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Ashton, Heidi – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2023
For the last decade education policy in England has been underpinned by a dichotomisation of education into STEM versus Arts. The rationale is that STEM graduates gain more lucrative employment via the desirability of the 'STEM skills' which it is stated are increasingly in demand and imperative for economic prosperity. Through a literature review…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Art, Art Education, STEM Education
Francis Davis – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2024
The developing science of cathedral studies has focused mainly on Anglican cathedrals. The present study argues for drawing Catholic cathedrals into this field. Employing data gathered from the websites of the 22 Catholic cathedrals in England and Wales, alongside data gathered from the diocesan reports submitted to the Charity Commission, this…
Descriptors: Catholics, Churches, Web Sites, Institutional Mission
Thomson, Pat; Greany, Toby; Cousin, Susan; Martindale, Nick – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2023
The work of school leaders during lockdown has been emotionally charged and emotionally draining, affecting immediate well-being and longer term career plans. To communicate the emotions that we were told about and which were obvious during interviews with serving headteachers, we turned to arts-informed methods. We used poems made from…
Descriptors: Poetry, Art, Instructional Leadership, Teacher Attitudes
Lefroy, Rebecca – English in Education, 2018
This paper aims to explore whether the teaching of the abstract literary concepts of symbolism, narrative perspective and style to young readers can be made more effective by the study of art in an art museum context. The research is an interpretive qualitative case study exploring the learning of 6 participants within a class of 28 students aged…
Descriptors: Museums, Teaching Methods, Art, Case Studies
Komatsu, Kayoko – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2017
In both England and Japan, art education was viewed as having nothing to do with self-expression, but was considered to be an efficient means for industrial development. In England, it was designed to train the eyes and hands of artisans. The art critic Ruskin has often been referred to in the context of the transition to self-expression in the…
Descriptors: Educational History, Art Education, Foreign Countries, Art
Hickey-Moody, Anna – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2016
In this article, the author strengthens and develops the theoretical platform for her concept of little public spheres. Hickey-Moody does so in order to present the concept as a tool for theorists who want to consider the political significance of marginalized youth. The concept of little publics is a theoretical frame the author developed to show…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Youth, Political Influences, Self Concept, Political Attitudes
Wood, Margaret; Pennington, Andrew; Su, Feng – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2021
This paper examines and evaluates some aspects of the legacy of the West Riding of Yorkshire County Council and its long serving Chief Education Officer, Sir Alec Clegg, who held the post between 1945 and 1974. Against a subsequent political discourse of markets, choice and autonomy which portrays local authorities as the cause of poor educational…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Educational Practices, Educational Philosophy
Wilson, Anthony – Education 3-13, 2021
This paper is a re-examination of Louise Rosenblatt's seminal work of reader-response theory, The Reader, The Text, The Poem. I argue that poems are essentially social in nature and that they open up a space in which conversation and interpretation can take place. With Rosenblatt I argue that until a reader engages with a poem, bringing to it a…
Descriptors: Reader Response, Poetry, Teaching Methods, High Stakes Tests
Arnab, Sylvester; Clarke, Samantha; Morini, Luca – Electronic Journal of e-Learning, 2019
This article discusses the application of game design thinking as a learning process for scaffolding co-creativity in Higher Education based on the GameChangers initiative (gamify.org.uk) part-funded by the Higher Education Funding Council of England (HEFCE). Taking into account the relationship between play, technology and learning, the game…
Descriptors: Creativity, Video Games, Design, Teaching Methods
Grierson, Elizabeth – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2015
This article seeks to investigate art in public urban space via a process of activating aesthetics as a way of enhancing pedagogies of engagement. It does this firstly by addressing the question of aesthetics in Enlightenment and twentieth-century frames; then it seeks to understand how artworks may be approached ontologically and…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Teaching Methods, Epistemology, Art
Sarid, Ariel – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2017
The primary objective of this paper is to discuss the implications of applying Habermas's concept of self-critical appropriation for rethinking the structure of the modernist curriculum, specifically the organization of school subjects and instruction time devoted to each of them. To this end, the paper examines Habermas's differentiation between…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Philosophy, Sciences, Moral Values
Marshall, Bethan; Gibbons, Simon – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2015
This article considers a conundrum in research methodology; the fact that, in the main, you have to use a social science-based research methodology if you want to look at what goes on in a classroom. This article proposes an alternative arts-based research method instead based on the work of Eisner, and before him Dewey, where one can use the more…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Education, Research Methodology, Social Sciences
Porto, Melina – Language Learning Journal, 2021
This study reports on the evaluation of long-term impact of four intercultural citizenship projects undertaken in university foreign language classrooms. Curricular developments based on Byram's intercultural citizenship theory have demonstrated the immediate impact including the development of self and intercultural awareness, criticality, social…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Social Justice
Simmons, Robin – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2017
This paper draws on research into the experiences of young people classified as NEET (not in education, employment or training) on an employability programme in the north of England, and uses Basil Bernstein's work on pedagogic discourses to explore how the creative arts can be used to re-engage them in work-related learning. Whilst creating…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Employment Potential, Out of School Youth, Ethnography
Bell, Lawrence T. O.; Evans, Darrell J. R. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2014
For many years art, anatomy and medicine have shared a close relationship, as demonstrated by Leonardo da Vinci's anatomical drawings and Andreas Vesalius' groundbreaking illustrated anatomical textbook from the 16th century. However, in the modern day, can art truly play an important role in medical education? Studies have suggested that art can…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Teaching Methods, Medical Education, Art