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Sang-Eun Lee – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
There is a tendency in recent curriculum reforms to put the major emphasis on the status and role of students. The OECD's Education 2030 project, for example, presents the concept of 'student agency' as a key vision for future learning frameworks. The OECD's discourse of student agency appears to serve as a catalyst for spreading the slogan that…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Academic Freedom, Bias, Curriculum Development
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Richard Ingram – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
This article outlines how the international push for inclusive education cannot be aligned with current education systems centred on neoliberal ideals of individualism, measurement, and competition. The way that these systems are organised means that a proportion of (usually marginalised) students are necessarily excluded. In order to meaningfully…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Access to Education, Neoliberalism, Individualism
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Dion Enari; Jacoba Matapo; Yvonne Ualesi; Radilaite Cammock; Hilda Port; Juliet Boon; Albert Refiti; Inez Fainga'a-Manu Sione; Patrick Thomsen; Ruth Faleolo – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
Growing interest in Pacific issues has meant a surge in Pacific research across the globe. Sadly, some research on Pacific people has been done without Pacific knowledge, wisdom and culture. As Pacific researchers, we understand the importance of outputs that interweave our ancestral and cultural wisdom, whilst centring and privileging our…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Research, Indigenous Knowledge, Research Methodology
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Arday, Jason; Zoe Belluigi, Dina; Thomas, Dave – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
Anti-racist education within the Academy holds the potential to truly reflect the cultural hybridity of our diverse, multi-cultural society through the canons of knowledge that educators celebrate, proffer and embody. The centrality of Whiteness as an instrument of power and privilege ensures that particular types of knowledge continue to remain…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Teaching Methods, Racial Bias, Cultural Pluralism
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Yancy, George – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2015
In this article, I argue that African-American philosophy emerges from a socio-existential context where persons of African descent have been faced with the absurd in the form of white racism (This paper is a substantially revised version on an earlier article. See Yancy, G. (2011). "African-American Philosophy through the Lens of…
Descriptors: African Americans, Philosophy, Pain, Western Civilization
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Anwaruddin, Sardar M. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2015
In this article I discuss how Jacques Rancière's thought invites us to re-conceptualize the education-emancipation nexus. The primary goal of traditional approaches to emancipatory and anti-oppressive education has been to empower the oppressed so that the latter can (re)gain their voice and transform their situations. Building on Rancière's…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy, Power Structure, Disadvantaged
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Calderón-Almendros, Ignacio; Ruiz-Román, Cristóbal – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2016
This project reflects on the way in which students in a situation of social risk construct their identity. Based on the reflections and theories originating from research conducted on individuals and collective groups in a situation of social exclusion due to disability, social class or ethnicity, this paper will analyse the conflicts these…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged, Conflict, Self Concept, Neoliberalism
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Scatamburlo-D'Annibale, Valerie; McLaren, Peter – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2004
Perhaps one of the most taken-for-granted features of contemporary social theory is the ritual and increasingly generic critique of Marxism in terms of its alleged failure to address forms of oppression other than that of "class." Marxism is considered to be theoretically bankrupt and intellectually passe, and class analysis is often savagely…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Political Attitudes, Social Theories, Social Systems