ABSTRACT

This book brings together fifteen comprehensive studies of significant North American scholars of comparative education from the 20th century. Providing relevant biographical detail, chapters analyse each scholar’s approach to comparative education and their on-going influences on the field.

Comparative studies in education have long benefited from the work of significant individuals who have collectively advanced the field, making it a vibrant and intellectually fruitful area of educational research. Offering a unique, systematic exploration of the work of the founders of comparative educational research, North American Scholars of Comparative Education emphasizes the importance of understanding the accomplishments of key historical figures in the field, and considers the legacies such individuals have created. Chapters move beyond descriptions of comparativists’ work, to illustrate the pivotal role played by each scholar in driving a progression through humanistic and scientific approaches, to new epistemological traditions within the field of comparative education. This in turn reveals critical historical-epistemological transitions which have had lasting impacts on the field.

Including contributions written by leading scholars in the field, this volume will be of great interest to researchers, academics and scholars in comparative and international education.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Unleashing the power of biographies to shape a narrative on perspectives in transition

part I|2 pages

The policy-oriented humanistic tradition in comparative education

chapter 1|10 pages

John Dewey

chapter 2|14 pages

Paul Monroe

chapter 3|13 pages

Isaac Leon Kandel

chapter 4|9 pages

William W. Brickman

chapter 5|12 pages

George Z. F. Bereday

part II|2 pages

The social scientific tradition in comparative education

chapter 6|10 pages

C. Arnold Anderson

chapter 7|17 pages

Philip J. Foster

chapter 8|9 pages

Mary Jean Bowman

chapter 9|13 pages

Donald K. Adams

chapter 10|13 pages

Joseph P. Farrell

part III|2 pages

New perspectives and methods in comparative education

chapter 11|11 pages

Gail Paradise Kelly

chapter 12|13 pages

Rolland G. Paulston

chapter 13|11 pages

Heidi Ann Ross

chapter 14|11 pages

Gerald H. Read

chapter 15|9 pages

Claude Andrew Eggertsen

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion

Harnessing disparate perspectives on ways of knowing for an uncertain future