La educación en la utopía moderna siglo XIX / Antología de S. Quintanilla Osorio.
Contributor(s)
Quintanilla Osorio, Susana (antología)Keywords
Socialismo UtópicoFilosofía de la Educación
Educación y Sociedad
Educación - Historia - Siglo XIX - Tema Principal
Feminismo
Sociología de la Educación
Educación y Política
370. BIB V. 10
Etica - Estudio y Enseñanza
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://148.201.96.14/dc/ver.aspx?ns=000175353Abstract
Esta obra presenta una selección de textos de pensadores utópicos los cuales propusieron cambios radicales a la educación de su época y plantearon problemas pedagógicos que aún son motivo de polémicas. Abarca además reflexiones en torno a la naturaleza del hombre y de la sociedad, relatos de experiencias educativas innovadoras, sugerencias prácticas acerca de la enseñanza y propuestas para la modificación de la escuela.Date
1985Identifier
oai:acervo.iteso.mx:175353http://148.201.96.14/dc/ver.aspx?ns=000175353
968-6011-79-X
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Revista Iberoamericana de Educación /Organización de Estados Iberoamericanos, la Ciencia y la Cultura.5532 (Madrid : OEI,, 1993-)Estado y educación.
-
La educación : revista interamericana de desarrollo educativo : I-III, 1991 / Dir. de G.P. Carvalho.Carvalho, Getúlio P. (dir.) (Washington, EUA : OEA, Secretaría General, Departamento de Asuntos Educativos, 1991)
-
Graduate and undergraduate students’ reaction to the teaching procedures used in semipresential classesPeixoto, Henry Maia; Universidade de Brasília; Peixoto, Mariana Maia; Universidade Federal da Paraíba; Alves, Elioenai Dornelles; Universidade de Brasília; Rodrigues, Maria Cristina Soares; Universidade de Brasília (Faculdade de Enfermagem da UFG, 2014-01-09)The objective of this study was to investigate the reactions of undergraduate and graduate students to the teaching procedures used in semipresential classes. This exploratory study was performed with a quantitative approach at a public university, with undergraduate and graduate students who had completed semipresential classes on health promotion education. Among the 19 evaluated teaching procedures, 15 (78.9%) did not show any statistically significant differences between the two academic levels. The means and medians for most variables, for both undergraduate (78.9%) and graduate (89.5%) students, were above 7 in a scale ranging between 0 (awful) and 10 (excellent). Therefore, it is concluded that both groups showed similar reactions to the teaching procedures and gave satisfactory opinions in this regard. Understanding these aspects can support designing class disciplines that use teaching procedures that are adequate to university students. Descriptors: Education, Distance; Education, Higher; Learning; Educational Measurement.