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Cynthia Ballenger – Schools: Studies in Education, 2025
This short article is a response to the reading wars currently engaging attention in the popular press and among school districts, parents, and teachers. It attempts to portray the variety and the nuances of teaching reading pedagogy in contrast to a one-size-fits-all approach focused either on phonics or on whole language. It further encourages…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Phonics, Reading Strategies, Teachers
Matthew S. McCluskey – Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, 2025
In an effort to scale success, many schools codify various practices to replicate them across schools. While such codification and replication can help scale success, scaling success often comes with numerous negative externalities such as a reduction of autonomy and burdens on successful educators. Based on real events and educators, this case…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Barriers, Scaling, Success
Archana Sridhar – Innovative Higher Education, 2025
Academic freedom is understood as a set of individual protections and community practices for faculty to assess quality, promote truth-seeking, and advance the common good through research, teaching, and other expression. It is also understood as a set of institutional principles for universities when it comes to decision-making about academic…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Civil Rights, Institutional Autonomy, College Faculty
Jeffrey R. Di Leo – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
This article argues that it is only possible to teach without dread today if one does not value academic freedom. For these people, it is perfectly acceptable to be told what course they will teach, the content of those courses, and the modality of instruction. If one does not care about such things, then neoliberal academe with regard to teaching…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Academic Freedom, Professional Autonomy, COVID-19
Olivera Kamenarac – Ethics and Education, 2025
In line with scholarly critiques on the pervasive impacts of neoliberalism in early childhood education and care (ECEC), this article examines how neoliberal regimes of truth utilise a distinct form of curiosity (i.e. 'institutionalised curiosity') to produce subjects and subjectivities aligned with widespread neoliberal narratives of education.…
Descriptors: Ethics, Neoliberalism, Early Childhood Education, Criticism
David Benoit – Canadian Journal of Science, Mathematics and Technology Education, 2024
Contributing to a scientific field is not always a scenic route. One cannot always act in the world according to the posted signs others have thought constituted relevant information. In doing so, one would prevent itself from taking uncharted roads with possibly much to discover. This autoethnographic journey of a didactician of mathematics tells…
Descriptors: Didacticism, Thinking Skills, Skill Development, Mathematics Teachers
Dave Yan; David Bright; Howard Prosser – Australian Educational Researcher, 2025
This article addresses the ethical question concerning how educational research helps immigrant teachers gain authority and ownership over their self-understanding and self-becoming. By critically examining prior research and analysing the dominant discourse surrounding this specific group, we highlight the limitations and ethical implications of…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Teacher Characteristics, Poetry, Authors
Orit Schwarz-Franco – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2024
Should education serve external goals, or should it be non-instrumental? In this paper, I recognize a tension between these two views with respect to the question of the end and the means in education, and I suggest conceptual and practical ways to handle this tension. The paper comprises two parts: the first part discusses the problem, and the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices, Professional Autonomy, Educational Objectives
Ge Wei – Advances in Research on Teaching, 2024
This chapter presents three Chinese teachers' narrative accounts about how they live in dilemmatic spaces due to excessive entitlement. Still, the teachers move forward with transformative agency. The thick description of the three teacher participants has been reported elsewhere as the narratives of Lee -- a math teacher, Ping -- a Chinese…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Expectation, Foreign Countries, Professional Autonomy
Scott Gelber – Review of Higher Education, 2024
Scholars have analyzed debates about controversial faculty speech inside and outside of the classroom, but none have paid close attention to the facet of academic freedom related to professors' decisions about daily teaching methods. This omission, along with obstacles to enacting pedagogical norms, has caused the scholarly community to overlook…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Academic Freedom, Teaching Methods, Professional Autonomy
Bruce Macfarlane – Oxford Review of Education, 2024
This article provides a conceptual reformulation of Merton's scientific ethos widely known by the acronym CUDOS (i.e. communism, universalism, disinterestedness and organised scepticism). While Merton perceived the threat to the autonomy of science as coming from "outside" the walls of academe, mainly in the form of nationalism and…
Descriptors: Behavior Standards, Sciences, Universities, Humanities
E. Adah Miller; L. Berland; T. Campbell – Journal of Science Teacher Education, 2024
There is an urgent call for science and STEM teachers to incorporate practices for equity-centered environments, social justice-orientations, criticality and other practices that promote system change. Yet this demand occurs against the backdrop marginalization of teachers' from having a say in the planning, teaching, and assessments in their own…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, STEM Education, Teachers, Equal Education
Jane Calvert – MIT Press, 2024
Where does science and technology studies (STS) belong? In "A Place for Science and Technology Studies," Jane Calvert takes readers through eight different rooms--the laboratory, the conference room, the classroom, the coffee room, the art studio, the bioethics building, the policy room, and the ivory tower--investigating the…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Scientific Research, Biology, Social Science Research
Toby Greany; Tom Cowhitt; Andy Noyes; Cath Gripton; Georgina Hudson – Journal of Educational Change, 2025
This article sets out an original conceptual framework for place-based professional learning by teachers and schools in decentralised education systems. High quality Continuing Professional Development and Learning by teachers is associated with improvements in children's outcomes. Most research in this area focuses on evaluating formal…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Educational Quality, Administrative Organization, Outcomes of Education
Idalis Villanueva Alarcón; José A. Muñoz – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2024
This paper provides an overview of the literature exploring the realities of contingent faculty at U.S. universities and colleges with a focus on STEM. We focus our review of the literature by exploring the experiences of Latinx/é contingent faculty in STEM and propose a series of conceptual frameworks that can be used to explore the hidden…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, STEM Education, Faculty, Adjunct Faculty
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