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  2. School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School

    A school is the educational ... originally meaning "leisure" and also "that in which leisure ... science – physics, chemistry, biology, geography, history, general ...

  3. School of thought - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_of_thought

    A school of thought, or intellectual tradition, is the perspective of a group of people who share common characteristics of opinion or outlook of a philosophy, [1] discipline, belief, social movement, economics, cultural movement, or art movement.

  4. History of education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_education

    The Teacher Wars: A History of America's Most Embattled Profession (2014) Herbst, Juergen. The once and future school: Three hundred and fifty years of American secondary education (1996). Parkerson Donald H., and Jo Ann Parkerson. Transitions in American education: a social history of teaching (2001) online

  5. Normal schools in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normal_schools_in_the...

    Normal schools in the United States in the 19th century were developed and built primarily to train elementary-level teachers for the public schools. The term “normal school” is based on the French école normale, a sixteenth-century model school with model classrooms where model teaching practices were taught to teacher candidates.

  6. School of Hard Knocks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_of_Hard_Knocks

    An item appearing in the Peninsula Enterprise newspaper about the "School of Hard Knocks" (1918). The School of Hard Knocks (also referred to as the University of Life or University of Hard Knocks) is an idiomatic phrase meaning the (sometimes painful) education one gets from life's usually negative experiences, often contrasted with formal education.

  7. Annales school - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annales_school

    The Annales school (French pronunciation:) is a group of historians associated with a style of historiography developed by French historians in the 20th century to stress long-term social history.

  8. Positivism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positivism

    Positivism is a philosophical school that holds that all genuine knowledge is either true by definition or positive – meaning a posteriori facts derived by reason and logic from sensory experience. [1] [2] Other ways of knowing, such as intuition, introspection, or religious faith, are rejected or considered meaningless.

  9. Deuteronomist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deuteronomist

    The Deuteronomist, abbreviated as either Dtr [1] or simply D, may refer either to the source document underlying the core chapters (12–26) of the Book of Deuteronomy, or to the broader "school" that produced all of Deuteronomy as well as the Deuteronomistic history of Joshua, Judges, Samuel, Kings, and also the Book of Jeremiah. [2]