ABSTRACT

First published in 1993, Education for the Twenty-First Century grew out of a common and deep-seated concern about the way young people think of their own future, and about some of the relatively simplistic education reforms advocated, often by people with scant comprehension of modern educational practices. Schools as institutions, schooling patterns, the curriculum and teachers themselves have come under heavy criticism, but it has to be recognized that the problems in education have no lasting or satisfactory solutions while schools continue to operate out of the framework which has determined their raison d’être for the past two hundred years. The authors argue that schools do not need fine tuning, or more of the same; rather some of the fundamental assumptions about schooling have to be revised. They argue that learning about the future must become very much a part of the present, and they set out in the book some of the thinking and several techniques which permit us to confront the future and make it a more friendly place. The book will be of interest to students, teachers and policymakers.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

How this book came to be

chapter Chapter 1|16 pages

The dimensions of change

chapter Chapter 2|20 pages

Industrialism and its consequences

chapter Chapter 3|15 pages

Global consciousness

The one-world view

chapter Chapter 4|17 pages

Beyond scientific materialism

Accepting other categories of knowing

chapter Chapter 5|29 pages

What will become of schools?

chapter Chapter 6|25 pages

The shift from past to future

chapter Chapter 7|35 pages

What can I do? Some bridging strategies

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion

The promise of the twenty-first century