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Bierdz, Brad – Power and Education, 2021
This exploration takes a look at how students in higher education are disempowered through regimes of social power that are always already extant and ubiquitous within educational regimes. Moreover, this exploration pays particular interest and attention to students in higher education because in many cases throughout relevant research, these…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Empowerment, Power Structure, Philosophy
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Philip J. Rosenbaum; Richard E. Webb – Journal of College Student Mental Health, 2024
Responding to the call for papers on "The Future of College Student Mental Health," we analyze the current "crisis" in college student mental health, and we discuss how it is co-constructed by our students and we who are the faculty and the administrators. We identify three factors: (1) A shift from offering value-based…
Descriptors: Mental Health, College Students, Crisis Management, Transformative Learning
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Burgess-Jackson, Keith – Journal of Educational Issues, 2020
I argue that it is degrading (and therefore insulting) for university administrators to refer to students as "customers" or "consumers" and to refer to instructors as "vendors" or "service-providers." There is nothing inherently wrong with economic analysis, much less with economics as an academic…
Descriptors: College Administration, Administrator Attitudes, College Students, Negative Attitudes
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LeMaster, Benny; Hummel, Greg – Communication Education, 2018
In this response, the authors critically engage bullying, which they understand as an intersectional cultural performance of/for power in relational context. They offer embodied experiences as individuals who survived bullying, performed bullying, bully, and who perpetuated institutionalized through curriculum and policy. Certainly, bullying holds…
Descriptors: Bullying, Freedom of Speech, Power Structure, Victims
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Angela Kehler; Roselynn Verwoord; Heather Smith – International Journal for Students as Partners, 2017
The concept of Students as Partners (SaP) has much merit; however, further reflection on the power embedded in daily SaP processes and relationships is needed. In this article, we use the SaP model articulated by Healey, Flint, and Harrington (2014) to examine three reflections of SaP in practice from two different Canadian post-secondary…
Descriptors: Partnerships in Education, Student Role, College Students, Power Structure
Zhu, Wuhan – RELC Journal: A Journal of Language Teaching and Research, 2012
This paper is motivated by the premise that little is known about the use of requestive strategies in request emails in Chinese English-as-a-Foreign-Language (EFL) context. Specifically, the paper examines and compares requestive strategies in request emails between two groups of university students, namely English majors (EM) and non-English…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Interlanguage, English (Second Language), Pragmatics
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Shafer, Gregory – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2012
Complaints from students are rare at the college level, but when they do happen, it offers a priceless opportunity to explore the value system of those students and encourage them to write about their beliefs and the alienation they are experiencing. While a majority of the students take writing as a requirement and seek only to earn the requisite…
Descriptors: College English, Fear, Writing Assignments, College Students
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Parmegiani, Andrea – Language Learning Journal, 2010
The notion that language is not simply a politically neutral medium of communication, but a social practice that determines power relations and shapes subjectivity has become widely accepted in critical language and literacy studies. Within any socio-linguistic community, certain ways of using language are considered "proper,"…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Student Attitudes, Language Attitudes, Language Usage
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Stengel, Barbara – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2008
This essay is a response to Barbara Applebaum's essay, "Engaging Student Disengagement: Resistance or Disagreement?" in which Applebaum explores privileged university students' "disengagement" when asked to confront institutionalized oppression. Applebaum analyzes and recommends Lynn Weber Cannon's rules for classroom discourse…
Descriptors: Advantaged, College Students, Classroom Communication, Power Structure
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Brooks, Julia G. – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2007
Each semester, Julia G. Brooks writes "silence=agreement" on the board during a discussion of socialization in her Introductory Sociology classes, and invites students to discuss their initial responses to this statement. Inevitably, there are students who agree with the statement outright, claiming "If people have something to say…
Descriptors: Democracy, Socialization, Sociology, Introductory Courses
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Podis, JoAnne; Podis, Leonard – College English, 2007
In higher education, issues of "in loco parentis" have been most often discussed in connection with campus administrative policies. College writing teachers need to reflect, however, on the ways they conceivably exercise parental authority in their own classrooms, through such models as the Stern Father and the Nurturing Mother. (Contains 26…
Descriptors: School Responsibility, Student Rights, Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Booth, Wayne C. – Academe, 1994
It is suggested that college teachers are in a position of substantial power with students because of the nature of their work, and that the traditional taboo on sexual relationships with students has less to do with morality than with the effectiveness of teaching and the mentor relationship. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Students, Higher Education, Mentors
Rost, Joseph C.; Cosgrove, Thomas J. – Campus Activities Programming, 1987
Political skill is critical to the success of any leader, and the political dimension of leadership can no longer be omitted from students' training. An understanding of politics and the ability to use political strategy are critical dimensions of leadership. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Students, Decision Making, Higher Education, Leaders
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Eccles, Tim – Language, Culture and Curriculum, 1995
Describes the development of quantity surveying as a third level discipline and the role of professional bodies in determining its cultural orientation. The article examines the conflict between professional standards and market forces and concludes that the contract on offer to surveying students commits them to a monocultural world view. (33…
Descriptors: College Students, Course Content, Course Objectives, Cultural Pluralism
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Dye, Linda; Bing, Robert – Educational Record, 1990
How a college governs itself has the potential for building consensus among faculty, administrators, students, and trustees, but hierarchical governance works against positive collegiality in a scholarly community. A model developed by Sherry Arnstein involving levels of citizen participation in urban planning can be adapted to describe governance…
Descriptors: Administrators, College Administration, College Faculty, College Students
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