The Significance, Interrelationships, and Ordering of Value Systems
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.11575/jet.v3i2.43564Abstract
As we look around the world today, we readily see in what an educational turmoil it is. There is hardly a country in which university students have not revolted against established procedures and values. In the United States the issue has spread into the high school systems. We find, in short, a revolt of the consumer of educational fare. What he is getting, he doesn't like. One can look at this as a generation struggle, youth versus intellectually atrophied elders, or as a struggle against de-humanized educational bureaucratic structures, i.e. against the style of life foisted upon the student by such social systems, or as a power struggle by contending groups for the direction and administration of educational institutions, or what is perhaps more decisive and underlying all the foregoing, a value conflict which includes not only the universities and lower schools but extends to the society at large.Downloads
Published
2018-05-10
Issue
Section
Articles
License
The Journal of Educational Thought retains first publication rights for all articles. The Journal grants reproduction rights for noncommercial educational purposes with the provision that full acknowledgement of the work’s source be noted on each copy. The Journal will redirect to the appropriate authors any inquiries for further commercial publication of individual articles. All authors wishing to publish in JET will be asked to fill in and sign a Consent to Publish and Transfer of Copyright agreement.
Authors must affirm that any submission to JET has not been and will not be published or submitted elsewhere while under considration by JET.