1st Edition

Comparative Education Some Considerations of Method

By Brian Holmes Copyright 1981
    206 Pages
    by Routledge

    206 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in 1981. Presented here is a coherent theory of Comparative Education research, based on the traditions and innovations established by such pioneers as Joseph Lauwerys and Nicholas Hans. From the author’s substantive studies emerges a taxonomy for education based on Popper’s critical dualism, and a way of analysing problems based on Dewey's reflective thinking and the social change theories of people such as Marx, Ogben and Pareto. Models of formal organisations drawn from Talcott Parsons show how systems analyses can be made in comparative perspective and how the processes of policy formulation, adoption and implementation can be studied.

    The use of ideal typical normative models illustrates how comparative educationists can penetrate aspects of man's socially created worlds. These techniques are exemplified in succinct models against which debates about education in Western Europe (Plato), the USA (Dewey) and the USSR (Marx, Engels and Lenin) can be analysed. Against the crude use of comparative arguments and transplantation of foreign practices, Dr Holmes suggests that problems should be analysed and the outcomes of hypothetical solutions or policies should be tested under identified national circumstances. The distinctive feature of this book is that it takes account of the debate among social scientists, rejects both induction and ethnomethodology as adequate in themselves and brings together the problem-solving approach favoured by American research workers and the hypothetico-deductive method of enquiry advocated by natural scientists such as Sir Peter Medawar and Sir John Eccles.

    Introduction 1. Cultural Borrowing - Misconceived Comparative Education 2. Comparative Education, Scientific Method and Educational Planning 3. The Positivist Debate in Comparative Education - An Anglo-Saxon Perspective 4. A Framework for Analysis - ‘Critical Dualism’ (Conventionalism) 5. The Collection and Classification of Data - National Profiles 6. Ideal-Typical Normative Models 7. Plato’s Just Society 8. Dewey’s Reflective Man in a Changing Scientific Society 9. The Ideal-Typical Soviet Man. A Selected Guide to Ancillary Reading

    Biography

    Brian Holmes