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Showing 1 to 15 of 61 results Save | Export
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Seunghyun Lee – Educational Theory, 2025
Whether open-mindedness (OM) counts as an admirable epistemic aim of education has been a surprisingly contentious matter. Skeptics point out that OM is only contingently truth-conducive and that open-minded students may be maladaptive to the hostile epistemic environment outside school. Here, Seunghyun Lee contends that, while these critiques are…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Epistemology, Thinking Skills, Cognitive Processes
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Charity E. Flener Lovitt; Miriam Bertram; Dana Campbell; Avery Cook Shinneman; Martha Groom; Deborah Hathaway; Amy Lambert; Grace A. Lasker – Journal of Chemical Education, 2025
In the face of accelerating climate change, effective education is paramount to fostering informed citizens and enacting meaningful action. Effective climate instruction contextualizes content so that students are engaged emotionally (affect) and can translate science into action. This paper describes six courses that use integrated approaches to…
Descriptors: Climate, Environmental Education, Integrated Curriculum, Science Education
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Sylvia Rojas-Drummond; Ana Laura Trigo-Clapés; Ana Luisa Rubio-Jimenez; José Hernández; Ana María Márquez – Theory Into Practice, 2024
While prior research has established the benefits of dialogic teaching-and-learning practices, their widespread school implementation has proven challenging. How might research on dialogic education help teachers enrich their everyday practices? In this article, we adapt and apply an established conceptual framework to previously published…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Persuasive Discourse, Perspective Taking, Classroom Communication
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Fiona Maine – Theory Into Practice, 2024
This article argues that provisional language is important for creating a dialogic space between speakers, where ideas are open for discussion; where participants respect each other's viewpoints; and where the goal is to encourage and explore multiple perspectives. Whilst much of the research on children's talk in the classroom focuses on the…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Persuasive Discourse, Perspective Taking, Classroom Communication
Sara Karn – Canadian Journal of Education, 2023
Historical empathy involves a process of attempting to understand the thoughts, feelings, experiences, decisions, and actions of people from the past within specific historical contexts. Although historical empathy has been a rich area of study in history education for several decades, this research has largely taken place outside of Canada. In…
Descriptors: History, History Instruction, Empathy, Teaching Methods
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Michael B. Sherry; Mandie Bevels Dunn; Jessica O'Brien – Theory Into Practice, 2024
How might teachers and students deepen dialogic space in online discussions centered on race? This paper explores challenges of creating shared spaces of collective inquiry online across audio/visual/written modes. We explore why participants switch modes--e.g. from oral/visual participation to written chat--while participating in a synchronous…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Persuasive Discourse, Perspective Taking, Classroom Communication
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Chatelier, Stephen; Jackson, Liz – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
In recent times, schools have begun to focus on issues of wellbeing, engaging with ideas from various fields such as positive psychology. It is in this context that there is a growing interest in humility, rather than this interest having emerged from debates in moral philosophy and moral education. However, to the extent that education for…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Educational Philosophy, Moral Values, Ethics
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Susan T. Gardner – Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis, 2019
When citizens with different value sets and perspectives find ways to communicate with a give-and-take reasoned dialogue, they can chart a path forward that is potentially flourishing for all. Reflecting on alternative strategies when reasoned dialogue is not within one's reach, however, is both necessary and urgent. In this article, the author…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Teaching Methods, Dialogs (Language), Perspective Taking
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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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Altorf, Hannah Marije – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2019
This article starts from the observation that Socratic dialogues in the Nelson-Heckmann tradition can create a sense of belonging or community among participants. This observation has led me to the current argument that Socratic dialogue offers an alternative to more prominent forms of conversation, which I have called 'discussion' and 'discourse…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Questioning Techniques, Classroom Communication, Perspective Taking
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Standish, Paul – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
The topic of testimony has gained increased prominence in recent years in epistemology, where it is typically taken to refer to the possible acquisition of knowledge through the understanding and acceptance of someone else's judgement. There is no doubt that learning in this way is a prominent feature of education. This conception of testimony…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Films, Literature, Teaching Methods
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Verducci, Susan – Educational Theory, 2019
Open-mindedness is typically considered an intellectual virtue that brings humans into (closer) contact with reality and its complexities. In this essay, Susan Verducci expands the ways we typically think of cultivating open-mindedness in classrooms to include the practice of engagement with the visual and performing arts. Working with the arts…
Descriptors: Perspective Taking, World Views, Ethics, Teaching Methods
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Thomas, Helena – English in Education, 2019
The idea that education should value imagination has lost currency over the last few decades and this has implications for teachers as well as pupils. Situated in a system of increased accountability, teachers in England are arguably less able than ever to act on their freedom and to imagine curricular and pedagogical possibilities beyond those…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Imagination, Teaching Methods, Writing Instruction
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Wolbert, Lynne; Schinkel, Anders – Oxford Review of Education, 2021
Wonder-full education recognises experiences of wonder as lying at the heart of learning and education. If we accept the premise that wonder is important for/in education, what should characterise wonder-full education? This paper clarifies what it is like to wonder, how the aims of wonder-full education are best described, and it discusses three…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Learning Motivation, Curriculum Design, Teacher Competencies
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Russell, Laura – Journal of Communication Pedagogy, 2018
This essay explores unique practices for teaching relational ethics through storytelling. Drawing from my experiences teaching an advanced undergraduate Narrative Ethics seminar, I explain how my students responded to a storytelling unit through which they examined their values and storytelling ethics. I interweave observations from my teaching…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Story Telling, Teaching Methods, Values
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