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Showing 1 to 15 of 22 results Save | Export
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Grace Enriquez; Victoria Gill; Gerald Campano; Tracey T. Flores; Stephanie Jones; Kevin M. Leander; Lucinda McKnight; Detra Price-Dennis – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to provide a transcript of a dialogue among literacy educators and researchers on the impact of generative artificial intelligence (AI) in the field. In the spring of 2023, a lively conversation emerged on the National Council of Research on Language and Literacy (NCRLL)'s listserv. Stephanie initiated the…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Literacy, Teachers, Personal Narratives
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Öhman, Anders – Educational Theory, 2020
In this article, Anders Öhman discusses Gert J. J. Biesta's concept of the risk of education and what it could mean for the study of literature in the classroom. The article's point of departure is Bakhtin's theory of the utterance. The utterance, for Bakhtin, has to be embodied, that is, it has to be governed by a purpose: it must be uttered by…
Descriptors: Risk, Educational Philosophy, Literature, Educational Theories
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Zumthurm, Tizian; Krebs, Stefan – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2022
Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, historians -- along with archivists and other stakeholders -- began to initiate digital memory banks, inviting members of the public to upload personal stories, pictures, videos, or other material connected to the pandemic and its impact on everyday life. This article describes how platforms from Western and Central…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Historians, Educational History
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Hassan, Robert – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
Pervasive digitality reveals us as analogue creatures that are unprepared for a world and a logic generated increasingly through automation. Promulgated by capitalism, digitality has created a new form of alienation, one far more powerful and comprehensive than that envisaged by either Marx or Lukács in the analogue-industrial age. Digital…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Automation, Information Technology, Alienation
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Cytrin, Yitzhak – Journal of Education and Training Studies, 2018
This article aims to examine the difficulties, misgivings, and criticism that exist in academia and the field of education, regarding creating history curricula relevant and significant to twenty-first century society and individuals; how compulsory history curricula can be suited to the methodology and didactics of training students as history…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, History Instruction, Teaching Methods, World Views
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Reveley, James – E-Learning and Digital Media, 2013
The opportunities social media provide for agential expressions of subjectivity and experiential learning, relative to social media's role in reproducing digital-era capitalism, are the subject of keen debate. There is now a burgeoning academic literature which suggests that social media users are, to a greater or lesser degree, alienated by…
Descriptors: Social Networks, Alienation, Computer Mediated Communication, Role
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Weiland, Steven – Global Education Review, 2015
Educational relations between societies and cultures that begin with benevolent intentions can come to be seen as threats to national autonomy and local preferences. Indeed, side by side with the growth since the first years of this century of Open Educational Resources (OER) there has been worry about their impact on global educational…
Descriptors: Open Education, Educational Resources, Online Courses, Educational Development
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Williamson, Robert, Jr. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2013
Twitter offers an engaging way to introduce students to reader-oriented interpretation of the Bible. The exercise described here introduces students to the idea that the reader has a role in the production of a text's meaning, which thus varies from reader to reader. Twitter enables us to capture the real-time thoughts of a variety of…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Biblical Literature, Teaching Methods, Reader Response
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Bennett, Andy – Youth Studies Australia, 2011
The academic study of youth culture has changed markedly in the past two decades. The early 1990s saw a "cultural turn" as the sociological focus moved from "institutional and structural features of society to the study of culture". Andy Bennett begins this article with a critical evaluation of the "cultural turn" and its impact on the field of…
Descriptors: Criticism, Cultural Influences, Information Technology, Popular Culture
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Fogleman, Jay; Niedbala, Mona Anne; Bedell, Francesca – Behavioral & Social Sciences Librarian, 2013
How do educators leverage students' fluency with ubiquitous information and communication sources to foster a scholarly digital ethos? This article describes a blended learning environment designed to engage first-year students in 21st-century emerging forms of scholarship and publication. The authors describe an effort to reverse the millennials'…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Criticism, Blended Learning, Scholarship
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Dockter, Jessica; Haug, Delainia; Lewis, Cynthia – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2010
We show how coauthor, Delainia Haug, and her students use Web 2.0 technologies in educational and empowering ways. We offer an account of Delainia's purposes for her curriculum, along with units of study and students' responses to this curriculum. We argue that the curriculum, which focused on media analysis and production, engaged students--many…
Descriptors: Internet, Social Networks, Creativity, Information Technology
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Haugsbakk, Geir; Nordkvelle, Yngve – European Educational Research Journal, 2007
This article focuses on how we perceive new technology and technological development within educational settings, and seeks to establish a critical link between the rhetoric of information and communications technology (ICT) and what Biesta called "the new language of learning". Within this "new language" the learner is a…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Criticism, Educational Technology, Information Technology
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Yang, Min – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2008
This paper offers a critique of the Chinese philosophy of online distance learning as a means of building a lifelong learning society. Literature about lifelong learning and its implications for online distance learning is reviewed. Documents, reports and research papers are examined to explore the characteristics of the Chinese philosophy of…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Educational Theories, Lifelong Learning, Discourse Analysis
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Goodison, Terry – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2002
Provides a critical analysis of two reports issued by the British Educational Communications and Technology Agency (BECTa) on the relationship between information and communication technology (ICT) and attainment levels of primary school children in national tests. Questions the assumptions upon which they are based and the role of teaching staff.…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Criticism, Educational Technology, Elementary Education
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Avis, Peter – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2002
This response to the previous paper on information and communication technology and attainment levels of primary school students as reported by the British Educational Communications and Technology Agency (BECTa) is critical of the author's approach to the reports. Emphasizes that they were preliminary reports, commissioned by the government. (LRW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Criticism, Educational Technology, Elementary Education
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