Available Formats
Moral Education for Americans
By (Author) Robert D. Heslep
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th August 1995
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Philosophy and theory of education
Human rights, civil rights
370.114
Hardback
224
Since World War II the regulation of conduct in the United States has become problematic. This condition has been recognized by ordinary citizens in the soaring crime rates, illegitimate births, neglect of the public good and increase in special and individual interests, preference for fame, fortune and power, gross immoral acts by public figures, and fascination of the media and the audience with spectacles of evil. The troubled control of social behavior in the nation is suggested by the fact that our society has no commonly accepted set of standards that can guide our actions. Heslep penetrates the bazaar of competing normative principles that Americans subscribe to in search of those logical and feasible standards of behavior that will conquer our nation's moral crisis. He then constructs an idea of character education for Americans, applying it to recent policy recommendations and to cases of individuals with moral education needs.
"(No other book) gives such an eclectic and comprehensive inquiry into moral education and is this highly readable and practical....This is a very fine book that adds much to the conversation about the purpose of education in a democratic society."-Carl Glickman Professor of Education University of Georgia
ROBERT D. HESLEP, a past president of the Philosophy of Education Society, is Professor of Educational Leadership at the University of Georgia. He has published six books including Thomas Jefferson and Education (1969) and Education in Democracy (1989).