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Showing 1 to 15 of 17 results Save | Export
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Elia Delphi – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2024
In this article, I make sense of my encounters with the language of objectivity as a student, tutor, mentor, and researcher. I rely on Dorothy E. Smith's conceptualisation of the ethic of objectivity, a practice that requires the student to devalue their embodied experience while ripping it from their experiential knowledge, which in turn they…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Perspective Taking, Power Structure, Personal Narratives
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Fritzsche, Lauren – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2022
Geographers have long advocated for decolonizing geographic research and curriculum to produce forms of anti-oppressive knowledge and learning. While these calls have become more prominent in recent years, these conversations are rarely translated into a reflection on pedagogy and how we integrate anti-oppressive teaching in the classroom. This…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Power Structure, Geography Instruction, Metacognition
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Carozzi, Giulia – Educational Action Research, 2023
For Foucault, discourses shape people's knowledge and inform how they act in a society. Power over others is legitimated by dominant discourses, a means through which hegemony discloses itself: a given group is entitled to oppress another. As a parent-educator based in Italy, I see such discourses manifesting themselves in actions and speeches. As…
Descriptors: Action Research, Educational Theories, Power Structure, Western Civilization
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Moyaert, Marianne – Religious Education, 2019
As interreligious educators we challenge our students to engage in hermeneutical self-reflection. In this article, I turn the tables, and engage in an exercise of reflective practice: I look back on my own pedagogy, consider my own religiously diverse classroom, and ask in what way the theoretical framework from which I approach interreligious…
Descriptors: Hermeneutics, Religious Education, Religious Cultural Groups, Reflective Teaching
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Loveridge, Judith; Cornforth, Sue – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2014
The processes of gaining consent for educational and social research with children and young people have become increasingly complex. A variety of influences contribute to this complexity. In this paper, we use post-structural concepts to focus on the influence of three co-existing and interweaving perspectives: protectionist, participatory and…
Descriptors: Perspective Taking, Educational Research, Social Science Research, Postmodernism
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Aspelin, Jonas – Education Inquiry, 2014
Teaching is today often described as a matter of adjusting to the individual lives of students. Building on the premises of three educational theories, mainly Martin Buber's concept of 'inclusion', the article aims to confront this idea and show how pedagogical attitude can be perceived from a relational perspective. A model is constructed in…
Descriptors: Individualized Instruction, Student Centered Learning, Inclusion, Educational Theories
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Gordon, John; Ramdeholl, Dianne – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2010
The Open Book, an adult literacy program in Brooklyn, from 1985-2002, remains, for many of the students and staff involved, a defining experience in their lives, a time that allowed them to see different possibilities, for themselves and society. In an attempt to preserve the field's collective historical memory, the authors in this chapter…
Descriptors: Adult Reading Programs, Adult Literacy, Models, Participative Decision Making
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Nagai, Chikako – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2010
In general education, European American values stand as the unacknowledged norm and are perceived as being culturally neutral or culture free. By recognizing European American culture and spirituality as one of many diversities, social work students may better identify biased values and expectations inherent in the traditional monocultural and…
Descriptors: Social Work, Professional Education, Clinical Experience, Culture
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Suhr-Sytsma, Mandy; Brown, Shan-Estelle – Writing Center Journal, 2011
In 1998, Catherine Prendergast observed that, although composition scholars sometimes identify a subject by race or ethnicity, "the legacy of racism in this country which participates in sculpting all identities--white included--is more often than not absent from the analysis of that writer's linguistic capabilities or strategies." Since then,…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Laboratories, Tutoring, Tutors
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Hastings, Wendy – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2010
This paper examines the methodological dilemmas associated with analytical framing as an aspect of the research process. Doing qualitative research potentially changes a researcher--changes their sense of self, who they think they are, who they want to become. The paper examines the ethical dilemma of what that change might mean--for the project,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preservice Teacher Education, Student Teaching, Placement
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Jacobson, Ronald B. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2007
To date, research on bullying has largely employed empirical methodologies, including quantitative and qualitative approaches. Through this research we have come to understand bullying as both a dyadic and peer group phenomenon, primarily situated in the heads (thinking) of those involved, or in a lack of skill or expertise, or in the delinquency…
Descriptors: Bullying, Peer Groups, Experience, Perspective Taking
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Hammersley-Fletcher, Linda – Management in Education, 2007
The Education Reform Act of 1988 introduced both a National Curriculum and a regime of inspection designed to ensure that schools were adequately meeting the demands of this curriculum. At the same time schools were being given greater autonomy through the increased powers of the governing body and open enrolment. Rather than add to the freedoms…
Descriptors: Educational Change, National Curriculum, Accountability, Moral Values
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Reitzug, Ulrich C. – Journal of School Leadership, 2008
The intersection and clash between prevailing norms of schooling and increasing sensitivity to diversity raises a host of previously ignored ethical considerations for school administrators. These ethical issues remain largely invisible to many school leaders and thus are addressed only minimally or inadequately. This paper explores ethical issues…
Descriptors: School Administration, Instructional Leadership, Ethics, Standards
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Witt, Norbert – Educational Research and Reviews, 2007
The statement in the title, what if Indigenous Knowledge contradicts accepted scientific findings (Fowler, 2000), is an expression of the dilemma people who research Indigenous Knowledge think they find themselves in when they are confronted with different interpretations of what it means to be human, or, as I may summarize it, with different…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Philosophy, Cultural Context, Indigenous Knowledge
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Webb, Patricia; Cole, Kirsti; Skeen, Thomas – College English, 2007
In this article, the authors call for tying service learning to feminist agendas, emphasizing civic activism involving true collaboration with communities. They report on a graduate seminar, "Feminism and Composition," at their own university that worked toward this goal by having students self-reflectively participate in local organizations that…
Descriptors: Service Learning, Feminism, Volunteers, Seminars
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