Our Faculty

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715 B'way, Room 408
Tue: (2-5 by appt)
Wed: (2-5 by appt)
Thu: (2-4 by appt)

David Thornton Moore

David Thornton Moore

Associate Professor

B.A. 1969, Amherst College; M.S.W. 1971, Pennsylvania; Ed.D. 1977, Harvard

David Thornton Moore, an anthropologist of education and work, studies the process by which people learn outside of classrooms, especially in workplaces. He has done extensive research and writing on experiential learning, internships, and service learning at the high school and college levels. His work has been published in such journals as Harvard Educational Review, Anthropology and Education Quarterly, and Learning Inquiry. He coauthored Working Knowledge: Work-Based Learning and Education Reform (RoutledgeFalmer, 2004) and was named Researcher of the Year by the National Society for Experiential Education in 2004. He has given invited talks on experiential learning at such schools as Williams College, Princeton University, and Queens College and has twice been the keynote speaker at the Martha's Vineyard Institute on Experiential Education. His current research explores the relationship between learning in the workplace and learning in school, particularly the process by which one informs the other. His Gallatin courses have focused on the concepts of learning, experience, and community, as well as on research methods and the history of social thought; he also teaches a course on everyday life. He is one of the organizers of Gallatin's Community Learning Initiative, and he served for more than five years as the Associate Dean of the Gallatin School.