Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
"A political scientist at Washington University in St. Louis and a native of England, where public funding of religious schools is common, MacMullen dissects the educational and political arguments for and against implementation of such a system in the United States... [MacMullen] proposes a solution he believes can satisfy both the wishes of families and the requirements of citizenship."--Education Week "MacMullen's book is an interesting read, with some significant policy implications. While the book does not necessarily win the case for adopting the author's approach, it succeeds admirably in advancing a more meaningful consideration of the goals of public education policy and whether religious instruction is incompatible with those goals."--Valerie Stoker, Journal of the American Academy of Religion

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix Introduction 1 PART I: Civic Education and Religious Schools 13 CHAPTER 1: The Civic Case against Religious Schools 15 The Civic Goals of Education 16 Civic Goals as the Only Goals of Public Education Policy 21 Do Religious Schools Make Good Citizens? 29 The Civic Value of Religious Schools 35 Responses and Conclusions 37 CHAPTER 2: Civic Education and the Autonomy Problem in Political Liberalism 41 Conflicting Educational Goals: Three Approaches to Resolution 41 Liberalism without Political Primacy 49 Is Autonomy a "Cost" of Civic Education? 54 Liberal Democratic Principles Presuppose the Value of Autonomy 60 Conclusion 62 PART II: Autonomy as a Public Value 65 CHAPTER 3: Autonomy, Identity, and Choice 67 Autonomy as Ongoing Rational Reflection 69 Caricatures of Rational Autonomy 73 The Nature of Autonomous Reflection 81 Conclusion 86 CHAPTER 4: The Value of Autonomy in a Pluralist World 88 John Stuart Mill, Joseph Raz, and the Intrinsic Value of Autonomy 88 Contemporary Liberal Responses to Mill: The Neutrality Condition 92 Autonomy and Moral Responsibility 93 Arguments for the Instrumental Value of Autonomy 96 The Instrumental Value of Autonomy and the Neutrality Principle 103 Conclusion 111 CHAPTER 5: Autonomy as a Goal of Education Policy: Objections and Responses 113 Parental Rights and Interests 113 "Parents Are People Too" 119 The Death Knell for Traditional Ways of Life? 124 Other Objections and Responses 129 Conclusion 136 PART III: Religious Schools and Education for Autonomy 137 CHAPTER 6: Secular Public Schools: Critiques and Responses 139 What's Wrong with Secular Education? 141 Public Control of Schools 147 Authority and Autonomy 151 Conclusion 155 CHAPTER 7: Religious Secondary Schools as Threat to Autonomy? 157 The Development of Autonomy Cannot Be Taken for Granted 157 The Autonomy Case against Religious Schools 162 Hallmarks of Permissible Religious Secondary Schools 169 Regulation and Entanglement 175 Conclusions and Policy Implications 179 CHAPTER 8: The Role of Religious Primary Schools 182 Age-Sensitive Education 182 Primary Culture and Identity 184 Reasoning within an Ethical Framework 188 Cognitive Development and Autonomous Reflection 190 Maintaining the Option of Autonomous Religious Belief 193 Hallmarks of Permissible Religious Primary Schools 197 Conclusion 202 Conclusion 205 Bibliography 221 Index 227

Faith in Schools Autonomy Citizenship and

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    A Paperback / softback by Ian MacMullen

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      View other formats and editions of Faith in Schools Autonomy Citizenship and by Ian MacMullen

      Publisher: Princeton University Press
      Publication Date: 31/05/2016
      ISBN13: 9780691171388, 978-0691171388
      ISBN10: 0691171386

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      "A political scientist at Washington University in St. Louis and a native of England, where public funding of religious schools is common, MacMullen dissects the educational and political arguments for and against implementation of such a system in the United States... [MacMullen] proposes a solution he believes can satisfy both the wishes of families and the requirements of citizenship."--Education Week "MacMullen's book is an interesting read, with some significant policy implications. While the book does not necessarily win the case for adopting the author's approach, it succeeds admirably in advancing a more meaningful consideration of the goals of public education policy and whether religious instruction is incompatible with those goals."--Valerie Stoker, Journal of the American Academy of Religion

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments ix Introduction 1 PART I: Civic Education and Religious Schools 13 CHAPTER 1: The Civic Case against Religious Schools 15 The Civic Goals of Education 16 Civic Goals as the Only Goals of Public Education Policy 21 Do Religious Schools Make Good Citizens? 29 The Civic Value of Religious Schools 35 Responses and Conclusions 37 CHAPTER 2: Civic Education and the Autonomy Problem in Political Liberalism 41 Conflicting Educational Goals: Three Approaches to Resolution 41 Liberalism without Political Primacy 49 Is Autonomy a "Cost" of Civic Education? 54 Liberal Democratic Principles Presuppose the Value of Autonomy 60 Conclusion 62 PART II: Autonomy as a Public Value 65 CHAPTER 3: Autonomy, Identity, and Choice 67 Autonomy as Ongoing Rational Reflection 69 Caricatures of Rational Autonomy 73 The Nature of Autonomous Reflection 81 Conclusion 86 CHAPTER 4: The Value of Autonomy in a Pluralist World 88 John Stuart Mill, Joseph Raz, and the Intrinsic Value of Autonomy 88 Contemporary Liberal Responses to Mill: The Neutrality Condition 92 Autonomy and Moral Responsibility 93 Arguments for the Instrumental Value of Autonomy 96 The Instrumental Value of Autonomy and the Neutrality Principle 103 Conclusion 111 CHAPTER 5: Autonomy as a Goal of Education Policy: Objections and Responses 113 Parental Rights and Interests 113 "Parents Are People Too" 119 The Death Knell for Traditional Ways of Life? 124 Other Objections and Responses 129 Conclusion 136 PART III: Religious Schools and Education for Autonomy 137 CHAPTER 6: Secular Public Schools: Critiques and Responses 139 What's Wrong with Secular Education? 141 Public Control of Schools 147 Authority and Autonomy 151 Conclusion 155 CHAPTER 7: Religious Secondary Schools as Threat to Autonomy? 157 The Development of Autonomy Cannot Be Taken for Granted 157 The Autonomy Case against Religious Schools 162 Hallmarks of Permissible Religious Secondary Schools 169 Regulation and Entanglement 175 Conclusions and Policy Implications 179 CHAPTER 8: The Role of Religious Primary Schools 182 Age-Sensitive Education 182 Primary Culture and Identity 184 Reasoning within an Ethical Framework 188 Cognitive Development and Autonomous Reflection 190 Maintaining the Option of Autonomous Religious Belief 193 Hallmarks of Permissible Religious Primary Schools 197 Conclusion 202 Conclusion 205 Bibliography 221 Index 227

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