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Teaching The Commons
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Teaching The Commons

Place, Pride, And The Renewal Of Community

Teaching The Commons

Place, Pride, And The Renewal Of Community

ByPaul Theobald
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 1997
eBook Published 7 February 2018
Pub. location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4324/9780429496950
Pages 192 pages
eBook ISBN 9780429965500
SubjectsEducation
Keywordstrans-Mississippi West, Rural Schools, Curricular Lens, Cyclic Conceptions, Winstanley's Vision
Get Citation

Get Citation

Theobald, P. (1997). Teaching The Commons. New York: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429496950
ABOUT THIS BOOK

Reaching all the way back to the classical and medieval past, Teaching the Commons chronicles ideas and resulting policies that have shaped contemporary rural life and living in much of the industrial West. The book examines philosophical assumptions and charts their evolution into conventional wisdom about how human beings should meet their needs, govern themselves, and educate their children. Further, this book examines how policies emanating from these assumptions have slowly eroded the vitality of rural communities, finding that if there is sufficient interest in saving what is left of rural America, an educational agenda at the local level needs to be embraced by America's rural schools.Using concrete ideas generated in rural schools across the country, Teaching the Commons demonstrates that it is possible to simultaneously revitalize rural schools and communities. Through concerted curricular and pedagogical attention to place?the immediate locality?schools can contribute to rebuilding community in rural America on an educational foundation.Arguing that vital, self-governing communities rather than self-interested individuals represent the greatest hope for American democracy, Teaching the Commons lays out an institutional foundation that would turn the cultivation of civic virtue into an educational goal every bit as important and attainable as education for success in the economic market.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |4 pages
Introduction
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part One|50 pages
The Creation of Community from a Historical Perspective
chapter 1|25 pages
Intradependence
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 2|12 pages
Cyclic Time
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 3|11 pages
The Avoidance of Risk
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part Two|61 pages
Public Policy and the Subordination of Community
chapter 4|17 pages
The Deserted Village: A European Prelude
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 5|18 pages
The American Countryside and the Dynamics of Acquisition
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 6|24 pages
The American Countryside and the Dynamics of Dispossession
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part Three|43 pages
Education and the Renewal of Community
chapter 7|13 pages
Starting the Conversation
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 8|15 pages
Place-Conscious Elementary Classrooms
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 9|13 pages
Place-Conscious Secondary Classrooms
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter |2 pages
Conclusion
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract

Reaching all the way back to the classical and medieval past, Teaching the Commons chronicles ideas and resulting policies that have shaped contemporary rural life and living in much of the industrial West. The book examines philosophical assumptions and charts their evolution into conventional wisdom about how human beings should meet their needs, govern themselves, and educate their children. Further, this book examines how policies emanating from these assumptions have slowly eroded the vitality of rural communities, finding that if there is sufficient interest in saving what is left of rural America, an educational agenda at the local level needs to be embraced by America's rural schools.Using concrete ideas generated in rural schools across the country, Teaching the Commons demonstrates that it is possible to simultaneously revitalize rural schools and communities. Through concerted curricular and pedagogical attention to place?the immediate locality?schools can contribute to rebuilding community in rural America on an educational foundation.Arguing that vital, self-governing communities rather than self-interested individuals represent the greatest hope for American democracy, Teaching the Commons lays out an institutional foundation that would turn the cultivation of civic virtue into an educational goal every bit as important and attainable as education for success in the economic market.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |4 pages
Introduction
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part One|50 pages
The Creation of Community from a Historical Perspective
chapter 1|25 pages
Intradependence
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 2|12 pages
Cyclic Time
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 3|11 pages
The Avoidance of Risk
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part Two|61 pages
Public Policy and the Subordination of Community
chapter 4|17 pages
The Deserted Village: A European Prelude
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 5|18 pages
The American Countryside and the Dynamics of Acquisition
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 6|24 pages
The American Countryside and the Dynamics of Dispossession
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part Three|43 pages
Education and the Renewal of Community
chapter 7|13 pages
Starting the Conversation
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 8|15 pages
Place-Conscious Elementary Classrooms
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 9|13 pages
Place-Conscious Secondary Classrooms
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter |2 pages
Conclusion
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
CONTENTS
ABOUT THIS BOOK

Reaching all the way back to the classical and medieval past, Teaching the Commons chronicles ideas and resulting policies that have shaped contemporary rural life and living in much of the industrial West. The book examines philosophical assumptions and charts their evolution into conventional wisdom about how human beings should meet their needs, govern themselves, and educate their children. Further, this book examines how policies emanating from these assumptions have slowly eroded the vitality of rural communities, finding that if there is sufficient interest in saving what is left of rural America, an educational agenda at the local level needs to be embraced by America's rural schools.Using concrete ideas generated in rural schools across the country, Teaching the Commons demonstrates that it is possible to simultaneously revitalize rural schools and communities. Through concerted curricular and pedagogical attention to place?the immediate locality?schools can contribute to rebuilding community in rural America on an educational foundation.Arguing that vital, self-governing communities rather than self-interested individuals represent the greatest hope for American democracy, Teaching the Commons lays out an institutional foundation that would turn the cultivation of civic virtue into an educational goal every bit as important and attainable as education for success in the economic market.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |4 pages
Introduction
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part One|50 pages
The Creation of Community from a Historical Perspective
chapter 1|25 pages
Intradependence
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 2|12 pages
Cyclic Time
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 3|11 pages
The Avoidance of Risk
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part Two|61 pages
Public Policy and the Subordination of Community
chapter 4|17 pages
The Deserted Village: A European Prelude
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 5|18 pages
The American Countryside and the Dynamics of Acquisition
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 6|24 pages
The American Countryside and the Dynamics of Dispossession
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part Three|43 pages
Education and the Renewal of Community
chapter 7|13 pages
Starting the Conversation
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 8|15 pages
Place-Conscious Elementary Classrooms
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 9|13 pages
Place-Conscious Secondary Classrooms
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter |2 pages
Conclusion
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract

