ABSTRACT

Elliot Eisner has spent the last forty years researching, thinking and writing about some of the enduring issues in arts education, curriculum studies and qualitative research. He has compiled a career-long collection of his finest work including extracts from books, key articles, salient research findings and major theoretical contributions and brought them together in a single volume. Starting with a specially written introduction, which gives an overview of Eisner’s career and contextualises his selection, the chapters cover a wide range of issues including:

* children and art
* the use of educational connoisseurship
* aesthetic modes of knowing
* absolutism and relativism in curriculum theory
* education reform and the ecology of schooling
* the future of education research.

 

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

My journey as a writer in the field of education

chapter |10 pages

Children'S Creativity in Art

A study of types American Educational Research Journal, 1965, 2(3): 125–136

chapter |7 pages

Educational Objectives

Help or hindrance? The School Review, 1967, 75(3): 250–260

chapter |13 pages

Instructional And Expressive Educational Objectives

Their formulation and use in curriculum W. James Popham, E. Eisner, H. Sullivan and W. Bruneau (eds), Instructional Objectives, Chicago, IL: McNally & Co., 1969 (Monograph Series on Curriculum Evaluation), pp. 1–18

chapter |11 pages

Educational Connoisseurship And Criticism

Their form and functions in educational evaluation Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1976, 135–150

chapter |12 pages

On The Uses Of Educational Connoisseurship And Criticism For Evaluating Classroom Life

Teachers College Record, 1977, 78(3): 345–358

chapter |8 pages

What Do Children Learn When They Paint?

Art Education, 1978, 21(3): 6–10

chapter |8 pages

On The Differences Between Scientific And Artistic Approaches To Qualitative Research *

Educational Researcher, 1981, 10(4): 5–9

chapter |10 pages

The Role of the Arts in Cognition and Curriculum

Journal of Art & Design Education, 1986, 5(1 and 2): 57–67

chapter |10 pages

Can Educational Research Inform Educational Practice?*

Phi Delta Kappan, 1984, 65(7): 447ȃ452

chapter |9 pages

Aesthetic Modes of Knowing

84th Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education, Learning and Teaching the Ways of Knowing, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1985, pp. 23–36

chapter |7 pages

The Celebration Of Thinking

Educational Horizons, 1987, 66(1): 1–4

chapter |11 pages

The Primacy of Experience and The Politics of Method *

Educational Researcher, 1988, 17(5): 15—20

chapter |6 pages

Slippery Moves And Blind Alleys

My travels with absolutism and relativism in Curriculum Theory Curriculum Inquiry,1989, 19(1): 59–65

chapter |7 pages

The Misunderstood Role of the Arts in Human Development

Phi Delta Kappan, 1992, 73(8): 591–595

chapter |14 pages

Educational Reform and the Ecology Of Schooling

Teachers College Record, 1992, 93(4): 610–627

chapter |13 pages

Forms of Understanding and the Future of Educational Research *

Educational Research, 1993, 22(7): 5–11

chapter |10 pages

Standards for American Schools *

Help or hindrance? Phi Delta Kappan, 1995, 76(10): 758–764

chapter |11 pages

The Promise and Perils of Alternative Forms of Data Representation *

Educational Researcher, 1997, 26(6): 4–10

chapter |9 pages

What Does it mean to say A School is Doing Well? *

Phi Delta Kappan, 2001, 82(5): 367–372

chapter |12 pages

From Episteme to Phronesis to Artistry in the Study and Improvement of Teaching

Teaching and Teacher Education, 2002, 18: 375–385

chapter |10 pages

What can education learn from the arts about the practice of education *

Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 2002, 18(1): 4–16