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  1.  22
    The Demands of Liberal Education.Meira Levinson -1999 - Oxford University Press UK.
    The Demands of Liberal Education analyses and applies contemporary liberal political theory to certain key problems within the field of educational theory. Levinson examines problems centred around determining appropriate educational aims, content and institutional structure and argues that liberal governments should exercise a much greater control over education than they now do. Combining theoretical with empirical research, this book will interest and provoke scholars, policy makers, educators, parents, and all citizens interested in education politics.
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  2.  24
    Dilemmas of Educational Ethics: Cases and Commentaries.Meira Levinson &Jacob Fay (eds.) -2016 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard Education Press.
    Educators and policy makers confront challenging questions of ethics, justice, and equity on a regular basis. Should teachers retain a struggling student if it means she will most certainly drop out? Should an assignment plan favor middle-class families if it means strengthening the school system for all? These everyday dilemmas are both utterly ordinary and immensely challenging, yet there are few opportunities and resources to help educators think through the ethical issues at stake. Drawing on research and methods developed in (...) the Justice in Schools project at the Harvard Graduate School of Education,_ Dilemmas of Educational Ethics_ introduces a new interdisciplinary approach to achieving practical wisdom in education, one that honors the complexities inherent in educational decision making and encourages open discussion of the values and principles we should collectively be trying to realize in educational policy and practice. At the heart of the book are six richly described, realistic accounts of ethical dilemmas that have arisen in education in recent years, paired with responses written by noted philosophers, empirical researchers, policy makers, and practitioners, including Pedro Noguera, Howard Gardner, Mary Pattillo, Andres A. Alonso, Jamie Ahlberg, Toby N. Romer, and Michael J. Petrilli. The editors illustrate how readers can use and adapt these cases and commentaries in schools and other settings in order to reach a difficult decision, deepen their own understanding, or to build teams around shared values. (shrink)
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  3.  17
    Democratic Discord in Schools: Cases and Commentaries in Educational Ethics.Meira Levinson &Jacob Fay (eds.) -2019 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard Education Press.
    _Teaching in a democracy is challenging and filled with dilemmas that have no easy answers._ For example, how do educators meet their responsibilities of teaching civic norms and dispositions while remaining nonpartisan? _Democratic Discord in Schools_ features eight normative cases of complex dilemmas drawn from real events designed to help educators practice the type of collaborative problem solving and civil discourse needed to meet these challenges of democratic education. Each of the cases also features a set of six commentaries written (...) by a diverse array of scholars, educators, policy makers, students, and activists with a range of political views to spark reflection and conversation. Drawing on research and methods developed in the Justice in Schools project at the Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE), _Democratic Discord in Schools_ provides the tools that allow educators and others to practice the deliberative skills they need in order to find reasonable solutions to common ethical dilemmas in politically fraught times. (shrink)
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  4.  42
    The ethics of biosafety considerations in gain-of-function research resulting in the creation of potential pandemic pathogens: Table 1.Nicholas Greig Evans,Marc Lipsitch &Meira Levinson -2015 -Journal of Medical Ethics 41 (11):901-908.
  5.  13
    The Development of Autonomy.Meira Levinson -1999 - InThe Demands of Liberal Education. Oxford University Press UK.
    Discusses the relationship between the exercise and development of autonomy and analyses their implications for liberalism and liberal education. Section 2.1 proves that since the liberal state values adults’ exercise of autonomy, it must also value children's development of autonomy. Section 2.2 argues that state paternalism towards children, in particular, state efforts to help children develop the capacity for autonomy even against their parents’ wishes, is consistent with liberal principles. Section 2.3 argues that parents have privileges rather than rights to (...) control their children's upbringing, but that these privileges nonetheless offer ample scope for parents to exert independent paternalistic control. Finally, Section 2.4 argues that the liberal ideal of autonomy not merely permits but requires the intrusion of the state into the child's life, specifically in the form of compulsory, ‘detached’, autonomy‐driven schools. (shrink)
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  6.  31
    The ethics of risk displacement in research and public policy.Gerard Vong &Meira Levinson -2020 -Bioethics 34 (9):918-922.
