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Uzun, Levent – Teaching English with Technology, 2017
The aim of the present study was to raise awareness related to the postmodern educational philosophies, and to the opportunities provided by the emerging technologies and conditions of our era with regard to foreign language (FL) education. The main discussion was that educators and educational practices are not in complete harmony with the recent…
Descriptors: Postmodernism, Educational Philosophy, Technology Uses in Education, Educational Technology
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Jourian, T. J. – Educational Forum, 2015
Higher education educators commonly understand social identities, including gender, to be fluid and dynamic. Lev's (2004) model of four components of sexual identity is commonly used to demonstrate the fluidity of sex, gender, and sexuality for individuals, but it does little to address the fixedness of those constructs. Through a multipronged…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Social Attitudes, Identification (Psychology), Sexuality
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Dziubinski, Julian P. – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2015
As a result of the "fragmented and largely isolated traditions of pedagogy" in the vastly diverse further education (FE) sector, initial teacher training (ITT) courses have been difficult to design and implement. Nevertheless, the historical requirement for FE teachers to possess a teaching qualification--although now removed--has raised…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Models, Preservice Teachers, Professional Continuing Education
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Cullen, Roxanne; Hill, Reinhold R. – Education Sciences, 2013
Rather than viewing curriculum as linear, a post-modern, learner-centered curriculum design is a spiral or recursive curriculum. Post-modernism provides a much less stable foundation upon which to build a model of student learning, a model that recognizes and even celebrates individual difference and one that is supported by research on how people…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Integrated Curriculum, College Programs
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Ehrich, Lisa Catherine; English, Fenwick W. – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 2013
This article follows the lead of several researchers who claim there is an urgent need to utilize insights from the arts, aesthetics and the humanities to expand our understanding of leadership. It endeavours to do this by exploring the metaphor of dance. It begins by critiquing current policy metaphors used in the leadership literature that…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Educational Policy, Figurative Language, Dance
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Nora, Krystia; Stewart, Marjorie; Condran, Jeffrey; Talerico, Katie; Santelli, Karen – CEA Forum, 2010
It is our belief that the story of how the composition faculty convinced administration to move from a rubric-based assessment model to a more qualitative model is both interesting and beneficial for others facing similar challenges. In the following five articles, Katie discusses how the experience of such assessment affected the faculty, Jeff…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Freshman Composition, Student Placement, Writing Evaluation
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Erickson, Mary; Villeneuve, Pat – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2009
This descriptive study investigates the bases used to support judgments of artworks by preservice art teachers at two large universities. Bases art teachers might use to judge artwork range from personal preferences, to cultural expectations, to criteria drawn from values of various artworlds. The 26 preservice teachers in this study used a…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, Art Teachers, Evaluation Criteria