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“American Progressivism in the Wider Atlantic World”
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“American Progressivism in the Wider Atlantic World”
“American Progressivism in the Wider Atlantic World” is an article by Daniel T. Rodgers is an article that focuses on a political movement in America that paid attention to ideas, compulsions, and issues that arose from the modernization of its Society. The author begins by referencing Ray Stannard Baker, and his ignorance of the effects nations had on each other (Rodgers 156). The paper’s argument begins with the idea that forces beyond its borders affect every nation, no matter how isolated. For a nation like America that was initially an imperial project, the complicity in world-historical forces significantly influenced it.
The author acknowledges that studies in progressive and New Deal politics are complex without an apparent end. Rodgers states that the United States during the 18th and 19th Centuries was a key outpost for European trade and a lure for European resources, which means it would be difficult to understand the nation without comprehending the North Atlantic trade. Therefore, the article focuses on capital policies and activities of major European economies during the said period. He concludes that the reconstruction of America was tied to movements of politics and ideas throughout this trade and capitalism.
The article continues to discuss the show of might between European nations in terms of economic and military power with Germany and France tied in fierce economic propaganda (157). It goes on to discuss the changes that happened to the Atlantic economy that was refurbished to inspire a new Atlantic-Wide politics that included America, a nation far away from centers where policies for this system were made. Progressive politics was an English denominator that came to America after the New Atlantic economy shook popular political parties. New politicians enjoyed this novel issues and benefited from them as they were propelled to power and popularity. Such figures in America were Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson (160). Rodgers calls this new set of politicians Advanced progressives.
According to Rodgers, American Progressives relied heavily on Europe and benchmarked their experience and ideas. From the article, one realizes that advanced progressives during the 18th Century had ambitions borrowed from Europe with cities not controlled by entrepreneurs, contractors, grafters, or franchises but with people aware of their own administration and in control of their fate. The advanced progressive compared their progress against cities like Glasgow and admired how different sides of a political divide were in harness and focused on details.
Works Cited
Rodgers, D. T. (1998). Atlantic crossings. Harvard University Press.
‘We the Best Scouts’ organization
Student’s Name
Institutional Affiliation
Course Title
Date
2148 West 20th Street,
Dallas
wethebestscouts@gmail.com
March 2rd, 2021
Erick Ramirez
555 SW 8th Street #503
Miami FL, 33199
Dear Ramirez,
I would like to take this chance to greatly welcome you to the ‘We the Best Scouts’ organization. Am much happy for you now that you are fully accepted to be one of our members. As the president of the club which is committed to building a better world, I welcome you fully so that we walk together in this journey towards the aim of facilitating the growth of young adults.
‘We the Best Scout’ is one of the operational and influential organizations in our school that has played a major part in positively impacting and changing the lives of the students. Our club was responsible for planting five hundred trees that nowadays purify the air and benefit the school in many ways. Remember that we are the club that cleans the school each Wednesday.
Upon joining our club, you will be trained for one week on our rules, mission, vision, and the role you will play in the organization. The training will commence on next week Monday at the scouts’ room number two. You will be required to demonstrate the Scout sign, salute, and handshake. You will also need to come along with a copy of your identification document and school documentation card. In our club, expect to gain more confidence, be responsible, and be self-sufficient. Our scout organization will give you more social skills and access to activities and opportunities that might are not available to other students.
I once more thank you for your acceptance into this amazing organization. Your membership in this club will add a lot to your resume. Scouting is fun with a purpose, directing, and aiding girls and boys in our school to be happy, healthy, and useful individuals. It creates self-knowledge, and the urge to explore and discover the world beyond the classroom.
Thank you for your interest in this school organization. You are fully welcomed to be one of us. You can reach us through our email provided in case you have any inquiries.
Best Regards,
Antonio Banderas, President
We the Best Scouts Organization
How Has This Course Affected Your Way Of Seeing Teaching
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Professor
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How Has This Course Affected Your Way Of Seeing Teaching?
Even though teachers are appointed to an office, it is vague whether a great deal of what they know is extraordinary: restricted to role incumbent and extraordinary, or marked by personality or degree from normal knowledge, in addition to common sense. The folkways of education explain teaching as customary, learned as well as practiced in a half-conscious manner in which individuals get on with their daily lives. Local mores comprise teaching knowledge held similarly to the folkways and typically founded on them. The private views of teachers are personally persuasive, arising from the atypical experiences, in addition to the characteristics of persons. What distinguishes teaching expertise from the related categories is less what concerns related knowledge than how it is used and held. Although it may develop on the folkways, teaching proficiency surpasses their mastery or expert performance by embracing judgments of suitability and testing of outcomes and less characteristic modes of practice, for instance discussion besides the deliberate management of impasse (Diorio, 2002).
