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Jeong-Kyu Lee – Online Submission, 2025
The purpose of this study is to explore education fever and credentialism in South Korea from the perspective of higher education. To discuss the study logically, three research questions are stated. First, what is the concept of Korean education fever from cultural perspective? Second, what and how has been developed educational credentialism in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Credentials, Cultural Influences
Ryan Ziols; Kathryn L. Kirchgasler – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2024
This paper adopts a biopower lens to examine emergency declarations that posit race or racism as problems to be addressed through mathematics education. We argue that attending to "slow emergencies" of racism must avoid sustaining mathematics education as a self-evident cause and cure for societal problems. We analyze how declarations of…
Descriptors: Racism, Mathematics Education, Social Problems, Educational History
Claire Sutherland – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2024
In March 2022 the United Kingdom (UK) government published "Inclusive Britain: the government's response to the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities." This accepts the 'bad apple' understanding of racism but is incurious as to the historical context and existing power relations shaping racist attitudes, thereby creating a tension…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, European History, History Instruction, Race
Kit Heintzman – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2023
In the 1760s, France was the first European kingdom to formalise veterinary education. The world's first veterinary school was sponsored by Louis XV after receiving a proposal from equestrian and educator Claude Bourgelat. At the time, Bourgelat was a recognised expert on equine anatomy, medicine, and riding. The principal function of veterinary…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, European History, Veterinary Medical Education
Ridha Rouabhia – Dinamika Ilmu, 2024
Mainstream writing instruction risks marginalising non-dominant voices if not consciously adapted using critical multicultural frameworks. This study analyses Mary Lynn Rampolla's widely used "A Pocket Guide to Writing" in History through a Cultural-Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) lens, taking notes on voice, power dynamics, and…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Guides, Multicultural Education, History
Kazimierska-Jerzyk, Wioletta – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
Dissent has its own special place in art education. It has two stereotypical, polarized faces. The first is a classical institution modelled on Italian and French academies. As official places, they aimed at elevating art to the rank of science and making it an expression and instrument of power. The opposite image of the school is an oasis of…
Descriptors: Art Education, Educational Philosophy, Dissent, Moral Values
Ryan Ziols; Christopher Kirchgasler – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2024
This article examines the possibilities and limits of strategies directed toward racialized healing amidst declarations of pandemics and legislative attacks on public school teachers. We question what these strategies take as a self-evident truth: that race and racism can be conceptualized in terms of health and transparently addressed through…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Well Being, Racial Factors, Social Problems
Rhody-Ann Thorpe – Prism: Casting New Light on Learning, Theory & Practice, 2022
Universities in the English-speaking world may trace their origins to England, where the first universities of Oxford and Cambridge were established. These universities were, for centuries, the models for universities to come both in terms of structure and philosophy; and they also became a tool of British colonial policy. With the progression of…
Descriptors: Universities, Colonialism, Postcolonialism, International Relations
Jamila J. Lyiscott; Phillip A. Smith; Amber M. Neal-Stanley; Brooke Harris Garad; Limarys Caraballo; Jasmine Hoskins; Keisha L. Green; Derron Wallace – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2025
As educational justice scholarship addressing racial oppression continues to name the role of the spirit, there is a need for Black and Brown Christian educators and researchers to locate ourselves as grounded in the epistemologies and pedagogies of Christ as our spiritual home. This paper brings together eight Black and Brown Christian educators…
Descriptors: Christianity, Power Structure, Freedom, Personal Autonomy
French, Patrice; James-Gallaway, Chaddrick; Bohonos, Jeremy – Journal of Transformative Education, 2022
Intergroup dialogue (IGD) is a program for facilitating conversations about social identity, institutionalized and systemic oppression, social conflict, and social justice. This article examines how IGD can contribute to adult education's socially just goals by facilitating transformative learning. An initial review of the literature, followed by…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Interpersonal Communication, Social Justice, Identification (Psychology)
The Rise of the Individual Learner: Sociological Insights on the History of Student-Centred Learning
David Furtschegger – History of Education, 2024
Research on student-centred learning lacks analyses of sociohistorical developments. This article contributes to this niche by developing a sociologically designed draft of its major upheavals. Drawing on Foucault's genesis of governmental rationalities, it links the emergence of educational subjectivations to processes of structural change.…
Descriptors: Social History, Student Centered Learning, Sociology, Social Science Research
Sarah Godsell; Bongani Shabangu; Guy Primrose – Cogent Education, 2024
Assessment remains a power nexus in Higher Education, where remnants of coloniality pool. The power that assessment holds makes it an important site for decolonisation. The purpose of this article is to present an experiment, and open a discussion, on the decolonisation of assessment. We argue that bringing assessment into the decolonisation…
Descriptors: Postcolonialism, Universities, Educational History, Power Structure
Osman Gultekin – Journal of International Students, 2025
International education and the process of internationalization have evolved through distinct historical phases, each characterized by shifting global political outlooks and increasing complexity. International politics and the global power hierarchy have always played a significant role in shaping the development of international education and…
Descriptors: International Education, Politics, Power Structure, Student Mobility
Justice, Benjamin – History of Education Quarterly, 2023
Schooling in the United States has never been a public good, nor has "the public good" been its primary goal. Since its origins in the early nineteenth century, schooling has been a "white" good, designed to promote white advantage. Three mechanisms, among many, have been key to this process: the relationship of schooling to…
Descriptors: Education, Whites, Racial Factors, Racism
Kai Horsthemke – Ethics and Education, 2025
The latest buzz word within the intersecting terrain of postcolonial pedagogy and social and applied epistemology seems to be the notion of 'reparation' -- or, to be more precise, reparation pertaining to past and ongoing epistemic injustice and harm. Reparations are frequently taken to involve decolonisation of both education and knowledge. The…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Postcolonialism, Instruction, Justice