Reconstructing the Campus

Reconstructing the Campus
Title Reconstructing the Campus PDF eBook
Author Michael David Cohen
Publisher University of Virginia Press
Total Pages 463
Release 2012
Genre Education
ISBN 081393317X

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The Civil War transformed American life. Not only did thousands of men die on battlefields and millions of slaves become free; cultural institutions reshaped themselves in the context of the war and its aftermath. The first book to examine the Civil War's immediate and long-term impact on higher education, Reconstructing the Campus begins by tracing college communities' responses to the secession crisis and the outbreak of war. Students made supplies for the armies or left campus to fight. Professors joined the war effort or struggled to keep colleges open. The Union and Confederacy even took over some campuses for military use. Then moving beyond 1865, the book explores the war's long-term effects on colleges. Michael David Cohen argues that the Civil War and the political and social conditions the war created prompted major reforms, including the establishment of a new federal role in education. Reminded by the war of the importance of a well-trained military, Congress began providing resources to colleges that offered military courses and other practical curricula. Congress also, as part of a general expansion of the federal bureaucracy that accompanied the war, created the Department of Education to collect and publish data on education. For the first time, the U.S. government both influenced curricula and monitored institutions. The war posed special challenges to Southern colleges. Often bereft of students and sometimes physically damaged, they needed to rebuild. Some took the opportunity to redesign themselves into the first Southern universities. They also admitted new types of students, including the poor, women, and, sometimes, formerly enslaved blacks. Thus, while the Civil War did great harm, it also stimulated growth, helping, especially in the South, to create our modern system of higher education.

Reconstructing the University

Reconstructing the University
Title Reconstructing the University PDF eBook
Author David John Frank
Publisher Stanford University Press
Total Pages 276
Release 2006
Genre Education
ISBN 9780804753760

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Detailed study of transformations in the teaching and research priorities of universities worldwide, examining how these changes correspond to globally institutionalized understandings of reality.

Reconstructing American Education

Reconstructing American Education
Title Reconstructing American Education PDF eBook
Author Michael B. Katz
Publisher Harvard University Press
Total Pages 238
Release 1987
Genre Education
ISBN 9780674750937

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"...A powerful interpretation of the uses of history in educational reform and of the relations among democracy, education, and the capitalist state. How did the American education take shape? What can a historian say about recent criticisms and proposals for improvement? What drives the politics of educational history? Katz shows how the reconstruction of America's educational past can be used as a framework for thinking about current reform."--Back cover.

Reconstructing Public Reason

Reconstructing Public Reason
Title Reconstructing Public Reason PDF eBook
Author Eric MacGilvray
Publisher Harvard University Press
Total Pages 278
Release 2004-12-30
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 9780674015425

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MacGilvray argues that we should shift our attention away from the problem of identifying uncontroversial public ends in the present and toward the problem of evaluating potentially controversial public ends through collective inquiry over time.

Reconstructing the Household

Reconstructing the Household
Title Reconstructing the Household PDF eBook
Author Peter W. Bardaglio
Publisher Univ of North Carolina Press
Total Pages 378
Release 2000-11-09
Genre History
ISBN 0807860212

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In Reconstructing the Household, Peter Bardaglio examines the connections between race, gender, sexuality, and the law in the nineteenth-century South. He focuses on miscegenation, rape, incest, child custody, and adoption laws to show how southerners struggled with the conflicts and stresses that surfaced within their own households and in the larger society during the Civil War era. Based on literary as well as legal sources, Bardaglio's analysis reveals how legal contests involving African Americans, women, children, and the poor led to a rethinking of families, sexuality, and the social order. Before the Civil War, a distinctive variation of republicanism, based primarily on hierarchy and dependence, characterized southern domestic relations. This organic ideal of the household and its power structure differed significantly from domestic law in the North, which tended to emphasize individual rights and contractual obligations. The defeat of the Confederacy, emancipation, and economic change transformed family law and the governance of sexuality in the South and allowed an unprecedented intrusion of the state into private life. But Bardaglio argues that despite these profound social changes, a preoccupation with traditional notions of gender and race continued to shape southern legal attitudes.

Reconstructing the University

Reconstructing the University
Title Reconstructing the University PDF eBook
Author David John Frank
Publisher
Total Pages 276
Release 2006
Genre Education
ISBN

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Detailed study of transformations in the teaching and research priorities of universities worldwide, examining how these changes correspond to globally institutionalized understandings of reality.

Reconstructing the Cognitive World

Reconstructing the Cognitive World
Title Reconstructing the Cognitive World PDF eBook
Author Michael Wheeler
Publisher MIT Press
Total Pages 372
Release 2005
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 9780262232401

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An argument for a non-Cartesian philosophical foundation for cognitive science that combines elements of Heideggerian phenomenology, a dynamical systems approach to cognition, and insights from artificial intelligence-related robotics.