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Technology’s Dilemma

Agricultural Colleges between Science and Practice in Germany, 1860-1934

by Jonathan Harwood (Author)
©2005 Monographs 288 Pages

Summary

In recent decades critics in several countries have complained that education in agriculture, engineering and medicine has drifted away from an earlier practical orientation, becoming increasingly irrelevant to actual needs. Since existing histories have surprisingly little to say about the causes of such ‘academic drift’, this book develops a model of institutional dynamics which explains why different institutions have evolved closer to the worlds of ‘science’ or ‘practice’.
The model is based on a study of German agricultural colleges and the study surveys the evolution of the agricultural curriculum during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as it swung back and forth between the poles of science and practice. It makes a comparative analysis of five colleges in the decades around 1900, some of them more science-oriented and others more practical, and follows the gradual transformation over half a century of two colleges in Bavaria which had to compete for recognition and funding. The wider relevance of these findings is also explored, not only for the history of agricultural education in the United States and Britain but also for engineering, medicine and management education, past and present.

Details

Pages
288
Year
2005
ISBN (PDF)
9783035303742
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039102990
DOI
10.3726/978-3-0353-0374-2
Language
English
Publication date
2005 (March)
Keywords
Deutschland Landwirtschaftliches Studium education /agriculture Bavaria's Agricultural Institution agricultural curriculum history /agriculture academic drift German agricultural college Geschichte 1860-1934 professional education
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2005. 288 pp.

Biographical notes

Jonathan Harwood (Author)

The Author: Jonathan Harwood was born in the United States and studied biology and sociology at Wesleyan (Connecticut), Harvard and Bristol Universities. He is the author of The Race Concept (1975, with Michael Banton), Styles of Scientific Thought: the German Genetics Community, 1900-1933 (1993) and a number of articles on the history of German science, biology, and plant-breeding. He is currently Reader in the History of Science and Technology at the University of Manchester (UK).

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290 pages