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Tillson, John – Educational Theory, 2023
In this paper, John Tillson defends an approach to deciding the aims and content of public schooling from the critique of Public Reason Liberalism. The approach that he defends is an unrestricted pairing of the Epistemic Criterion and of the Momentousness Criterion. On the Epistemic Criterion, public schooling should align students' credence with…
Descriptors: Public Education, Public Schools, Educational Objectives, Educational Principles
Ben Kotzee – Educational Theory, 2025
The debate about the ethics of belief is a classic and it has given rise to wide-ranging debates in epistemology, the philosophy of language, the philosophy of mind, as well as in ethics. In epistemology, the question is what the norms of belief are -- should one believe what is true, what is well-evidenced, what is pragmatic or what? -- and this…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Educational Principles, Ethics, Knowledge Base for Teaching
Norris, Trevor – Educational Theory, 2021
This article explores two questions: (1) Is education a unique and distinct discipline? (2) Is education anything other than the achievement of noneducational aims or objectives? In it, Trevor Norris examines how these two questions are interconnected, specifically analyzing how what we think about education as a distinct field of study informs…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories, Educational Objectives, Role of Education
Joldersma, Clarence W. – Educational Theory, 2017
Philosophers of education often focus their critique on issues such as neoliberalism, consumerism, pluralism, and so on, and they typically turn for solutions to what we might call the political: democracy, the public, cosmopolitanism, dissent. These critiques and solutions remain firmly connected to what Heidegger calls "the world," and…
Descriptors: Ethics, Educational Philosophy, Criticism, Social Responsibility
Waddington, David I. – Educational Theory, 2015
Critics like Leonard Waks argue that video games are, at best, a dubious substitute for the rich classroom experiences that John Dewey wished to create and that, at worst, they are profoundly miseducative. Using the example of "Fate of the World," a climate change simulation game, David Waddington addresses these concerns through a…
Descriptors: Video Games, Simulation, Educational Games, Educational Technology
Frank, Jeff – Educational Theory, 2011
This essay begins where Alasdair MacIntyre's "After Virtue" begins: facing a moral world in ruin. MacIntyre argues that this predicament leaves us with a choice: we can follow the path of Friedrich Nietzsche, accepting this moral destruction and attempting to create lives in a rootless, uncertain world, or the path of Aristotle, working to reclaim…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Ethics, Ethical Instruction, Educational Philosophy
Holma, Katariina – Educational Theory, 2011
The crucial epistemological question for formulating the principles that underlie moral education concerns the status of rationality and objectivity in ethics and education. In this essay Katariina Holma argues that the intertwined understanding of the concepts of education, ethics, rationality, and objectivity is built into our language and our…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Ethics, Values Education, Moral Values
Stitzlein, Sarah M. – Educational Theory, 2012
In this article Sarah Stitzlein highlights an educational right that has been largely unacknowledged in the past but has recently gained significance given renewed citizen participation in displays of public outcry on our streets and in our town halls. Dissent is typically conceived of as a negative right--a liberty that guarantees that the…
Descriptors: Dissent, Citizen Participation, Civics, Educational Philosophy
Newman, Anne – Educational Theory, 2012
Educational theorists frequently invoke rights claims to express their views about educational justice and authority. But the unyielding nature of rights claims presents a significant quandary in democratic contexts, given the tension between rights claims and majoritarian democracy. Educational theorists have given limited attention to this…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Democracy, Democratic Values, Educational Philosophy
Ben-Porath, Sigal – Educational Theory, 2012
The state's commitment to educating all children can be framed as a matter of human capital development, or the economic benefits accrued to individuals and society as a result of educational attainment; it can be framed as a matter of capabilities, or the development of functionings that enable human flourishing; and it can be framed as a matter…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Educational Attainment, Disabilities, Educational Policy
Harwood, Valerie – Educational Theory, 2010
Encouraging debate on inclusion and equity can meet with awkward silences, particularly across disciplinary boundaries. In disability studies, for example, it can be difficult to build dialogue with other disciplines; as a consequence, the different disciplinary groups within the field of education often end up working in their own "equity" silos.…
Descriptors: Opinions, Intellectual Disciplines, Interdisciplinary Approach, Disabilities
Schinkel, Anders – Educational Theory, 2010
Today, many liberal philosophers of education worry that certain kinds of education may frustrate the development of personal autonomy, with negative consequences for the individuals concerned, the liberal state, or both. Autonomy liberals hold not only that we should promote the development of autonomy in children, but also that this aim should…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Political Attitudes, Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories
Pitt, Alice – Educational Theory, 2010
When hopelessness and helplessness become recurring themes in teacher education scholarship, this signals a conceptual problem with the question of autonomy in the profession. In this essay, Alice Pitt argues that breakdowns of professional life belong to what is most subjective in the profession. Pitt opens her analysis of this conundrum by…
Descriptors: Social Life, Scholarship, Role of Education, Beginning Teachers
Biesta, Gert – Educational Theory, 2010
The idea of emancipation plays a central role in modern educational theories and practices. The emancipatory impetus is particularly prominent in critical traditions and approaches where the aim of education is conceived as that of emancipating students from oppressive structures in the name of social justice and human freedom. What is needed to…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Educational Theories, Democracy, Freedom
Simons, Maarten; Masschelein, Jan – Educational Theory, 2008
In this essay, Maarten Simons and Jan Masschelein reconsider the concepts "educationalization" and "the grammar of schooling" in the light of the overwhelming importance of "learning" today. Doubting whether these concepts and related historical-analytical perspectives are still useful, the authors suggest the concept "learning apparatus" as a…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Educational Philosophy, Role of Education, Government Role