Reaching all the way back to the classical and medieval past, Teaching the Commons chronicles ideas and resulting policies that have shaped contemporary rural life and living in much of the industrial West. The book examines philosophical assumptions and charts their evolution into conventional wisdom about how human beings should meet their needs, govern themselves, and educate their children. Further, this book examines how policies emanating from these assumptions have slowly eroded the vitality of rural communities, finding that if there is sufficient interest in saving what is left of rural America, an educational agenda at the local level needs to be embraced by America's rural schools.Using concrete ideas generated in rural schools across the country, Teaching the Commons demonstrates that it is possible to simultaneously revitalize rural schools and communities. Through concerted curricular and pedagogical attention to place?the immediate locality?schools can contribute to rebuilding community in rural America on an educational foundation.Arguing that vital, self-governing communities rather than self-interested individuals represent the greatest hope for American democracy, Teaching the Commons lays out an institutional foundation that would turn the cultivation of civic virtue into an educational goal every bit as important and attainable as education for success in the economic market.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |4 pages
Introduction
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part One|50 pages
The Creation of Community from a Historical Perspective
chapter 1|25 pages
Intradependence
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 2|12 pages
Cyclic Time
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 3|11 pages
The Avoidance of Risk
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part Two|61 pages
Public Policy and the Subordination of Community
chapter 4|17 pages
The Deserted Village: A European Prelude
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 5|18 pages
The American Countryside and the Dynamics of Acquisition
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 6|24 pages
The American Countryside and the Dynamics of Dispossession
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part Three|43 pages
Education and the Renewal of Community
chapter 7|13 pages
Starting the Conversation
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 8|15 pages
Place-Conscious Elementary Classrooms
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 9|13 pages
Place-Conscious Secondary Classrooms
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter |2 pages
Conclusion
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

Reaching all the way back to the classical and medieval past, Teaching the Commons chronicles ideas and resulting policies that have shaped contemporary rural life and living in much of the industrial West. The book examines philosophical assumptions and charts their evolution into conventional wisdom about how human beings should meet their needs, govern themselves, and educate their children. Further, this book examines how policies emanating from these assumptions have slowly eroded the vitality of rural communities, finding that if there is sufficient interest in saving what is left of rural America, an educational agenda at the local level needs to be embraced by America's rural schools.Using concrete ideas generated in rural schools across the country, Teaching the Commons demonstrates that it is possible to simultaneously revitalize rural schools and communities. Through concerted curricular and pedagogical attention to place?the immediate locality?schools can contribute to rebuilding community in rural America on an educational foundation.Arguing that vital, self-governing communities rather than self-interested individuals represent the greatest hope for American democracy, Teaching the Commons lays out an institutional foundation that would turn the cultivation of civic virtue into an educational goal every bit as important and attainable as education for success in the economic market.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |4 pages
Introduction
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part One|50 pages
The Creation of Community from a Historical Perspective
chapter 1|25 pages
Intradependence
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 2|12 pages
Cyclic Time
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 3|11 pages
The Avoidance of Risk
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part Two|61 pages
Public Policy and the Subordination of Community
chapter 4|17 pages
The Deserted Village: A European Prelude
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 5|18 pages
The American Countryside and the Dynamics of Acquisition
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 6|24 pages
The American Countryside and the Dynamics of Dispossession
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part Three|43 pages
Education and the Renewal of Community
chapter 7|13 pages
Starting the Conversation
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 8|15 pages
Place-Conscious Elementary Classrooms
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 9|13 pages
Place-Conscious Secondary Classrooms
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter |2 pages
Conclusion
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract

Reaching all the way back to the classical and medieval past, Teaching the Commons chronicles ideas and resulting policies that have shaped contemporary rural life and living in much of the industrial West. The book examines philosophical assumptions and charts their evolution into conventional wisdom about how human beings should meet their needs, govern themselves, and educate their children. Further, this book examines how policies emanating from these assumptions have slowly eroded the vitality of rural communities, finding that if there is sufficient interest in saving what is left of rural America, an educational agenda at the local level needs to be embraced by America's rural schools.Using concrete ideas generated in rural schools across the country, Teaching the Commons demonstrates that it is possible to simultaneously revitalize rural schools and communities. Through concerted curricular and pedagogical attention to place?the immediate locality?schools can contribute to rebuilding community in rural America on an educational foundation.Arguing that vital, self-governing communities rather than self-interested individuals represent the greatest hope for American democracy, Teaching the Commons lays out an institutional foundation that would turn the cultivation of civic virtue into an educational goal every bit as important and attainable as education for success in the economic market.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |4 pages
Introduction
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part One|50 pages
The Creation of Community from a Historical Perspective
chapter 1|25 pages
Intradependence
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 2|12 pages
Cyclic Time
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 3|11 pages
The Avoidance of Risk
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part Two|61 pages
Public Policy and the Subordination of Community
chapter 4|17 pages
The Deserted Village: A European Prelude
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 5|18 pages
The American Countryside and the Dynamics of Acquisition
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 6|24 pages
The American Countryside and the Dynamics of Dispossession
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
part Three|43 pages
Education and the Renewal of Community
chapter 7|13 pages
Starting the Conversation
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 8|15 pages
Place-Conscious Elementary Classrooms
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter 9|13 pages
Place-Conscious Secondary Classrooms
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
chapter |2 pages
Conclusion
ByPaul Theobald
View abstract
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