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Peter M. Nelson – Critical Education, 2025
This essay places David Graeber's consistent focus on imagination and possibilities into conversation with social studies education. In a sociopolitical climate characterized by neoliberalism, militarized borders, and political censorship of social studies teaching and learning in P-12 schools, it is crucial that social studies teachers and…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Democracy, Educational Philosophy, Neoliberalism
Franchi, Leonardo; Davis, Robert – Journal of Catholic Education, 2021
Critical reflection on the curriculum offered in the Catholic school is a valuable addition to wider dialogue on the nature of education and schooling. It enables the Church's educational agencies to offer a distinctive vision of education to the diverse range of students who freely participate in its educational ventures. In Catholic thinking,…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Churches, World Views, Religious Education
Shih, Yi-Huang – International Journal of Education and Practice, 2020
Teaching students to appreciate the beauty of life in the world through aesthetic education, using a variety of teaching principles to extend their aesthetic experience, will promote "aesthetic intelligence" for children in Taiwan. This can enrich their aesthetic literacy, and give them a desire to perceive and appreciate beautiful…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Teaching Methods, Aesthetics, Intelligence
Literacy Research: Theory, Method, and Practice, 2021
This article explores the concept of literacy futurisms as guided by the 2019-2021 Scholars of Color Transitioning into Academic Research Institutions cohort, who conceptualize themselves as part of an emergent literacy research collective. Drawing on the knowledges of our ancestors and children, we offer dimensions of a framework-in-the-making…
Descriptors: Literacy, Futures (of Society), Educational Philosophy, Code Switching (Language)
Botstein, Leon – Liberal Education, 2018
Few subjects have suffered as much as the liberal arts from the power of stale rhetoric, hollow appeals to tradition, and journalistic misrepresentation. Leon Botstein, begins this article by saying that together, these three factors have generated and legitimated public skepticism about the liberal arts. A liberal arts education (which is rarely…
Descriptors: Liberal Arts, Educational Attitudes, Educational Philosophy, Misconceptions
Fettes, Mark – Democracy & Education, 2013
Three variations of experience identified in the educational literature entail different ways of thinking about and developing learners' imaginations. The relationship between these different imaginative modes resembles shifts between different kinds of understanding in Kieran Egan's theory of imaginative development. From this theoretical…
Descriptors: Experience, Value Judgment, Imagination, Development
Ayers, Rick; Ayers, William – Teachers College Press, 2011
Education at its best is about opening doors, opening minds, and inviting students to become powerful choice-makers as they forge their own pathways into a wider world. While many teachers long for teaching to be something transcendent and powerful, they all too often find themselves teaching obedience and conformity. This dynamic book--by two…
Descriptors: Imagination, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Guidelines, Educational Philosophy
Swaine, Lucas – Educational Theory, 2012
The ideal of personal autonomy enjoys considerable support in educational theory, but close analysis reveals serious problems with its core analytical and psychological components. The core conception of autonomy authorizes individuals to employ their imaginations in troubling and unhealthy ways that clash with sound ideals of moral character.…
Descriptors: Democracy, Personal Autonomy, Psychological Characteristics, Moral Values
Leopold, David – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
The aims of education, and the appropriate means of realising them, are a recurring preoccupation of utopian authors. The utopian socialists Robert Owen (1771-1858) and Charles Fourier (1772-1837) both place human nature at the core of their educational views, and both see education as central to their wider objective of social and political…
Descriptors: Role of Education, Educational Philosophy, Imagination, Social Environment
den Heyer, Kent; Fidyk, Alexandra – Educational Theory, 2007
The historical fiction novel straddles the factual and the fictive recreation of past motivations that animate historical events. Through reading a work of historical fiction, Ursula Hegi's novel "Stones from the River," Kent den Heyer and Alexandra Fidyk offer a theoretical consideration of the following questions and their classroom…
Descriptors: Novels, Imagination, Ethics, History Instruction
Bolin, Paul E. – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2009
Through the presentation of three historical accounts, this article explores the roles imagination and speculation may play within the writing and study of history. By looking at these three incidents, each drawn from the history and historiography of art education over the past 150 years, through a perspective that embraces the value of utilizing…
Descriptors: Art Education, Historiography, Art History, Historical Interpretation
Hillmann, Paula J. – Online Submission, 2004
Are creativity and imaginative thinking impeded by the emphasis that many American schools place on cooperative learning and collaborative thinking today? This paper explores past and present philosophies concerning individualism and creativity as they relate to education in the USA. A person's ability to individuate is based on the premise that…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Elementary Secondary Education, Educational Philosophy, Individualism
Oberski, Iddo; McNally, Jim – Teaching and Teacher Education: An International Journal of Research and Studies, 2007
Teaching has moved gradually from being seen as an art or craft to an evidence-based techno-rational profession. However, within Steiner-Waldorf schools, teachers are largely autonomous and seen, like their pupils, as always "coming into being", through the development of an objective imaginative faculty. This perspective is derived from Steiner's…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Scientific Methodology, Educational Philosophy, Educational Principles
Anderson, Doug – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2005
Drawing on Charles Peirce's descriptions of his correspondence course on the "Art of Reasoning," I argue that Peirce believed that the study of logic stands at the center of a liberal arts education. However, Peirce's notion of logic included much more than the traditional accounts of deduction and syllogistic reasoning. He believed that the art…
Descriptors: Required Courses, Correspondence Study, Logical Thinking, Liberal Arts