In this 1960 article Isaiah Berlin compares Woodrow Wilson's emphasis on the need to educate university students for life in the real world with the difference between Oxford 'realism' and Cambridge 'idealism' in the nineteenth century. Oxford favoured a Wilsonian preference for general education over (but not to the exclusion of) pure scholarship, and Cambridge the cultivation of private life and personal relationships. Both universities were opposed to the excessive specialisation that Wilson deprecated. © The Isaiah Berlin Literary Trust 2004.
CITATION STYLE
Berlin, I., & Hardy, H. (2012). Woodrow Wilson on education. Research in Comparative and International Education, 7(3), 274–281. https://doi.org/10.2304/rcie.2012.7.3.274
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