    We identify three distinct ethical problems that can arise with risk displacement. Risk displacement is the shifting of extant risk from one or more individuals to other individual(s) such that the reduction of risk to the first group is causally implicated in increasing risk to the second group. These problems are: concentration of risk in inequitable ways; transfer of risk to already vulnerable or disadvantaged populations; and exercise of undue influence over potential research participants. The first two arise in both (...) public policy and research initiatives, whereas the third is a special concern that only applies to research initiatives. We argue that when one or more of these is of high magnitude, then the study or policy intervention may be ethically wrong. Finally, we conclude that although some risk displacement is ethically permissible, researchers and policymakers still have ethical reasons to reduce the magnitude of these problems. (shrink)
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  7.  17
    It’s (Still) All in Our Heads: Non-ideal Theory as Grounded Reflective Equilibrium.Meira Levinson -2014 -Philosophy of Education 70:37-43.
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  8.  23
    Can Our Schools Help Us Preserve Democracy? Special Challenges at a Time of Shifting Norms.Meira Levinson &Mildred Z. Solomon -2021 -Hastings Center Report 51 (S1):15-22.
    Civic education that prepares students for principled civic participation is vital to democracy. Schools face significant challenges, however, as they attempt to educate for democracy in a democracy in crisis. Parents, educators, and policy‐makers disagree about what America's civic future should look like, and hence about what schools should teach. Likewise, hyperpartisanship, mutual mistrust, and the breakdown of democratic norms are perverting the kinds of civic relationships and values that schools want to model and achieve. Nonetheless, there is strong evidence (...) that young people want to be civically engaged and are hungry for more and better civic learning opportunities. Reviving the civic mission of schools is thus a win‐win‐win. Adults want it, youth want it, and democracy needs it. We propose three means by which educators and the public can reconstruct our common purpose and achieve civic innovation to help democracy in crisis: support action civics, strengthen youth leadership outside the classroom, and engage both students and adults with “hard history” and contemporary controversies. (shrink)
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  9.  239
    Is Autonomy Imposing Education Too Demanding? A Response to Dr. De Ruyter.Meira Levinson -2004 -Studies in Philosophy and Education 23 (2/3):223-233.
  10. Mapping multicultural education.Meira Levinson -2009 - In Harvey Siegel,The Oxford handbook of philosophy of education. New York: Oxford University Press.
  11.  166
    (1 other version)Common schools and multicultural education.Meira Levinson -2007 -Journal of Philosophy of Education 41 (4):625–642.
    Common schooling and multicultural education intuitively seem to be mutually reinforcing and possibly even mutually necessary: each is motivated by and/or serves the aims of promoting social justice and equality, common civic membership, and mutual respect and understanding, among other goals. An examination of the practical relationship between the two, however, reveals that neither one is a necessary or sufficient condition for achieving the other; in fact, each may in fairly common circumstances make the other harder to achieve. In other (...) words, there is no direct instrumental relationship between multicultural education and common schools. Nor is there a clear expressive relationship between the two. Although common schools may serve as explicit, public symbols of our multicultural civic commitment to diversity, mutual respect and egalitarian inclusiveness, many demographically common schools neglect or even betray multicultural ideals, while many restricted entry and even segregated schools may express these ideals better than most comprehensive and integrated schools. Hence, while multicultural education and common schooling do intuitively stand for similar, mutually reinforcing ideals, in practice they may be linked more closely in the confusions and dilemmas of implementation they both raise than in their mutual realisation. (shrink)
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  12.  19
    Philosophical Reflections on Teachers’ Ethical Dilemmas in a Global Pandemic.Sarah K. Gurr,Tatiana Geron,Daniella J. Forster &Meira Levinson -forthcoming -Studies in Philosophy and Education:1-21.
    The COVID-19 pandemic raised not only overwhelming practical challenges but also deep ethical dilemmas for educators. There have been few efforts to connect these challenges to either ethical dilemmas teachers faced in pre-pandemic times or to philosophical analyses of complex normative terrain of teachers’ work. We facilitated eleven discussion groups with 101 educators from seven countries on the dilemmas they faced due to COVID-19. Analysis of these sessions reveals how the pandemic amplified, exacerbated and augmented pre-pandemic educational dilemmas in ways (...) that recalibrated teachers’ core values and beliefs, and highlights the importance of engaging teachers in ethical dialogue. (shrink)
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  13.  25
    The Ethics of World‐Building in Normative Case Studies.Tatiana Geron &Meira Levinson -2024 -Educational Theory 74 (3):293-300.
