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Knupsky, Aimee; Caballero, M. Soledad – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2020
Research on Theory of Mind explores how we develop the capacity to understand that others have thoughts and feelings that differ from our own and how we are compelled to "read" them. However, a preponderance of evidence from the cognitive humanities and cognitive neurosciences tells us that our readings are often misguided or just plain…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Neurosciences, Misconceptions, Classroom Communication
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Zembylas, Michalinos – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2021
This essay draws on the concept of "agonistic emotions" and "affects" to think with some of the arguments of Chantal Mouffe's political theory and discusses what this means pedagogically in handling far right rhetoric in the classroom. To show the possibilities of this theorization of agonistic emotions and affects, the essay…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Educational Philosophy, Emotional Response, Teaching Methods
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Bonita Marie Cabiles – International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives, 2021
This article explores initial thinking about a pedagogy of discomfort for teaching in the context of cultural and linguistic diversity. To foster inclusive and socially just cultures of participation, contemporary classrooms need to attend to the subtle ways that taken-for-granted teaching practices marginalise diverse cultural and linguistic…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Cultural Differences, Classroom Communication, Cultural Background
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Ruitenberg, Claudia W. – Philosophical Inquiry in Education, 2015
This essay examines the concept of performativity in relation to what are perceived to be reasonable and unreasonable affective responses to discourse. It considers how discourse, especially in classrooms and other educational contexts, produces effects, and how it is that those effects are sometimes seen as attached to the discourse, and…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Educational Philosophy, Hidden Curriculum, Classroom Communication
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Thompson, Greg; Cook, Ian – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2013
This paper uses Deleuze and Guattari's concept of faciality to analyse the teacher's face. According to Deleuze and Guattari, the teacher-face is a special type of face because it is an "overcoded" face produced in specific landscapes. This paper suggests four limit-faces for teacher faciality that actualise different mixes of significance and…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Teacher Characteristics, Classroom Communication, Nonverbal Communication
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Walters, Sue – Ethnography and Education, 2014
This paper is a re-engagement with some ethnographic data, originally analysed using a sociocultural approach. It makes use of a recent proposal that Lacan's "mirror stage" when applied to an analysis of classroom settings and interactions can offer a fruitful way of explaining and understanding classroom lives, identities and…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Psychiatry, Sociocultural Patterns, Self Concept
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Achugar, Mariana – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2009
This article explores the construction of a bilingual professional identity in a bilingual creative-writing graduate program in southwest Texas by analyzing a classroom event and the participants' interpretation of it. In bilingual classrooms the resources available to construct professional identities include a large repertoire of linguistic…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Bilingualism, Creative Writing, Power Structure
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Barber, Mark – European Journal of Special Needs Education, 2008
Intensive Interaction was introduced to a special developmental school in Melbourne, Australia. The school had previously used behavioural and skills-based teaching approaches to underpin the teaching of students with severe/profound intellectual disabilities and autistic spectrum disorders. Video baselines of students involved in classroom…
Descriptors: Severe Mental Retardation, Autism, Interaction, Foreign Countries