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Myths and Traditions of Central European University Culture

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  • 224 pages
  • 8 hours of reading

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By examining the myriad myths surrounding Central European universities, Czech historians Lukás Fasora and Jiří Hanus take a diachronic approach to investigating the issues facing higher learning in the region. Using careful historical research, the authors point out vast discontinuities, comparing how the philosophy of education from the Middle Ages to the nineteenth century has changed and how this evolution relates to the current administrative goals of higher education. As they confront the history and myths of university education, the authors do not shy away from exploring difficult questions, such as whether political and economic influences have completely transformed the goals and structure of today's universities in Central Europe. Though focused on university systems in a specific geographic region, the findings have wide-ranging implications for higher education the world over.

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Myths and Traditions of Central European University Culture, Lukáš Fasora, Jiří Hanuš

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Released
2021
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Language
English
Publisher
Karolinum
Released
2021
Format
Paperback
Pages
224
ISBN10
8024643804
ISBN13
9788024643809
Series
Description
By examining the myriad myths surrounding Central European universities, Czech historians Lukás Fasora and Jiří Hanus take a diachronic approach to investigating the issues facing higher learning in the region. Using careful historical research, the authors point out vast discontinuities, comparing how the philosophy of education from the Middle Ages to the nineteenth century has changed and how this evolution relates to the current administrative goals of higher education. As they confront the history and myths of university education, the authors do not shy away from exploring difficult questions, such as whether political and economic influences have completely transformed the goals and structure of today's universities in Central Europe. Though focused on university systems in a specific geographic region, the findings have wide-ranging implications for higher education the world over.