American Educational Studies
Online ISSN : 2436-7192
Print ISSN : 2433-9873
ISSN-L : 2433-9873
Volume 32
Displaying 1-10 of 10 articles from this issue
  • Akihiro ASONUMA
    2022 Volume 32 Pages 53-73
    Published: January 31, 2022
    Released on J-STAGE: January 26, 2023
    RESEARCH REPORT / TECHNICAL REPORT FREE ACCESS

    Focusing on research universities is key in exploring the social foundations and conditions under which academic research operates. It was in 19th-century Germany that universities began to encompass the research function, but the concept of the "research university" has become popular in the U.S. , where the functional differentiation of higher- education institutions made significant progress in the 20th century. In Japan, certain American research universities often serve as models for university reform. Stanford University, for example, is sometimes taken as a model, but its unique model is not suited for Japanese universities. In this way, diversity of research universities is often overlooked.

    Mimetic isomorphism may cause a certain degree of homogeneity among research universities. However, they have not been uniformly shaped by government policies but rather have formed naturally through the involvement of various actors and factors. Thus, the U.S. seems to have a great diversity of research universities. The role of these research universities encompasses more than just research, and which role they emphasize varies from university to university. Since World War II, the U.S. federal government has been an extremely important source of research grants, and the quantity of federal research grants that universities receive is used to measure their research activities. However, research universities are not driven solely by federal research funding.

    Therefore, in order to avoid misunderstandings caused by using the specific research universities as a model and to clarify how society supports academic research, this paper explores the diversity of the financial base of American research universities. The analysis shows that research universities can be classified into several groups, including tuition-dependent, institutional grant-dependent, research grant-dependent, investment revenue-dependent, hospital revenue-dependent groups, and so on.

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  • Yuichiro NISHINO
    2022 Volume 32 Pages 74-96
    Published: January 31, 2022
    Released on J-STAGE: January 26, 2023
    RESEARCH REPORT / TECHNICAL REPORT FREE ACCESS

    J.L. Meriam was appointed to the University of Missouri in 1904 and guided experiments as the principal of the University of Missouri Elementary School for about 20 years from 1905 to 1924. These experiments were investigated by John Dewey and Evelyn Dewey and subsequently featured in School of Tomorrow. Meriam created a curriculum that is very different from traditional school programs divided into subjects. The curriculum created and implemented by Meriam consisted of four studies: "observation," "play," "stories," and "handwork." Despite the fact that Meriam created a curriculum that excluded traditional subjects in this way, graduates of the University of Missouri Elementary School outperformed public school graduates in terms of their marks and the ages.

    However, there is little prior research on Meriam’s experiments. Therefore, clarifying the details of the curriculum implemented by Meriam is an urgent issue. In this study, we elucidated a part of the curriculum focusing on "stories," one of the four studies in the curriculum developed by Meriam. Meriam was aware of the problem in education at the time of many students not attending school. Truant students lived indolent lives outside school, engaging in delinquency.

    Many adults also led indolent lives after work, indulging in immoral forms of leisure. In order to break through the current state of society, Meriam needed to teach children how to spend their leisure hoursat school. Meriam focused on reading during a period of leisure. Reading can be enjoyed while also acquiring knowledge from a wide variety of worlds. Reading can also be enjoyed while learning culture. Therefore, Meriam placed "stories" as part of the curriculum with the main purpose of fostering an attitude of reading for enjoyment.

    However, without the guidance of a teacher, children only read the type of books they like. Meriamstated that teacher guidance is essential to keep children interested in a wide variety of books. Meriam encouraged children to become interested in a wide variety of books by having the children introduce books to each other.

    Through "stories," Meriam sought to achieve character development tomake the children better, happier, and more competent through a school education that helped children to adjust themselves to real life. Then, he positioned the "stories" in the curriculum to broaden the scope of that adjustment. Meriam also emphasized that children should acquire culture through reading during the "stories" time. These efforts by Meriam, attempting to acquire knowledge and culture simultaneously even while being a child- centered curriculum, are surely a valuable example of their time.

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