Meira Levinson Book Talk & Signing - "Ethics in Your World" Book Series

Date: 

Friday, April 29, 2016, 3:00pm to 4:00pm

Location: 

Harvard Book Store, 1256 Mass. Ave., Cambridge MA 02138

The Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics and Harvard Book Store are pleased to welcome Meira Levinson, Faculty Committee Member, Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, and Professor of Education, Harvard Graduate School of Education, for a discussion of Dilemmas of Educational Ethics: Cases and Commentaries.

This is the third event in a new speaker series, co-presented with the Harvard Book Store, featuring leading thinkers taking on tough problems that matter to us all.

Meira Levinson is a normative political philosopher who writes about civic education, multiculturalism, youth empowerment, and educational ethics. In doing so, she draws upon scholarship from multiple disciplines as well as her eight years of experience teaching in the Atlanta and Boston Public Schools. Her most recent books include the co-edited Making Civics Count (Harvard Education Press, 2012) and No Citizen Left Behind (Harvard University Press, 2012). The latter book shows how schools can help tackle a civic empowerment gap that is as shameful and antidemocratic as the academic achievement gap targeted by No Child Left Behind. In 2013, it was awarded the Michael Harrington Award from the American Political Science Association, the Exemplary Research in Social Studies Award from the National Council for the Social Studies, and a Critics Choice Award from the American Educational Studies Association. It also won the 2014 North American Society for Social Philosophy Book Award. Levinson fosters civic education scholarship at Harvard as co-convener of HGSE’'s Civic and Moral Education Initiative. Levinson has been awarded a 2014 Guggenheim Fellowship to support her newest project, on “Justice in Schools.” In this work, she combines philosophical analysis and school-based case studies to illuminate the complex dimensions of evaluating, achieving, and teaching justice in schools. The project is intended to give educators tools for making just decisions in their own practice, and also to push political theorists to develop theories of justice that are robust enough to address complex school-based dilemmas. This project, like her previous research, reflects Levinson’'s commitment to achieving productive cross-fertilization— without loss of rigor —among scholarship, policy, and practice.

This event is free; no tickets are required. The book will be for sale at the event.