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Bronwyn A. Sutton – Qualitative Research Journal, 2024
Purpose: School climate strikes are opening spaces of appearance, becoming differently active forms of public pedagogy where new and previously unthought collective climate action is possible. This inquiry contributes to understanding school climate strikes as important forms of climate justice activism by exploring how they work as public…
Descriptors: Climate, Strikes, Activism, Environmental Education
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Jinqi Xu – Palgrave Studies in Global Higher Education, 2025
This book provides a unique perspective on internationalization in higher education, focusing on the experiences of Chinese business students in Australia. It challenges conventional views by investigating the nuances of Chinese students' learning, rather than just addressing learning style differences and language barriers. The author's personal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Foreign Students, Business Education, Undergraduate Students
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Ailie McDowall – Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 2024
When Indigenous and non-Indigenous postgraduate research students start researching Indigenous topics, how can we best prepare them for the task ahead? In this article, I describe the approach taken by one regional Australian university to support research students with Indigenous topics through a Master of Philosophy (Indigenous). Drawing on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Graduate Students, Masters Programs, Indigenous Populations
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Grierson, Elizabeth M. – Australian Educational Researcher, 2021
Ten years have passed since the first meetings of Arts advisors to start identifying the priorities and approaches that the Arts may take when formalised into a national curriculum structure. Now the time has come for reviewing the past to inform the future. Now is the time for reviewing, interrogating and challenging the "Australian…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Visual Arts, Art Education, Foreign Countries
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Malone, Karen; Tran, Chi – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
Humans are living in damaged landscapes within a new geographical epoch known as the Anthropocene. The COVID-19 outbreak fuels uncertainty, instability, and ambiguity for humans. This viral disaster has been blamed for losing and further exacerbating ecological imbalance, and prompts a need to re-examine multispecies relations and, in particular,…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Diseases, Climate
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Eilam, Efrat – Studies in Science Education, 2022
Globally climate change (CC) is scarcely addressed in school curricula, and school graduates are mostly uneducated about climate change. The purpose of this paper is to make a case for conceptualising CC as a discipline, and to further argue why CC should be included in school curricula as a disciplinary-subject. An initial examination of CC in…
Descriptors: Climate, Change, Intellectual Disciplines, Educational Change
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Mills, Terence; Mills, Frances – Australian Mathematics Education Journal, 2020
The concept of correlation arises in Unit 3 of General Mathematics in the Australian Curriculum (ACARA, 2010-present). University students will meet the topic in applied statistics subjects in courses on business, psychology, research methods as well as in mathematical subjects on probability and statistics. When students are introduced to the…
Descriptors: Statistics Education, Causal Models, Correlation, Philosophy
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Reed, Christopher – Journal of Religious Education, 2021
In response to a religiously diverse and culturally enriched Australia, this paper will discuss the instance of one Catholic primary school which has taken up the challenge of engaging in Religious Education through integrating the beliefs and practices underlying the KU Leuven's Hermeneutical Communicative Model to Religious Education. This…
Descriptors: Hermeneutics, Models, Catholic Schools, Elementary School Students
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Forrest, Kristy – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
The entropic state that engulfed the East Coast of Australia in the first eight months of 2020 followed thirty years of uninterrupted economic growth and 10 years of tenuous federal governments divided on the question of climate change. The twin geophysical crises of catastrophic bushfires and the COVID-19 pandemic have led to a public reckoning…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy, Foreign Countries, Natural Disasters
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Besley, Tina; Jackson, Liz; Peters, Michael A. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
This paper focusses on our concerns about revelations about sexual harassment in universities and the inadequate responses whereby some universities seem more concerned about their own reputations than the care and protection of their students. Seldom do cases go to criminal court, instead they mostly fall within employment relations policies…
Descriptors: Sexual Harassment, Higher Education, College Faculty, College Students
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Quay, John – Policy Futures in Education, 2021
Education faces a dilemma: policy and practice are primarily humanist in orientation, and yet the environmental challenges education hopes to confront require moving beyond humanist perspectives -- to posthumanist awareness. Recent policy advances in Victoria, Australia, highlight the empowerment of students. Yet widening the scope of education…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational Policy, Educational Practices, Student Empowerment
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Peers, Chris – Global Studies of Childhood, 2020
This article contributes to a growing debate within the field of early childhood education about the concept of 'belonging'. It continues from earlier discussions that commented on the adoption of Belonging as a key term in the development of a national curriculum for the early years in Australia in 2009, as well as increasingly common references…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, National Curriculum, Educational Philosophy, Language Role
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Corcoran, Tim; Claiborne, Lise; Whitburn, Ben – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2019
Life's paradoxes present across the varied landscapes we traverse in education and serve as formidable barriers in attempts to secure ethical consistency in practice. The presence of paradox invites educational researchers and practitioners to diligently examine our available choices, particularly when fixed by dominant ways of knowing/being. This…
Descriptors: Attitudes toward Disabilities, Logical Thinking, Philosophy, Foreign Countries
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Somerville, Margaret J.; Powell, Sarah J. – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2022
In this paper we propose the concept of 'becoming-with' in relation to the experience of the catastrophic fires in the summer of 2019-2020 in Australia, and their implications for research into young children's response to bushfires, and their learning about bushfire recovery, which resulted in the development of an arts-based project to explore…
Descriptors: Well Being, Environmental Education, Natural Disasters, Foreign Countries
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Peers, Chris – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2018
The theory of belonging as it arises in the theme of the Australian "Early Years Learning Framework" suggests a complex arrangement of philosophical concepts, which deserve rigorous explication and interrogation. In this article, the author draws out some of the most pertinent implications of 'belonging' for the theory of early learning…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Philosophy, Early Childhood Education, Risk
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