    Normative case studies are designed to offer richly detailed “worlds of possibility” that invite complex reflection and discussion about authentic ethical dilemmas in education. In this essay, Tatiana Geron and Meira Levinson argue that authors' choices of what details to include in a case are themselves ethical decisions that require significant ethical responsibility. Case details can shape which avenues of ethical inquiry are open to readers, whether and how institutional and structural conditions get considered, whose perspectives are included and legitimized, (...) and what political issues are understood as “open” or “closed.” At its best, case “world-building” can help readers understand the full complexity of ethical decision-making in education. However, for this to occur, case authors must seek out expert and dissenting perspectives, field test the case with diverse audiences, and remain reflexive about their own perspectives and how these shape their world-building decisions. (shrink)
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  14.  21
    Making Civics Count: Citizenship Education for a New Generation.David E. Campbell,Meira Levinson &Frederick M. Hess (eds.) -2012 - Harvard Education Press.
    "By nearly every measure, Americans are less engaged in their communities and political activity than generations past.” So write the editors of this volume, who survey the current practices and history of citizenship education in the United States. They argue that the current period of “creative destruction”—when schools are closing and opening in response to reform mandates—is an ideal time to take an in-depth look at how successful strategies and programs promote civic education and good citizenship. _Making Civics Count_ offers (...) research-based insights into what diverse students and teachers know and do as civic actors, and proposes a blueprint for civic education for a new generation that is both practical and visionary. (shrink)
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  15.  45
    Intentional collaboration, predictable complicity, and proactive prevention: U.S. schools’ ethical responsibilities in slowing the school-to-deportation pipeline.Tatiana Geron &Meira Levinson -2018 -Journal of Global Ethics 14 (1):23-33.
    ABSTRACTIn the United States, constitutional and statutory law reinforce the right of all children to receive an education, regardless of their citizenship or immigration status. In a time of heightened anti-immigrant sentiment and law enforcement, however, partnerships among school districts, local law enforcement, and the U.S. Departments of Justice and Homeland Security subject undocumented and unaccompanied minor students to indefensible levels of risk for detention and deportation. We identify three stances that U.S. schools may take in the face of a (...) potential ‘school-to-deportation pipeline.’ Schools that engage in intentional collaboration actively increase detention and deportation by referring students to immigration officials for criminal, non-criminal, and even non-disciplinary activity. Schools that engage in predictable complicity may not intend to subject their undocumented and unaccompanied minor students to detention or deportation, but still put students at risk by involving police in school policies. We argue that U.S. schools should instead engage in proactive protection of immigrant students and families, including actively resisting federal policies when necessary. (shrink)
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  16.  8
    Autonomy and the Foundations of Contemporary Liberalism.Meira Levinson -1999 - InThe Demands of Liberal Education. Oxford University Press UK.
    Discusses contemporary liberalism's meaning, character, and justification. Section 1.1 argues that three constitutive commitments define contemporary liberalism and distinguish it from other theories. Section 1.2 demonstrates that, contrary to political liberalism's claims, these three commitments are best linked by the value of autonomy. Hence, contemporary liberalism is best understood as displaying weak perfectionism. Section 1.3 analyses autonomy more carefully, developing it as a substantive notion of higher‐order preference formation within a context of cultural coherence, plural constitutive personal values and beliefs, (...) openness to other's evaluations of oneself, and a sufficiently developed moral, spiritual or aesthetic, intellectual, and emotional personality. (shrink)
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  17.  2
    Autonomy, Schooling, and the Reconstruction of the Liberal Educational Ideal.Meira Levinson -1996
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  18.  13
    Culture, Choice, and Citizenship: Schooling Private Citizens in the Public Square.Meira Levinson -1999 - InThe Demands of Liberal Education. Oxford University Press UK.
    Analyses the relationships between cultural coherence, cultural pluralism, civic education, and autonomy. Section 4.1 argues that the skills, habits, values, and beliefs that underlie the capacity for autonomy also underlie the capacity for citizenship; hence, education for citizenship and for autonomy are mutually reinforcing. Section 4.2 develops an ‘English’ model of political liberal education, contrasting it with an ‘American’ model developed in Section 4.3 and a ‘French’ model in Section 4.4. Section 4.5 concludes that all of these political liberal models (...) of education, which attempt in different ways to balance cultural coherence and civic virtue without promoting autonomy, are inferior—on both theoretical and empirical grounds—to weakly perfectionist liberal education. (shrink)
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  19. Civic Contestation in Global Education: Cases and Conversations in Educational Ethics, International Perspective.Meira Levinson,Ellis Reid,Tatiana Geron &Sara O'Brien (eds.) -forthcoming
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  20.  13
    Community Matters: Challenges to Civic Engagement in the 21st Century.Meira Levinson,William A. Galston,Jacob T. Levy,Peter Levine,Robert K. Fullinwider &Mick Womersley (eds.) -2005 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    In Community Matters: Challenges to Civic Engagement in the 21st Century, six distinguished scholars address three perennial challenges of civic life: the making of a citizen, how citizens are to agree , and how to define the rights and responsibilities of citizenship. These essays will encourage students, academics, and interested citizens outside the academy to go farther and dig deeper into these vital issues.
