ABSTRACT

Charles Bailey advances a modern characterization and justification of liberal education and defends such a view of liberal education against contemporary challenges. The book will be of special value to those guiding educational policy, designing curricula and reflecting on their own teaching practice. An introductory part of the book describes the need for justification and the special nature of liberal education as compared with other characterizations of education in utilitarian terms. The author offers a positive account of the content of liberal education, after a consideration and critique of the work of Paul Hirst, Philip Phenix and John White and follows this with an account of teacher strategy, attitude and methodology appropriate to liberal education. The final part of the book describes contemporary trends and challenges to the idea of liberal education and shows how they fail to provide a coherent alternative to liberal education as a basis for universal compulsory education.

chapter 1|6 pages

Introduction—Theory and education

part I|28 pages

Justification of Liberal Education

chapter 2|5 pages

Education and its justification

chapter 3|7 pages

Types of education

chapter 4|15 pages

The justification of liberal education

part II|88 pages

Content and Method

chapter 5|14 pages

Some preliminary ideas

chapter 6|29 pages

Three accounts considered

chapter 7|24 pages

The content of a liberal education

chapter 8|20 pages

The methods of a liberal education

part III|60 pages

Challenges to Liberal Education

chapter 9|20 pages

The challenge of economic utility

chapter 11|9 pages

Teachers, assessment and accountability