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Showing 1 to 15 of 37 results Save | Export
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Daly, Jim – Australian Universities' Review, 2020
This article questions the use of the term 'siloed' to describe certain degrees or subjects in the Australian university curriculum. Education Minister Dan Tehan used the term as part of a justification of a re-set of funding priorities for university education from 2021 which he announced in June 2020. The Minister partly turned his argument on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Curriculum, Undergraduate Study, Humanities
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Snaza, Nathan – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2017
This article is a response to Hugo Letiche's "Bewildering Pedagogy," an extended critique of many of Snaza's published texts. In it, Snaza selected four important points of disagreement and elaborated four tensions between Letiche's claims and his own present thinking--tensions that all turn on ontological and epistemological axioms…
Descriptors: Politics, Humanism, Definitions, Altruism
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Frances, Raelene – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2016
This article supports Bérubé's conclusion regarding the intellectual health of humanities scholarship. However, it argues that the case of "contingent faculty"--or academics with short-term or casual contracts--is in many respects different in Australia to the situation he outlines for the US. Whilst a variety of funding pressures have…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Humanities, Scholarship
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Martino, Andrew – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2015
In a world that no longer privileges thinking, Andrew Martino writes here that we might need to consider what we are asking of our students--and why--when we ask them to think. This article presents a declaration of how Martino thinks honors education can serve as a resistant force against the increasing encroachment of a wholly utilitarian…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Humanities, Role of Education, Educational Objectives
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Allsup, Randall Everett – Music Educators Journal, 2014
This article seeks to reignite debate about the purpose of a university music education. Taking inspiration from Randall Thompson's 1935 investigation of the role of music preparation in U.S. colleges and universities, an analogous call is made for a less vocational approach to the study of music. The author claims that the music education…
Descriptors: Music Education, Humanities, Human Capital, Teaching Methods
Immerman, Stephen D. – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2014
The cost and the value of higher education, the short- and long-term impact of student debt, the role of career preparation, and accountability for student outcomes are the subject of intense and increasing examination and debate. As challenging as these times may be, it is still imperative to maintain access, be cost effective, be contemporary in…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Access to Education, Educational Trends, College Readiness
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Lemberger, Matthew E. – Journal of Humanistic Counseling, 2012
In his extension of the humanistic vision, Hansen (2012) recommends that counseling practitioners and scholars adopt operations that are consistent with his definition of a multiple-perspective philosophy. Alternatively, the author of this article believes that Hansen has reduced the capacity of the human to interpret meaning through quantitative…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Research Methodology, Humanistic Education, Humanism
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Grant, Barbara M. – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2008
Hegel's master and slave is a significant archetype for graduate research supervision. The master-slave relation vividly exemplifies the hierarchical bond that ties supervisor and student together. Such a confronting view of supervision provides a counterbalance to contemporary emphases on equality between supervisor and student. In what follows,…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Humanities, Supervisor Supervisee Relationship, Supervisors
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Baggi, Dennis L. – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2007
There are two main claims in this article. First, that the classic pillars of engineering education, namely, traditional mathematics and differential equations, are merely a particular, if not old-fashioned, representation of a broader mathematical vision, which spans from Turing machine programming and symbolic productions sets to sub-symbolic…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Engineering, Science Education, Modern Mathematics
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Stevenson, John; Yashin-Shaw, Irena; Howard, Peter – Journal of Vocational Education and Training, 2007
This paper examines data drawn from interviews with homeless people who were undertaking a "Clemente" programme offered by the Australian Catholic University in the Vincentian Village in East Sydney. The "Clemente" programme, conceptualised by Shorris, is based on the belief that an education in the humanities empowers people…
Descriptors: Homeless People, Figurative Language, Humanities, Vocational Education
Lehmann, Winfred P. – IDEAL, 1987
When computers first became available, scholars in the humanities made little use of them. Language applications were introduced by non-linguists. By contrast, numerical applications were pursued widely in the physical sciences, engineering, and business. Only recently have computer languages and hardware been developed for managing human…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Computer Oriented Programs, Computers, Humanities
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Stearns, Peter – Liberal Education, 1991
Developments in humanities scholarship are moving in surprisingly congruent directions. Far from competing with proper attention to pedagogy, they provide solid bases for curricular coherence and teaching effectiveness. New integrative themes crossing disciplinary lines in humanities, focusing here on history, can help fulfill several humanities…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Higher Education, Humanities, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Lagemann, Ellen Condliffe – Harvard Educational Review, 2005
Ellen Lagemann focuses on developments within the history of education to examine questions about the role of humanities research in the study of education--an issue which has plagued education scholarship since its inception. In this article, Lagemann demonstrates that scholars of education have sought to base their work on factual or…
Descriptors: Schools of Education, Humanities, Educational Research, Educational History
Brandt, Ronald S., Ed. – 1981
Evaluation of a middle school humanities program is the focus of this report. It explains how to identify information needs and set priorities, how to obtain information from a variety of sources, and what to do with the data collected in terms of formulating recommendations for the school board. The variety of evaluation approaches presented are…
Descriptors: Curriculum Evaluation, Data Collection, Evaluation Methods, Humanities
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Proctor, Robert E. – Liberal Education, 1991
If higher education is to have a coherent curriculum and a coherent way of thinking about the world, it may need to study premodern ways of thinking for both insights and the courage to think in new ways. The tradition of the humanities, which originated in fifteenth-century Italy, can help. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Curriculum, Core Curriculum, Educational Philosophy, Higher Education
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