Educating for deliberative democracy
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Educating for deliberative democracy
(New directions for higher education, no. 152)
Jossey-Bass, 2010
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In Educating for Deliberative Democracy, contributing authors and editor Nancy L. Thomas explore the critical role that higher education can play ? alongside expanding coalitions of civic organizations, public officials, and everyday citizens ? in strengthening democracy. At the heart of these efforts is a conviction that persistent public problems call for dialogue and deliberation that result in collective action by diverse groups of informed, skilled, motivated, and principled citizens--what many call deliberative democracy. What makes deliberative democracy so appealing is that it holds equal promise for democratic renewal and students' learning. Its principles--inclusion, reason, neutrality, respect, and collegiality--can also guide the academy toward more democratic dialogue and political deliberation about the problems facing our communities, our nation, and the world, more examination of the values tensions that public problems engender, and more learning about how to improve people's lives, build communities, and strengthen democracy. Educating for Deliberative Democracy covers a wide variety of democratic experiments in the classroom, on campuses, and in communities.
Read and download Nancy Thomas's Editor's Notes, the table of contents and a sample chapter. Learn more about democratic education and engagement online at The Democracy Imperative. A 35% discount is available for orders of 10 or more copies. To place an order, call Sandy Quade at 860-339-5023 or, send her an email at squadepe@wiley.com. This is the 152nd volume of the Jossey-Bass quarterly report series New Directions for Higher Education. Addressed to presidents, vice presidents, deans, and other higher-education decision-makers on all kinds of campuses, New Directions for Higher Education provides timely information and authoritative advice about major issues and administrative problems confronting every institution.
Table of Contents
EDITOR'S NOTES ( Nancy L. Thomas). 1. Teaching and Learning Civility (Peter Levine) Incivility can obstruct constructive public discourse and problem solving. Restoring civility is a task for higher education, but it may require tradeoffs with other democratic values. 2. Putting Politics Where It Belongs: In the Classroom (Diana Hess, Lauren Gatti) Teaching university students through discussing controversial issues has the potential to build civic capacity and political tolerance. 3. The Difficult Dialogues Initiative at Clark University: A Case Study (Sarah Buie, Walter Wright) This initiative works to foster a culture of dialogue on the campus raising awareness of discourse itself and encouraging skills and attitudes of responsible citizenship across our community. 4. Intergroup Dialogue and Democratic Practice in Higher Education (Gretchen E. Lopez, Ximena Zuniga) Participants in intergroup dialogue examine the significance of social identities and social inequalities and practice intergroup communication and collaboration skills. 5. "To Establish an Effective Community Spirit": A Land Grant Extension and Deliberative Dialogue (Monica Herrera, Joyce Hoelting) A Land Grant Extension at the University of Minnesota was part of "Horizons," a program using dialogue-to-action tools to address rural poverty. 6. Facilitating Democracy: Centers and Institutes of Public Deliberation and Collaborative Problem Solving (Martin Carcasson) Campus-based centers and institutes serve as hubs for local dialogue, deliberation, and collaborative problem solving. 7. Research for Democracy and Democracy for Research (Kiran Cunningham, Matt Leighninger) Action research is a promising vehicle for filling gaps in our knowledge of deliberation and democratic governance. 8. Power, Privilege, and the Public: The Dynamics of Community University Collaboration (Byron P. White) The dynamics of institutional power need to be addressed through structural practices that support prospects for authentic, democratic partnerships. 9. Democratizing Academic Professionalism Inside and Out (Albert W. Dzur) Academic professionals need to embrace and facilitate democratic modes of public problem solving while retaining traditional scholarly commitments. 10. The Politics of Academic Freedom (Nancy L. Thomas) Institutional leaders, faculty, students, and the public need a better understanding of why academic freedom is essential to student learning and to a democracy characterized by vigorous and balanced political discourse. 11. Practicing What We Preach: Democratic Practices in Institutional Governance (Bruce L. Mallory) Strategies for moving closer to effective forms of shared governance, using deliberative approaches that sustain faculty authority over the academic mission. 12. Higher Education's Democratic Imperative (Nancy L. Thomas, Matthew Hartley) Where do we go from here? Next steps for higher education. ADDITIONAL RESOURCES INDEX.
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