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Showing 1 to 15 of 65 results Save | Export
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Fay Lowe – Journal of Religious Education, 2024
This research addresses the concerning influence of far-right extremism on pupils in England, highlighting risks leading to potential radicalisation and violent extremism. Conducted through focus groups at the national RE conference 'RExChange 2022', the study explores whether and how far-right extremism should be integrated into the Religious…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Religious Education, Political Attitudes, Focus Groups
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Brann, Maria; Russell, Laura D. – Journal of Communication Pedagogy, 2019
Health communication courses explore health phenomena from various angles. Whether focusing on interpersonal and organizational relationships or addressing community and national campaigns, instructors may choose from various contents to design these courses. This essay highlights critical questions, contents, and activities useful for instructors…
Descriptors: Health, Communication (Thought Transfer), Curriculum Design, Course Content
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Weintraub, Roy; Tal, Nimrod – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2023
This article examines the key category defining multiculturalism in Israeli history education: the representation of North African and Middle Eastern Jewry, aka "Mizrahim." Applying Nordgren's and Johansson's conceptualisation, the article explores the changes in this subject from the establishment of Israel to the present day. The…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Course Content, Ethnocentrism, Jews
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Caterina B. Azzarello; Ashlee Kemp; Kevin Pugh – Journal of Educational Research and Innovation, 2024
This study examines teachers' beliefs about Critical Race Theory (CRT) in the U.S. educational system. Given the controversy surrounding CRT, understanding these beliefs is crucial for informing professional development, curriculum design, and instructional strategies. The study employed an online survey to assess over sixty U.S. preservice and…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Educational Practices, Beliefs, Preservice Teachers
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Hung, Cheng-Yu – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2022
The new Taiwanese citizenship curriculum has converted its traditional bullet-point guidelines to hundreds of open-ended questions. Each question acts to initiate collective inquiry, to stimulate the sharing of lived experiences and to trigger within-class conversations. The previous pre-determined educational objectives and learning outcomes, in…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Educational Change, Citizenship Education, Foreign Countries
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Konik, I.; Konik, A. – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2018
This article explores the possibility that the recent #RhodesMustFall and #FeesMustFall student protests at South African universities may be partially underpinned by grief over a dying essentialist assemblage in the wake of the 2012 Marikana massacre--which saw the assemblage severed from the State Apparatus in a way that spelled its doom.…
Descriptors: Activism, Grief, Models, Advocacy
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Finney, Sara – L2 Journal, 2019
Recent scholarship has highlighted the importance of increasing the intellectual viability of lower-level foreign language (FL) study while facilitating connections between academic practice, learners' lives, and global communities. This article reports on a content-based role-immersion simulation (RIS) designed to incite a critical orientation…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Curriculum Design, Intellectual Development
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Poulsen, Jens Aage – Education Sciences, 2013
It is a cliché, but also a fundamental fact that we live in a world where globalization and international challenges, opportunities and relationships play an increasing role. However, how have these changing conditions affected the content of school history? To what degree have curricula and textbooks addressed these challenges? Is the main focus…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Global Education, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Course Content
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Fancourt, Nigel – British Journal of Religious Education, 2016
This article explores the place of discourse about religions in education by comparing two very different schools. It initially outlines some of the current debates around religious discourse, notably in dialogue. A theoretical frame for analysing religious discourse in schools is proposed, combining a theorisation of three levels of dialogue with…
Descriptors: Classification, Religion, Discourse Analysis, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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Charlotte L. Land; Laura A. Taylor; Haylee Lavender; Barbara McKinnon – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2018
Purpose: This paper aims to consider how students and teachers engaged in political work in their design and enactment of critical literacy workshops in one US elementary school facing pressures of accountability and standardization. Design/methodology/approach: As a collaborative team of university researchers and classroom teachers, the authors…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Elementary School Teachers, Urban Schools, Hispanic American Students
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Smith, Mike U.; Gericke, Niklas M. – Science & Education, 2015
Mendel is an icon in the history of genetics and part of our common culture and modern biology instruction. The aim of this paper is to summarize the place of Mendel in the modern biology classroom. In the present article we will identify key issues that make Mendel relevant in the classroom today. First, we recount some of the historical…
Descriptors: Genetics, Biology, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Science Instruction
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Shlasko, Davey – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2015
In social justice education a tension sometimes emerges between the complex ideas we want participants to grapple with and the relatively straightforward activities we use to communicate those ideas. We adapt learning activities to meet participants' evolving needs and to communicate emerging theories and analyses, but sometimes adjusting an…
Descriptors: Authoritarianism, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Disadvantaged, Social Justice
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Buck, Alison; Parrotta, Kylie – Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning, 2014
In this paper, we describe an exercise that challenges hetero-normative and sexist notions of sexuality, allowing students to envision alternative models. Research shows how active learning eases student anxiety over challenging or threatening material. After reading Jessica Fields' "Risky Lessons" and Waskul, Vannini, and Weisen's…
Descriptors: Sex Education, Sexuality, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Student Developed Materials
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Duhaylongsod, Leslie; Snow, Catherine E.; Selman, Robert L.; Donovan, M. Suzanne – Harvard Educational Review, 2015
In this article, Leslie Duhaylongsod, Catherine E. Snow, Robert L. Selman, and M. Suzanne Donovan describe the principles behind the design of curricular units that offer disciplinary literacy support in the subject of history for middle school students who represent a wide range of reading levels, and for their teachers, whose own subject matter…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Curriculum Design, History Instruction, Units of Study
Duhaylongsod, Leslie; Snow, Catherine E.; Selman, Robert L.; Donovan, M. Suzanne – Grantee Submission, 2015
In this article, Leslie Duhaylongsod, Catherine E. Snow, Robert L. Selman, and M. Suzanne Donovan describe the principles behind the design of curricular units that offer disciplinary literacy support in the subject of history for middle school students who represent a wide range of reading levels, and for their teachers, whose own subject matter…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Curriculum Design, History Instruction, Units of Study
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