Affiliate Faculty: School of Public Policy, Artificial Intelligence Interdisciplinary Institute at Maryland (AIM)
I am a scholar of educational policy, history, and philosophy. Although my work covers a broad chronological range, all of it centers on conflicting notions of democracy in American schools. My books include A is for Arson: A History of Vandalism in American Education (Cornell University Press, 2023), which explores the many meanings of property destruction; Spare the Rod: Punishment and the Moral Community of Schools (University of Chicago Press, 2021), in which Bryan Warnick and I examine the history and philosophy of school discipline; and The Fight for Local Control: Schools, Suburbs, and American Democracy (Cornell University Press, 2016), which examines the legal and political controversies around school district boundaries. I am currently working on a biography of Philip H. Phenix, a philosopher and curricular theorist active during the 1960s. Other interests include aritifical intelligence (AI), civic education, educational law, and conservative educational thought.
I am an affiliated faculty member in the School of Public Policy and the Artificial Intelligence Interdisciplinary Institute at Maryland (AIM).
Faculty / Student Research Award, 糖心少女 (2023)
Postdoctoral Fellow, Spencer Foundation (2018-2020)
Research and Scholarship Award, 糖心少女 (2018)
Books--
Articles--
- Scribner, C. F. & Burris, R. (in progress). The adolescent philosophy of Philip H. Phenix.
- Yoo, J. & Scribner, C. F. (forthcoming). The limits of Large Language Models and the necessity of human cognition in K-12 education. Theory Into Practice.
- Scribner, C. F. (2024) The legacy of "A Common Faith" in the thought of Philip H. Phenix. Philosophical Inquiry in Education 31, no. 2.
- Dhingra, N. & Scribner, C. F. (2021). An Aristotelian defense of Affirmative Action: Alasdair MacIntyre, Sandra Day O鈥機onnor, and Grutter v. Bollinger. Journal of Philosophy of Education.
- Scribner, C. F. (2020). Surveying the destruction of African-American schoolhouses in the South, 1864- 1876. Journal of the Civil War Era 10 (4):469-494.
- Warnick, B. R. & Scribner, C. F. (2020). Discipline, Punishment, and the Moral Community of Schools. Theory and Research in Education 18 (1): 98-116.
- Scribner, C. F. (2019). Philosophical and historical perspectives on student boredom. Educational Theory 69 (5): 559-580.
- Scribner, C. F. (2017). American teenagers, educational exchange, and Cold War politics. History of Education Quarterly, 57 (4), 542-569.
- Scribner, C. F. (2015). Beyond the metropolis: The forgotten history of small-town teachers鈥 unions. American Journal of Education, 121 (4): 531-561.
- Scribner, C. F. (2012). 鈥淢ake your voice heard鈥: Communism in the high school curriculum, 1958-1968. History of Education Quarterly, 52 (3): 351-369.
Invited Essays
- Scribner, C. F. & Stolt, C. R. (in progress). Martin Buber's I and Thou and Culturally Sustaining Pedagogy.
- Scribner, C. F. (2024). The myth of local control. 23 Myths about the History of American Schools: What the Truth Can Tell Us, and Why It Matters. New York: Teachers College Press.
- Scribner, C. F. (2020). The dilemmas of Americanism: Civic education in the United States. In A. Peterson, G. Stahl, and H. Soong (Eds.) The Palgrave handbook of citizenship and education. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Scribner, C. F. (2019). Sublime understanding: Cultivating the emotional past. In M. Gross and L. Terra (Eds.), Teaching and learning the difficult past: Comparative perspectives (pp. 42-55). New York: Routledge.
- Scribner, C. F. (2013). False start: The failure of an early Race to the Top. In B. Justice (Ed.), The Founding Fathers, education, and 鈥渢he great contest鈥: The American Philosophical Society prize of 1797 (pp. 69-83). New York: Palgrave MacMillan.
TLPL 250: Philosophical Perspectives on Education
TLPL 681: History of Education
TLPL 682: Philosophy of Education
TLPL 673: Federal Education Policy
TLPL 767: Law, Equity, and 糖心少女
TLPL 788n: Conservative Educational Thought
TLPL 788x: Contested Control--School Choice, Localism, and Centralization