Publication Date
In 2025 | 5 |
Since 2024 | 31 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
John I. Liontas | 2 |
Abdullah D. Alenezi | 1 |
Annelie Ott | 1 |
Anton Vydra | 1 |
Ashley Rose Mehlenbacher | 1 |
Ashley Yoon Mooi Ng | 1 |
Ben Eltham | 1 |
Bianca Thoilliez | 1 |
Brad Mehlenbacher | 1 |
Cara Shipp | 1 |
Carolyn Eckert | 1 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Reports - Evaluative | 31 |
Journal Articles | 29 |
Books | 1 |
Speeches/Meeting Papers | 1 |
Education Level
Higher Education | 5 |
Postsecondary Education | 5 |
Secondary Education | 2 |
Adult Education | 1 |
Grade 9 | 1 |
High Schools | 1 |
Junior High Schools | 1 |
Middle Schools | 1 |
Audience
Practitioners | 1 |
Teachers | 1 |
Location
Australia | 2 |
Canada | 2 |
China | 2 |
Asia | 1 |
Denmark | 1 |
Germany | 1 |
Saudi Arabia (Riyadh) | 1 |
United Kingdom | 1 |
United States | 1 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Anton Vydra – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2024
The aim of this paper is to explore how the history of images and conceptual metaphors resulting from them that we use in educational reflections are formed regardless of if they are problematized in practical life. Insight into history shows how these images are shaped not only by our own experiences and by the context of our lives, but also by…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, History, Culture, Education
Bianca Thoilliez – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2024
This essay begins with the premise that Italo Calvino's Memos serve as a fundamentally educational proposition. Each of his lectures can be regarded as a substantive proposal, encouraging a revaluation of our contemporary world through unconventional forms of knowledge, especially considering the challenges posed by the new millennium. The essay's…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Teaching Methods, Educational Quality, Educational Philosophy
Kathy L. Guthrie; Daniel M. Jenkins – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2024
This article provides an overview of the leadership learning framework (LLF) and insight into how this framework was developed. The shift from focusing on teaching to the learning of leadership to developing programs in both curricular and co-curricular spaces is amplified in this model. The six aspects of the LLF are discussed using a steering…
Descriptors: Leadership Training, Figurative Language, Learning Processes, Program Development
Lucinda McKnight; Cara Shipp – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to share findings from empirically driven conceptual research into the implications for English teachers of understanding generative AI as a "tool" for writing. Design/methodology/approach: The paper reports early findings from an Australian National Survey of English teachers and interrogates the…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Writing Strategies, English Instruction, Language Usage
Melinda Lanius – PRIMUS, 2024
In this paper, I analyze the impact of culture and metaphor on cryptology education. I will compare and contrast the historically grounded metaphors of cryptology-is-warfare and encryption-is-security to a set of counter-metaphors: cryptology-is-privacy and encryption-is-communication. Using this explicit understanding of conceptual metaphor, I…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Technology, Coding, Information Security
Richard Jordan; Thomas M. Ward – International Journal of Christianity & Education, 2024
We make two interventions in two evolving scholarly literatures. First, we show how fractal metaphors escape a recurring dichotomy in Christian pedagogical scholarship, the either/or of alienation from one's object of study versus union with it in "an act of love." Second, we try to replace recent interdisciplinary work's emphasis on…
Descriptors: Christianity, Religious Education, Imagination, Alienation
José Luis Rodríguez Illera – Digital Education Review, 2024
The article reviews some of the relationships between AI and education, emphasizing the metaphors used, the difficulties in finding points of agreement, as well as aspects of the social criticism that is made of AI (e.g. considering that it can be a form of unwanted deviation). AI appears as one more case of technology that comes to improve…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Thinking Skills, Ethics
Ashley Rose Mehlenbacher; Sara Doody; Carolyn Eckert; Brad Mehlenbacher – Written Communication, 2024
Rhetorical figures of speech provide important analytical frames to chart how arguments operate within genres and within genre ecologies. Varieties of the figure prolepsis allow for the rendering of future time or fact in the present, which can be a powerful rhetorical inducement toward social and political action. In this article, we examine how…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Figurative Language, International Organizations, Climate
Deb Verhoeven; Ben Eltham – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
Universities and management consultants are locked in a "danse macabre." We turn to the vampire genre to elaborate on the relationship of consulting companies to the university sector, focusing on the University of Alberta in Canada and Monash University in Australia. We are academics with long experience of the consequences of change…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, Consultants, Organizational Change
Maricela León; Catherine Lemmi; Quentin Sedlacek; Nickolaus Alexander Ortiz; Kimberly Feldman – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2024
This commentary proposes the metaphor of "languaging-as-practice" in science education as an alternative to "language-as-tool" metaphors. Describing language as a tool implicitly positions language as static and unchanging and assumes that named languages are distinct and bounded entities. In contrast, describing languaging as…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Figurative Language, Science Education, Linguistics
Luke Peh Lu Chang; Shamas ur Rehman Toor; Leong Y. Jonathan – European Journal of Education (EJED), 2024
Interdisciplinary studies can create synergy across various fields, allowing for knowledge in a previously specialized area to support other disciplines. A number of scientific theories and laws have been applied in other domains to explain the latter's phenomenon; the adaptation of Newton's Gravitational Law for studies of bilateral trade,…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Language Usage, Figurative Language, Administrator Education
Melanie Nind; Sadhbh O'Dwyer; Marta Cristina Azaola – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2025
This article explores the use of the circle as a shape metaphor in qualitative and education research and particularly in research designs. Circles dominate the shape metaphors found in the literature and the paper argues that this is because circles have key features that align well with designing and conducting qualitative research. Circles…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Educational Research, Cooperation, Communities of Practice
Kuttybayev Shokankhan; Kassym Balkiya; Issayeva Zhazira Isayevna; Koblanova Aiman; Moldagali Bakytgul – Novitas-ROYAL (Research on Youth and Language), 2024
This comparative study looks into the image of the wolf in Genghis Aitmatov's "Plakha" and Jack London's "White Fang." For this purpose, first, the concept of the wolf in fiction is discussed, and the representation of wolves in these two texts is analyzed. This study explores the relationship between wolves and human beings as…
Descriptors: Novels, Imagery, Animals, Fiction
William Kuehnle – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2024
When confronted with the ineffable, poets turn to metaphor. Similarly, philosophers of education often employ metaphors and analogies to explain the functions of education (e.g., schools are families, machines, prisons, etc.), and, more specifically, the role of educators. Teachers have been described as prophets, liberators, and midwives, which,…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Figurative Language, Logical Thinking, Role of Education
Sicong Chen – Comparative Education, 2024
While historically and ideologically peripheralised in modern Chinese politics, traditional culture has been discursively rehabilitated by the Chinese communist regime in recent years. Existing literature on this phenomenon tends to focus on the politicisation of culture, that is, how Chinese culture, particularly the Confucian tradition, is…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Asian Culture, Citizenship Education, Confucianism