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Karen Gravett; Carol A. Taylor; Nikki Fairchild – Teaching in Higher Education, 2024
This article engages posthuman theory to propose a rethinking of the theory and practice of relational pedagogies within higher education (HE). There has been renewed emphasis within HE discourses on the significance of relationships within learning and teaching as a means to offer a counter-view to an uncaring marketised HE system. This article…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Learning Processes, Higher Education, Feminism
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Lorraine Bennett; Ali Abusalem – Athens Journal of Education, 2024
Still rebounding from the impact of the global pandemic, the higher education sector is being challenged even further by the next wave of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies. These technologies have the power to generate in a matter of seconds, quality text, images, music and coding responses to questions or prompts entered into an online…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Influence of Technology, Information Technology, Higher Education
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Andy Markwick; Michael J. Reiss – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2024
Today's school students are faced with complex and harmful global challenges that they will need to address. The ability to think critically and creatively, to work in interdisciplinary teams and to understand the importance of a healthy planet for all life will be key to success. Education, including school education, has a major role in helping…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Curriculum Development, Teaching Methods, Educational Change
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Andy Markwick; Michael J. Reiss – Curriculum Journal, 2025
Today's school students are inheriting complex and harmful global challenges that are potentially irreversible and which they will need to address. The ability to think critically and creatively, to work in interdisciplinary teams and to understand the importance of a healthy planet for all life will be needed for success. Education has a major…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Curriculum Development, Global Approach, Teaching Methods
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Jairo I. Fúnez-Flores – Curriculum Journal, 2024
This essay reviews and builds upon Aníbal Quijano's contribution to decolonial theory to sketch out what I refer to as the geopolitics and coloniality of curriculum, broadly understood as an imperial doctrine and a pedagogical mode of domination aimed at producing a modern/colonial subjectivity. It argues that the geopolitics and coloniality of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Colonialism, Violence, Decolonization
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Nopparat Ruankool – British Journal of Religious Education, 2024
Following the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic and its rapid spread around the world, the normality of people's lives was disrupted. Education was not immune from this. In many countries, to limit the spread of the infection, students were required by the government to study remotely. This social isolation in a limited space generated concerns…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Religious Education, Teaching Methods
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Omar Faruque – Journal of Mathematics Education at Teachers College, 2024
This article analyzes a popular arithmetic textbook, "Arithmetic: For the Use of Schools and Colleges," authored by Jadav Chandra Chakravarti, to examine the contents and pedagogies in the text for how mathematics was taught and learned from the end of the nineteenth century through the first half of the twentieth century in colonial…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Mathematics Education, Colonialism, Educational History
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Lai, Yvonne; Strayer, Jeremy F.; Ross, Andrew; Adamoah, Kingsley; Anhalt, Cynthia O.; Bonnesen, Chris; Casey, Stephanie; Kohler, Brynja; Lischka, Alyson E. – ZDM: Mathematics Education, 2023
In 1908, Felix Klein suggested that to mend the discontinuity that prospective secondary teachers face, university instruction must account for teachers' needs. More than a century later, problems of discontinuity remain. Our project addresses the dilemma of discontinuity in university mathematics courses through simulating core teaching practices…
Descriptors: Secondary School Teachers, Teacher Competencies, Teaching Methods, College Mathematics
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Julie A. Reuben – History of Education Quarterly, 2024
Fear for the future of democracy in the 1930s and 1940s led university educators to redefine the purpose of general education as preparation for democratic citizenship. This mobilized social scientists to engage in curricular reform and experiment with progressive pedagogical practices in new general education courses. These courses have been…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Democracy, Higher Education, United States History
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Chie Noyori-Corbett; David P. Moxley – Journal of Social Work Education, 2024
Recognizing the current turmoil resulting in the displacement of large numbers of people across the globe, the continuing persecution of groups within their countries, and the necessity of responding effectively and globally to human vulnerability, the authors argue for the elevation of human rights content within the social work curriculum. The…
Descriptors: Social Work, Civil Rights, Counselor Training, Refugees
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Dizon, Arnie G. – History of Education, 2023
CIPP, which stands for Context, Input, Process and Product, an evaluation model, is one of the most widely applied curriculum evaluation models in education. This document-based study sought to determine the historical development of CIPP as a curriculum evaluation model. Here, the reasons why the CIPP evaluation model was conceptualised are…
Descriptors: Educational History, Curriculum Evaluation, Models, Curriculum Development
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JoAnn S. Lee; Michael Wolf-Branigin – Journal of Social Work Education, 2023
The Grand Challenges for Social Work were introduced by the American Academy for Social Work & Social Welfare in 2016, which are social problems that are interrelated and "exceedingly complex". We discuss the relevance of complexity theory, operationalized by complex adaptive systems (CAS), to the Grand Challenges. CAS moves beyond…
Descriptors: Social Work, Social Problems, Counselor Training, Curriculum Development
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Daniel Moulin – Journal of Moral Education, 2024
Inspired by Aristotle and Goffman this article considers how the study of virtue acquisition may be pursued through an observational theorising about social interactions in institutions. Adapting Goffman's and Harré's notions of moral order and moral career, it proposes character education to be a dialogic process requiring negotiation between…
Descriptors: Ethics, Interpersonal Relationship, Philosophy, Moral Development
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Daniel Töpper – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
This essay starts with the classical assertion of Niklas Luhmann that there exist no pedagogic technologies, but takes up parts of his conceptual understanding of technology to describe and understand mass schooling in the nineteenth century. It is argued that using his terminology and focusing on "technologies of schooling" brings into…
Descriptors: Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Teaching Guides, Educational Sociology, Curriculum Development
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Roberto Franzini Tibaldeo – SpringerBriefs in Education, 2023
This book explores the contribution to education contained in the theoretical work and teaching practice of Matthew Lipman (1923-2010) and Ann Margaret Sharp (1942-2010). Their long-lasting cooperation gave rise to the well-known "Philosophy for Children" (P4C) curriculum, which is nowadays globally widespread. P4C basically relies on…
Descriptors: Children, Philosophy, Theory Practice Relationship, Holistic Approach
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