Educational anthropology : an introduction / George F. Kneller

By: Kneller, George F [author]Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Wiley, c1965Description: ix, 171 pages ; 22 cmSubject(s): EDUCATIONAL ANTHROPOLOGY | EDUCATIONAL SOCIOLOGYLOC classification: LC 191 .K4 1965
Contents:
Chapter 1. Anthropology, Culture, Education -- Chapter 2 Theories of Culture -- Chapter 3 Man, Culture, Personality -- Chapter 4 Education in Modern and Primitive Societies -- Chapter 5 Education and Cultural Change -- Chapter 6 Education and Discontinuity -- Chapter 7 Education and Cultural Values -- Chapter 8 Curriculum and Teacher in Cultural Perspective.
Summary: The idea of a union of education and anthropology first caught my imagination some twenty-five years ago when my studies of education in National Socialist Germany brought me to grips with questions of race and culture. My mentor then was Bronislaw Malinowski. As it happened, our conferences proved mutually beneficial, for in helping me see the potential fruitfulness of anthropology for education, he himself came to appreciate better what education could contribute to his own subject.
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Item type Current library Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books LRC - Graduate Studies
National University - Manila
Gen. Ed - CEAS General Circulation GC LC 191 .K4 1965 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) c.1 Available NULIB000012701

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Chapter 1. Anthropology, Culture, Education -- Chapter 2 Theories of Culture -- Chapter 3 Man, Culture, Personality -- Chapter 4 Education in Modern and Primitive Societies -- Chapter 5 Education and Cultural Change -- Chapter 6 Education and Discontinuity -- Chapter 7 Education and Cultural Values -- Chapter 8 Curriculum and Teacher in Cultural Perspective.

The idea of a union of education and anthropology first caught my imagination some twenty-five years ago when my studies of education in National Socialist Germany brought me to grips with questions of race and culture. My mentor then was Bronislaw Malinowski. As it happened, our conferences proved mutually beneficial, for in helping me see the potential fruitfulness of anthropology for education, he himself came to appreciate better what education could contribute to his own subject.

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