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  21.  14
    Dilemmas of Deliberative Civic Education.Meira Levinson -2002 -Philosophy of Education 58:262-270.
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  22.  8
    Introduction.Meira Levinson -1999 - InThe Demands of Liberal Education. Oxford University Press UK.
    The goal of this book is to develop a coherent liberal political theory of children's education provision. This goal is motivated by three observations: although people's intuitions about liberalism already guide their approach to education policy, their intuitions are often wrong; in liberal states, liberal political principles should and do have important ramifications for education policy; and educational outcomes have important ramifications for the health and preservation of the liberal polity. The book does not justify liberalism's value—instead takes that as (...) given—but it does address the relationship between formal schooling and other forms of education, as well as discusses the difference between liberal and democratic theories of education. (shrink)
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  23.  14
    Making Sense of It All: Transforming Political Theory into Educational Policy.Meira Levinson -1999 - InThe Demands of Liberal Education. Oxford University Press UK.
    Addresses the practical implementation of the liberal educational ideal. Section 5.1 identifies the ways in which choice, cultural coherence, and citizenship fit together within an autonomy‐driven education, and also discusses three other possible liberal or educational aims that should potentially help guide the implementation of the liberal ideal: economic competitiveness, democratic self‐reflection, and equality. Section 5.2 constructs a public policy of liberal education, arguing for strict state regulation of schools as well as for school choice in the form of controlled (...) choice. Section 5.3 discusses the changes that would need to take place in the areas of legislation, pre‐service and in‐service teacher training, public dialogue, school accountability, and cultural attitudes about education in order to make the liberal educational ideal a reality, especially in the US and Britain. (shrink)
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  24.  7
    Modifying the Liberal Educational Ideal.Meira Levinson -1999 - InThe Demands of Liberal Education. Oxford University Press UK.
    Examines four objections stemming from the clash of theory and intuition. It argues that the ‘detached school’ should, with minor modifications, continue to provide the basis for the liberal educational ideal. Section 3.1 addresses concerns about state tyranny, arguing that the detached school both counters the threat of parental tyranny and ensures a substantive pluralism among schools and within society. Section 3.2 shows that detached schools can promote effective parental involvement. Section 3.3 addresses the hidden curriculum of schools, while Section (...) 3.4 discusses the ability of the detached school to help children develop cultural coherence and a stable sense of identity as well as a capacity for choice. (shrink)
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  25.  23
    Reply to Critics.Meira Levinson -2015 -Social Philosophy Today 31:183-193.
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  26.  45
    Response to the Review Symposium of No Citizen Left Behind.Meira Levinson -2013 -Studies in Philosophy and Education 32 (6):667-670.
  27. Theorizing educational justice.Meira Levinson -2022 - In Randall R. Curren,Handbook of philosophy of education. New York, NY: Routledge.
  28. Theorizing educational justice.Meira Levinson -2022 - In Randall R. Curren,Handbook of philosophy of education. New York, NY: Routledge.
  29.  51
    Tacking Toward Justice.Meira Levinson -2013 -Social Theory and Practice 39 (2):343-352.
  30. Photo Bomb: responding to online aggressions” in Civic Contestation in Global Education: Cases and Conversations in Educational Ethics, International Perspectives.A. Romero-Iribas,Meira Levinson,Ellis Reid,Tatiana Geron &Sara O'Brien (eds.) -forthcoming - Bloomsbury, Philsophy of Education.
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  31.  38
    Demoralized: Why Teachers Leave the Profession They Love and How They Can Stay.Becky L. Noël Smith,Keith E. Benson,Meira Levinson &Barbara S. Stengel -2019 -Educational Theory 69 (3):341-354.
  32.  10
    Teacher Layoffs in the Worst of Times: A Non-ideal Theory of Least-Unjust Teacher Firings in L.A. Unified School District.Victoria Theisen-Homer &Meira Levinson -2014 -Philosophy of Education 70:195-203.
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