Educating Angels: Teaching for the Pursuit of Happiness

Educating Angels: Teaching for the Pursuit of Happiness

by Tony Armstrong
Educating Angels: Teaching for the Pursuit of Happiness

Educating Angels: Teaching for the Pursuit of Happiness

by Tony Armstrong

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Overview

School reform and accountability tests have been hotly debated for decades, but the goal of reform and accountability has not. Most agree that the main problem with contemporary education is that it fails to adequately prepare students with the “21st century skills” needed to find jobs and promote national competitiveness in the global economy. Tony Armstrong challenges both the morality and the consequences of pushing this purpose of education. He says it is immoral because it neglects our children’s deepest aspiration—happiness—and treats them as mere cogs in the economic machine. Dr. Armstrong shows how methods of well-being based on happiness research—mindfulness, gratitude, perspective—can greatly improve kids’ chances to feel better in the present and to live happier lives in the future. And the kindergarten-through-college “happiness pedagogy” he presents would also be a superior way to teach those “21st century skills.”

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781624910142
Publisher: Parkhurst Brothers, Inc.
Publication date: 11/01/2013
Series: Our National Conversation , #9
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 200
File size: 603 KB

About the Author

Tony Armstrong is a Professor at Wesley College in Delaware.

Table of Contents

Contents 1. An Education Worthy of Angels 2. The Purpose of Liberal Education 3. The Nature of Happiness 4. Sources of Happiness 5. Empowering the Pursuit of Happiness 6. Fostering Appreciation 7. Philosophy 8. Higher Education 9. Transformation Notes

Interviews

School reform and accountability tests have been hotly debated for decades, but the goal of reform and accountability has not. Most agree that the main problem with contemporary education is that it fails to adequately prepare students with the “21st century skills” needed to find jobs and promote national competitiveness in the global economy. Tony Armstrong challenges both the morality and the consequences of pushing this purpose of education. He says it is immoral because it neglects our children’s deepest aspiration—happiness—and treats them as mere cogs in the economic machine. Dr. Armstrong shows how methods of well-being based on happiness research—mindfulness, gratitude, perspective—can greatly improve kids’ chances to feel better in the present and to live happier lives in the future. And the kindergarten-through-college “happiness pedagogy” he presents would also be a superior way to teach those “21st century skills.”

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