Democracy as Discussion: Civic Education and the American Forum MovementAs Americans worry ever more about the effects of media on the quality of public deliberation, they have developed a renewed interest in public discussion, especially face-to-face public discussion. Over a century ago, public forums_organized and widespread_provided a place where citizens could discuss the political issues of the day, and they became a means of adult civic education. William M. Keith documents the college course developed by the new field of Speech to teach the skills of discussion, as well as the forum movement, which culminated in the Federal Forum Project. Using primary sources from archives around the country, Democracy as Discussion traces the early history of the Speech field, the development of discussion as an alternative to debate, and the Deweyan Progressive philosophy of discussion that swept the U.S. For the first time the structure and details of the Federal Forum project in the context of the forum movement and adult civic education in the U.S. are recounted and analyzed, making this book a valuable resource in the study of political communication and history. |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 87–ի 1-ից 5-ը:
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Almost a hundred years ago, Americans were struggling to find new modes of participation in a seemingly moribund democratic process, and they are again today. In a striking parallel to developments in the Progressive era, ...
Almost a hundred years ago, Americans were struggling to find new modes of participation in a seemingly moribund democratic process, and they are again today. In a striking parallel to developments in the Progressive era, ...
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Much of the impetus for academic and non—academic interest in deliberative democracy flows from a renewed quest for forms of communication that will not only enhance participation but also ensure that somehow it is "deliberative," ...
Much of the impetus for academic and non—academic interest in deliberative democracy flows from a renewed quest for forms of communication that will not only enhance participation but also ensure that somehow it is "deliberative," ...
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Let's think for a moment about how simple the act of citizen participation might be. Suppose a group of concerned citizens wanted to form an organization to enhance local democratic participation and practice. What are their obstacles?
Let's think for a moment about how simple the act of citizen participation might be. Suppose a group of concerned citizens wanted to form an organization to enhance local democratic participation and practice. What are their obstacles?
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The group might have to provide training or information for participants. Who does the groups want to attend? They might try to get a representative group of people, as in a deliberative poll.10 Or they might operate as voting does, ...
The group might have to provide training or information for participants. Who does the groups want to attend? They might try to get a representative group of people, as in a deliberative poll.10 Or they might operate as voting does, ...
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The face-to-face picture of communication is local, intuitive, transparent and grounded; the participants are stakeholders in local issues, and ideally even people who sharply disagree understand each other pretty well; this picture ...
The face-to-face picture of communication is local, intuitive, transparent and grounded; the participants are stakeholders in local issues, and ideally even people who sharply disagree understand each other pretty well; this picture ...
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Բովանդակություն
1 | |
17 | |
Teaching Discussion | 113 |
The Forum Movement | 211 |
Conclusion | 331 |
Bibliography | 343 |
Index | 358 |
About the Author | 361 |
Այլ խմբագրություններ - View all
Democracy as Discussion: Civic Education and the American Forum Movement William M. Keith Դիտել հնարավոր չէ - 2007 |
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AAAE papers adult education American argued argument Association audience Bryson Carnegie Corporation Cartwright CCNY century Chapter Chautauqua citizens claimed communication conflict context cooperation course Craig Baird critical deliberation deliberative Deliberative Democracy democracy democratic Dewey’s Deweyan didn’t discus Discussion and Debate discussion pedagogy Ehninger Elliott elocution Federal Forum File Ford Hall Forum forum leaders forum movement Forum Project goals Ibid ideas influence institutions intercollegiate debate interest issues John Dewey John Studebaker Journal of Speech judges liberal Lindeman logic lyceums Mary Parker Follett McBurney method NARA National O’Neill oratory organization Overstreet participation pedagogy persuasion philosophy political practice problem Progressivism propaganda Public Discussion public forum public speaking Quarterly Journal question radio rhetoric Roper Series III.A Sheffield sion skills social speaker speech teachers Studebaker and Williams Studebaker’s T-groups talk teaching textbooks thinking tion Town Meeting tradition University Press Winans Woolbert York