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Mitchell, David; Stones, Alexis – London Review of Education, 2022
This article makes the case for repositioning values and ethics as central to understanding how curriculum knowledge can be educationally powerful. Disciplinary knowledge can help individuals make sense of the present, explore alternative futures and participate in society, making ethical choices about how to live. This, however, depends on…
Descriptors: Climate, Curriculum Development, Ethics, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Mheta, Gift; Lungu, Bwalya Nyangu; Govender, Thaiurie – South African Journal of Education, 2018
The call for the decolonisation of universities and curricula in South Africa was at the centre of the 2015 Fallist protests. The protests, which left a trail of destruction and many universities closed for periods of time, had as one of their positive outcomes the precipitation of a renewed interest in the decolonisation of university education…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Colleges, Land Settlement
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Rose, Gail L.; Rukstalis, Margaret R. – Mentoring & Tutoring: Partnership in Learning, 2008
Mentoring and ethics are integral and intersecting components of medical education. Faculty workloads and diffusion of responsibility for teaching impact both ethics and mentoring. In current academic medical center environments, the expectation that traditional one-on-one mentoring relationships will arise spontaneously between medical students…
Descriptors: Biology, Ethics, Mentors, Role
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Alexander, Hanan A. – Theory and Research in Education, 2005
It is generally supposed that a curriculum should engage students with worthwhile knowledge, which requires an understanding of what it means for something to be worthwhile: a substantive conception of the good. Yet a number of influential curriculum theories deny or undermine one or another aspect of the key assumption upon which a meaningful…
Descriptors: Ethics, Curriculum Development, Value Judgment, Educational Theories