspective. In England,
the education of the moral child has been both an underpinning
aspiration of the National Curriculum and a focus of particular
curricular subjects, most notably citizenship education. The purpose
of this book is to make a contribution to this emerging field, and to
do so in two ways. First, it presents a substantial body of empirical
evidence, the results of the largest UK study to date of what parents,
pupils and teachers are thinking and doing in the area of moral
education and, more specifically, 'character education'. Second, it
seeks to elucidate more clearly what those involved in the debate mean
by the terms used. The terms used in relation to moral and character
education are not fixed, and are sometimes used apparently in
different senses, by different contributors, and for different
purposes. As a result of these two features, the present work offers
some suggestions about possible ways forward in developing concrete
proposals for moral education, in particular in identifying an
appropriate language that can be used by practitioners in situations
'on the ground'.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781845406271
Publisert
2019
Utgave
2. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Imprint Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter