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Bleazby, Jennifer; Thornton, Simone; Burgh, Gilbert; Graham, Mary – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
Despite the scientific consensus, climate change continues to be socially and politically controversial. Consequently, teachers may worry about accusations of political indoctrination if they teach climate change in their classrooms. Research shows that many teachers are using the 'teaching the controversy' approach to teach climate change,…
Descriptors: Climate, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Place Based Education, Culturally Relevant Education
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Jenny Ritchie – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
This paper considers 'democracy' with reference to education in the (neo)colonial context of Aotearoa (New Zealand). It discusses impacts of the western project of colonisation, arguing for the need to counter damaging hegemonic discourses such as white supremacy and racism that have underpinned and fuelled its operation. It identifies…
Descriptors: Ecology, Environmental Education, Colonialism, Neoliberalism
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Keri Facer – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
Climate change has been called both a 'slow emergency' and an 'urgent crisis', it creates tensions between human and non-human temporalities, it asks some communities to 'speed up' and demands others slow down, and requires choices between present needs, historical responsibilities and future consequences. If students are to understand and…
Descriptors: Climate, Imagination, Educational Practices, Time Perspective
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Forrest, Kristy – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
The entropic state that engulfed the East Coast of Australia in the first eight months of 2020 followed thirty years of uninterrupted economic growth and 10 years of tenuous federal governments divided on the question of climate change. The twin geophysical crises of catastrophic bushfires and the COVID-19 pandemic have led to a public reckoning…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy, Foreign Countries, Natural Disasters
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Latecka, Ewa – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
In this article I shall reflect on the issue of humanising pedagogy, taking a view that dehumanisation, in general, comes from two kinds of oppression. I shall argue that, apart from oppression of the political type, tertiary education is also a victim of another type of oppression which contributes to its dehumanisation, viz. the oppression…
Descriptors: Humanism, Teaching Methods, Power Structure, Political Attitudes
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Harrison, Neil – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
Many great cultures of the world have recognised the impossibility of teaching. Governments in various colonial countries continue to spend huge sums of money on 'closing the gap' in Indigenous education, yet national assessment figures would support the claim that teaching is indeed an impossibility. This paper draws on some of Biesta's recent…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Human Body, Indigenous Populations, Self Motivation
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O'Sullivan, Nan – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2019
This research parallels Tongan academic Hufanga 'Okusitino Mahina's assertions in the 1994 Contemporary Pacific article Our Sea of Islands, that 'People are thought to walk forward into the past and walk backward into the future, both taking place in the present, where the past and the future are constantly mediated in the ever-transforming…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Pacific Islanders, Futures (of Society), Sustainability
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Wu, Jinting – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2017
The article examines two forms of public pedagogies in a rural region of Southwest China-tourism and ethnic songs-to illustrate their contested roles in transforming local relations with natural and built environment. While tourism development daily alters the village landscape by spatial intervention, demolition, and construction, the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Geographic Regions, Indigenous Knowledge, Ecology
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McKnight, Anthony – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2015
The cultural invasion of Yuin Country in Australia not only colonized the Yuin people and Yuin Country itself, but also contributed to non-Aboriginal people's continual colonized journey of disconnecting self from Mother Earth. Cultural awareness is a process driven by Western theories informed by the colonial dualism that functions on separation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Policy, Cultural Awareness
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Engels-Schwarzpaul, A.-Chr. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2015
"The Western tradition", as passe-partout, includes fringe figures, émigrés and migrants. Rather than looking to resources at the core of the Western tradition to overcome its own blindnesses, I am more interested in its gaps and peripheries, where other thoughts and renegade knowledges take hold. It is in the contact zones with…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Indigenous Knowledge, Minority Groups, Foreign Countries
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Harrison, Neil – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2005
Following the first significant research into Indigenous methods of learning, it was argued that Indigenous students could learn western knowledge using Indigenous ways of learning. Subsequent research contradicted this finding to take the position that Indigenous students must learn western knowledge using western methods and so this set the…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Learning Strategies, Metalinguistics, Cognitive Style