In every activity along with diverse walks of life, people make use of knowledge. Knowledge concerns different things and facilitates diverse kinds of actions. Knowledge also varies in how extensively it is distributed, how it is acquired and held. Knowledge also varies in the manner in which it is considered as warranted. Facts can be acknowledged with sentences, names, propositions, artificial signs, as well as their relationships, representations, ideas, habits, concepts, intuitions, judgments, response to stimuli, in addition to all such classes may be diversely defended. When issues are regarded as a matter of rationality, the issue of warrants possibly will not even occur, and even inconsistencies are considered in stride. Individuals gain knowledge in the course of participation in cultural paradigms; such participation enables individuals to be members of particular groups and permits them to execute social roles. Several cultural paradigms have lesser and exceedingly chosen partakers than others. These disparities have to do with their pervasiveness, the scale to which cultural paradigms are diffused throughout diverse walks of life or activities. They affect, sequentially, the scale to which knowledge is esteemed by as well as divided amongst or dispersed over different groups.
Although individuals reward common sense and judge some scant knowledge ornamental, the arcane has a propensity to be valued increasingly highly than common knowledge (Elbaz, 2003).
Is Teaching Knowledge Special?
Teaching is an all-encompassing act, which is diffused through all walks of life and activities. Individuals in all manner of occupations are trained how to perform their jobs, more often than not by persons who are not qualified as teachers. In day to day life, individuals show one another how to perform different things, explain concepts or procedures, in addition to responding through approving or correcting the apprentice in the circumstances. People turn out to be proficient native speakers with a higher scale of success than the teachers who hold university degrees have in generating readers. Paradoxically, the notion that several people are deficient in communicative proficiency is a relic of universal schooling. Each day, millions of students observe their teachers for approximately six hours every day, throughout the week, for close to twelve years. This observation apprenticeship grants them a close-up, comprehensive analysis of how teachers perform. It then follows that, in most cases, teaching knowledge is not regarded as special, and therefore, people are undecided in relation to its significance. Just as everyday experience, and common sense, teaching knowledge is rated too low, yet appreciated. As far as teaching is concerned, the question begs, who should be considered as the ignorant? In the event that participation in cultural paradigms entitles an individual to role performance, only a few would seem to be excluded from teaching. This would include, probably only the flagrantly immoral and demented. When individual biography, as well as, daily experience presents feasible recipes, special training for teachers do not require being lengthy or arduous. What may not have been acquired in school life can be learned through teaching. Teachers’ informal, professional socialization may offer the key to a great deal of the operating knowledge of teachers. This accounts for its psychologically biased, in both tendency and fact, collective, commonsensical nature (Diorio, 2002).
The Indistinct Status of Teaching Knowledge Matters
Similar to the invention of the wheel, teaching was introduced in ancient times. The teaching folkways are uncomplicated, like the profession, plain and visible to all. Whereas wheels as well as the teaching activities both bear several innate characteristics, for example, abstract geometrical characteristics, cognitive objectives and outcomes. The great majority of people in normal circumstances may get things done without a clear understanding of them. The focus on teaching knowledge is hence no trivial; rather, it is an endeavor to be descriptive, as well as, to circumvent foregone conclusions with reference to teacher advocacy, in addition to, denials or ascriptions of professional status. Even though a fundamental and an obviously motivating factor in contemporary debate in regard to the knowledge teachers employ and hold, these matters are of no consequence when trying to comprehend the lights that teachers exist by. For a mass profession dominated by females, with an unexciting career, comparatively low remuneration in addition to status, low retention and eased entry, those ambiguities may be considered an advantage, for they denote that occupational commitment may not be requisite for attaining teaching knowledge. In reality, these structural characteristics of the career may be correlates of its cognitive foundation in the teaching folkways (Steltenpohl, 2004).
The majorities of theorists regard these ambiguities as vices and invoke their arcane descriptions of teaching knowledge in opposition to the folkways. These theorists invoke expertise where individuals think that rationality suffices. They rely on teachers’ personal beliefs and descriptions as proof of teaching knowledge that is unique. These theorists usually disparage what people learn in relation to teaching through and working living, but do not find much that is positive in formal education either. From time to time, a number of theorists act as though the invention of teaching is yet to be. These theorists may be both right as well as wrong, in that, they are wrong to dismiss or disregard the folkways of teaching, and right in making upsetting inquiries. They are right in believing that teaching is more than commonsensical, wrong in assuming that the personal beliefs of teachers ought to be held for outstanding motives (Elbaz, 2003).
Conclusion
Usual college teaching is improbable to upset the commonsense concepts of what teaching entails, although it extends the observation apprenticeship to approximately 13,000 hours. Specialized courses for teachers have a propensity to confirm these concepts by being of a rational nature themselves, or through not being, or apparently being, too theoretical. In general, formal mechanisms of socializing in teaching are a small number and brief in duration, not exceptionally arduous, and bear weak effects. The teachers on the contrary consider practice teaching as the most significant component of their preparation.
References
Diorio, J. A. (2002). Knowledge, Autonomy & the Teaching Practice. Curriculum Inquiry, 10, pp. 257-282.
Elbaz, F. (2003). Teacher Thinking: Study of Pragmatic Knowledge. New York: Nichols.
Steltenpohl, S. (2004). Orientation to College: A Reader. Boston, MA: Cengage Learning.