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Showing 1 to 15 of 119 results Save | Export
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Rowena A. Azada-Palacios – Ethics and Education, 2025
This paper is a reflective response to Tena Thau's suggestion -- in her 2024 piece 'Moral Philosophy as War Propaganda' -- that philosophy has little to teach about the war in Gaza (and, by extension, similar cases of widespread, horrific human suffering). I first reconstruct one of the arguments that Thau makes in her piece. I then show that her…
Descriptors: War, Foreign Countries, Philosophy, World Views
Harney, John O.; Thomas, Nancy – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2019
Nancy Thomas is director of the Institute for Democracy & Higher Education at Tufts University's Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life. In the Question & Answers (Q&A) presented in this article, New England Journal of Higher Education (NEJHE) Executive Editor John O. Harney asks Thomas about her insights on higher education, citizen…
Descriptors: Democracy, Higher Education, Citizen Participation, Elections
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Peterson, Barbara A. – Democracy & Education, 2019
Heggert and Flowers (2019) offer important insights into how social media provides students with important opportunities to engage in meaningful civic engagement and political activism. They argue that students are more politically active than some recent studies would have us believe because they are utilizing social media platforms, methods not…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Civil Disobedience, Activism, Citizen Participation
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Jackson, Tambra O.; Flowers, Natasha C. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2017
In this essay, we specifically focus our attention on Donald Trump's perspective of the conditions of schools that Black children attend. The fact remains that as a presidential candidate, he verbalized stereotypical notions that many people hold about the conditions of schools that Black children attend. Thus, the purpose of this essay is to…
Descriptors: African Americans, Mothers, Current Events, Racial Relations
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Owen-Smith, Jason; Scott, Christopher Thomas; McCormick, Jennifer B. – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2012
Human embryonic stem cell (hESC) research has sparked incredible scientific and public excitement, as well as significant controversy. hESCs are pluripotent, which means, in theory, that they can be differentiated into any type of cell found in the human body. Thus, they evoke great enthusiasm about potential clinical applications. They are…
Descriptors: Current Events, World Affairs, Human Body, Ethics
Doyle, Christopher L. – American Educator, 2012
This author contends that contemporary issues classes no longer have currency, as standardized test results are the litmus test for education. In many schools, students are isolated from firsthand accounts and formal study of events that textbooks will one day proclaim as defining experiences of their generation. According to Doyle, schools tend…
Descriptors: Merit Pay, Test Results, Citizenship, Democracy
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Roksa, Josipa; Arum, Richard – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2012
From the housing crisis to high debt, from stagnating incomes to high unemployment, the Great Recession has touched most aspects of many people's lives. College graduates, a highly educated group often insulated from the worst of economic challenges, have not been spared. Their unemployment rate reached 9.1 percent in 2010--the highest annual rate…
Descriptors: Unemployment, Debt (Financial), College Graduates, Credit (Finance)
Terrence Cheng – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
On June 4, 1989, the Chinese military, under orders from the highest levels of government, violently crushed peaceful civilian demonstrations in Beijing, most symbolically in and around Tiananmen Square. In the end, the Chinese government claimed that the death toll was approximately 200, but the Chinese Red Cross reported 2,000 to 3,000 deaths.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Studies, Current Events, Historiography
Gup, Ted – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
In this article, the author reports his dismay when he learned that his students are ignorant of critical issues outside of the classroom despite the availability of online information. However, he believes that its both unfair and inaccurate to hold those young people accountable for the moral and legal morass they find themselves in as a nation.…
Descriptors: Current Events, History, Knowledge Level, College Students
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Gregg, Melissa – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2008
Over the past decade, publishers' catalogues have showcased a continuing supply of introductory readers, taxonomies and evaluations of cultural studies, largely for teaching purposes. In this article, the author suggests that the current climate of academic publishing has allowed cultural studies' particular investment and commitment to scholarly…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Empathy, Publishing Industry, Political Influences
Early, Gerald L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
In this article, the author shares his thoughts when he saw the controversial "New Yorker" cover of July 21, 2008 showing the Democratic presidential nominee, Barack Obama, as a Muslim jihadist and his wife, Michelle, as a gun-toting, Afro-wearing black militant. The cover told the story of a rite of African-American passage that occurred at a…
Descriptors: Current Events, Racial Attitudes, African Americans, Journal Articles
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Zaloom, Caitlin – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2009
Over the three decades between the urban crisis and the credit crisis, New York City revived its economy by making itself the preeminent center for global finance. Manhattan's streetscape and public places rose with the fortunes of the banks and their employees. Wall Street's mood came to define New York City's outlook. In the 1990s and early…
Descriptors: Fiscal Capacity, Economic Development, Finance Occupations, Financial Services
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Renner, Adam – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2009
America's sense of community is broken down; its sense of connectedness and the collective is "collapsing." That these senses ever existed is a matter for considerable debate. But, as the new millennium gains momentum and neoliberalism seeks expansion, the author argues that a focus on rekindling these concepts of community,…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Democracy, Community, Curriculum Development
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Kendler, Howard H. – American Psychologist, 2006
This paper replies to comments on the article "Psychology and Phenomenology: A Clarification." Four of the five comments on my article were critical of my treatment of psychology and phenomenology. I will try to identify the sources of these disputes, but not with the intention of demonstrating the superiority of one discipline over the other. In…
Descriptors: Psychology, Phenomenology, Current Events, Values
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Doughty, Howard A. – College Quarterly, 2009
In the early 1980s, it was not sub-prime mortgages and toxic assets, bank failures and factory closures that crowded the pages of the business section of the daily newspapers. It was something called "stagflation," a noxious combination of inflationary pressures on currency and stagnating levels of production. Still, the effects were…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Economic Climate, Ethics, Economics
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