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Little, Sabrina – Journal of Character Education, 2021
In the classical tradition of education that emerged from the ancient Greek paideia, there is a productive pedagogical sequence of mixed methods for virtue education. First, stories of heroes are paired with physical training. Virtue concept-learning comes next, and strategies involving imitation are adjusted as a student intellectually matures.…
Descriptors: Values Education, Ethics, Teaching Methods, Strategic Planning
Grant, Thomas A. – ProQuest LLC, 2012
This quasi-experimental study at a Northwest university compared two methods of teaching media ethics, a class taught with the principle-based SBH Maieutic Method (n = 25) and a class taught with a traditional case study method (n = 27), with a control group (n = 21) that received no ethics training. Following a 16-week intervention, a one-way…
Descriptors: Mass Media, Ethics, Case Studies, Teaching Methods
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Wardekker, Willem – Educational Review, 2004
In this article, I develop the idea that the starting point of moral education is formed by the affective commitments individuals make in the course of growing up. The task of education is to enable children to critically consider and revise these commitments, as part of the development of a reflective personal identity. Ethical concepts like…
Descriptors: Ethics, Moral Values, Moral Development, Concept Formation
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Bineham, Jeffery L. – Communication Studies, 1989
Refutes David Tukey's argument that the consensus theory of epistemic rhetoric reduces spiritual experience to a social construct which denies the possibility of a divine reality. Examines Walter Rauschenbusch's "A Theology for the Social Gospel" to prove that consensus theory accounts for religious beliefs, providing a useful framework…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Communication Research, Concept Formation, Epistemology
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Lipman, Matthew – Journal of Moral Education, 1987
Holds that ethical inquiry, as a "craft," causes students in this area to be "apprentices," and the classroom a "community of inquiry" wherein the tools, methods, practices, and procedures of the craft are imparted. States that the generic procedures of reasoning, necessary for moral reasoning, should be taught within…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Concept Formation, Curriculum Development, Educational Environment
Appelbaum, David – 1975
Socrates' contention was that the sophist misconstrues the sphere of ethics. Although the sophist presents a systematized moral world, no experience is implied. This can be applied to the new professionalism in the teaching of ethics. Loosening the creative tension of perceived responsibility effectively closes down the real moral decision. The…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Creative Thinking, Decision Making
Bebeau, Muriel J.; Thoma, Stephen J. – 1998
This study describes the steps taken to measure the integrity of an intermediate concept measure and test the assessment strategy of a well-validated dental ethics curriculum. Because this curriculum, which had been in place for 15 years, had consistently been shown to influence moral judgment, it was posited that a cross-sectional comparison…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Construct Validity
Stahl, Robert J.; And Others – 1978
The purpose of the paper is to stress the development of content-centered classroom activities useful for attaining values clarification and/or moral development goals. The objective is to help teachers understand the formulation of content-centered learning activities so that they will be able to plan and produce their own value sheets or moral…
Descriptors: Affective Objectives, Cognitive Objectives, Concept Formation, Concept Teaching