ABSTRACT

Education in World History shows how broad currents in transnational history have interacted with trends in educational organization and teaching practices over time.

From antiquity and early classical societies to present day, this book highlights the ways in which changes in religious and intellectual life and economic patterns in key world regions have generated developments in education. Since the postclassical period, cross-cultural connections have also influenced educational change. In more recent times, transnational dialogues and mobility have played a vital role in shaping educational patterns. Ranging through South and East Asia, Africa, Europe and the Americas, the book also considers how the impact of modern forces, such as industrialization and nationalism, have transformed education in fundamental ways. Throughout the volume, Mark S. Johnson and Peter N. Stearns emphasize the tensions between elite and state educational interests and more diverse popular demands for access and, often, for more innovative pedagogy.

Suitable for introductory world history and history of education courses, this lively overview reconsiders the history of education from the perspective of world and comparative history.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Linking World History and the History of Education

part I|34 pages

Education in Early Human Societies

chapter 1|15 pages

Education in Antiquity and Early Classical Societies

The Role of Religion

chapter 2|6 pages

Rome and the Early Christian World

Building the Classical Legacy

chapter 3|11 pages

Education in South and East Asia

Two Other Classical Traditions

part II|38 pages

The Postclassical Centuries

chapter 5|9 pages

Christian Education in Western Europe

chapter 6|15 pages

Education in Postclassical Societies

Regional Patterns in Asia, Africa and the Americas

part III|46 pages

The Early Modern Period

chapter 8|16 pages

Changes in Eighteenth-Century European Education

New Roles for Science and the State

chapter 9|12 pages

Education in Early Modern Eurasia and Africa

Tradition and Expansion

part IV|54 pages

The Long Nineteenth Century and an Emerging Modern Framework for Education

chapter 10|10 pages

The Revolutionary Tide

chapter 11|19 pages

Educational Changes in Western Societies

part V|64 pages

The Contemporary Period

chapter 15|10 pages

Recent Patterns and Tensions

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion