Douglas M. Sloan--for three decades a professor of history and education at Teachers College, Columbia University[1][2]—is a curriculum theorist [3] and author.[4] His 1971 book The Scottish Enlightenment and the American College Ideal, which argued that American education owed its roots to influential Presbyterian Scots who never feared an educated populace unlike their counterparts in the Anglican church, was a contribution to larger on-going intellectual discussion on Scottish and American relations (e.g., Ian Charles Cargill Graham's 1956 Colonists from Scotland: Emigration to North America, 1707-1783 and Andrew Hook’s 1975 Scotland and America: A Study of Cultural Relations, 1750—1835).[5] In the mid-1980s Sloan edited the collection of essays published as The Computer in education: a critical perspective (Columbia University Press, 1985).[6] His 1994 book Faith and knowledge: mainline Protestantism and American higher education focuses on the rise and fall of American Protestant churches engagement with higher education, noting that this now almost forgotten and often overlooked theological renaissance, begun in the 1930s, would fully blossom in March 1953 with the launch of an essentially new journal The Christian Scholar. Its morph into the journal Soundings fifteen years later would signal the renaissance's abrupt end.[7]
References
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- ↑ Curriculum Development in the Postmodern Era, Patrick Slattery, CRC Press, 2006, ISBN 0415953383, ISBN 9780415953382, 330 pages
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- ↑ Scots in the North American West, 1790-1917: 1790-1917, Ferenc Morton Szasz, University of Oklahoma Press, 2000, ISBN 0806132531, ISBN 9780806132532, 272 pages
- ↑ Template:Web cite
- ↑ Faith and Knowledge, Douglas Sloan, Westminster John Knox Press, 1994, ISBN 0664228666, ISBN 9780664228668, 272 pages