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Abraham P. DeLeon – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
In this article, the author animates a different kind of telling and knowing for critical scholarship. Recognizing an unknowable reality through a journey to a mythical past, the author imagines an "ontology of the serpent," a radical interdisciplinary, incantation for the future. This sorcerous evocation re-animates ancient mythical…
Descriptors: Christianity, Mythology, Figurative Language, Personal Autonomy
Joel White – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
The present article continues my work in logomachy and the philosophy of education. It turns to Bernard Stiegler's concept of the 'idiotext' as the means of terming what I have previously called 'particular sets of sense'. The gambit of the article is that 'intropy' (uncertainty provoked by informational complexity) provides a very useful concept…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Figurative Language, Educational Theories, Learning Processes
Bray, Mark – Journal for the Study of Education and Development, 2023
In the academic literature, private supplementary tutoring is widely called shadow education because much of its content mimics that of schooling. The author of this paper wrote the first global study of the phenomenon, which was published in 1999 and set the agenda for much subsequent research. The present paper considers research emphases over…
Descriptors: Private Education, Tutoring, Educational Research, Figurative Language
Traugh, Cecelia – Schools: Studies in Education, 2022
Building on Carini's idea of works bearing the imprint of their makers and using an example from my work in educator education that illustrates how Descriptive Inquiry can be a means of making and remaking a body of thought and practice, I explore the large idea of schools as made work. Through the exploration of the college faculty into race, I…
Descriptors: Inquiry, College Faculty, Race, Figurative Language
Peter Cole – in education, 2024
There is an urgency for compelling new narratives of ecological survival that draw on Indigenous and 'othered' millennial intelligences and agencies. With a focus on the lifegivingness and sacredness of water, this paper is a call for collective inter-cultural cross-species oral-performative, recuperative conversations for re-learning to care for…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Music, Religious Factors, Water
Khetrapal, Neha – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2023
The scientific study of religion has steered toward materiality. Herein, researchers have highlighted the intricate role of the human body and its sensorium for perceiving objects. With this trend, a text-based approach to religion has become less prominent. However, parallel exploratory efforts have been underreported for religious education…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Olfactory Perception, Learning Strategies, Human Body
Nelson, Robert – Routledge Research in Education, 2022
In this book, Robert Nelson reminds us that one of the most important elements of teaching and learning is to inspire and to be inspired. Given that inspiration itself has evolved through metaphor, the inquiry distinguishes inspirational learning by its peculiarly metaphoric character. We acknowledge that students respond to passion and…
Descriptors: Influences, Figurative Language, Academic Aspiration, Motivation
Annie Isabel Fukushima; Tanjerine Vei – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
To teach about race is to recognize how there are communities whose worlds are shaped by violence, death, and resurrection, such as Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Emmett Till, George Floyd, and the many unnamed. Resurrection invokes the zombie figure. Zombies are iconic, and as implemented in an interdisciplinary course, a means to foster…
Descriptors: Feminism, Teaching Methods, Racial Relations, Figurative Language
Martina Blecic – Journal of Biological Education, 2024
In this paper I suggest a pragmatic model for the notion of 'information' used in molecular biology in the description of protein synthesis. Discarding any ontological commitments of the term 'information', I propose a view of information based on an analogy with communication. This view could at least supplement the existing information-metaphor…
Descriptors: Genetics, Molecular Biology, Figurative Language, Communication (Thought Transfer)
Sarah Urquhart – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
Ecologically, lichen plays a significant role in the formation of flourishing ecosystems by breaking apart rock formations using small fungal threads to form fertile soil which supports a growing complexity/diversity of life. This essay uses lichen as a metaphor to describe fossilized constructs (colonial epistemologies and ontologies,…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Biological Sciences, Ecology, Biodiversity
Rochat, Shékina; Borgen, William A. – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2023
Meeting the psychological, social, and economic challenges of career transitions requires people to be increasingly flexible and hardy. In this article, we propose that envisioning one's life as a game can foster well-being, coping strategies, and success with career transitions. The SuperBetter approach (McGonigal, 2015. "Superbetter: A…
Descriptors: Career Development, Games, Vocational Adjustment, Coping
Pinyan Lin; Steven J. Courtney; Paul Armstrong; Amanda McKay – Oxford Review of Education, 2025
In China, formal school groupings known as 'education collectives' have become one of the most common forms of school-to-school collaboration, promoted by policymakers to narrow the achievement gap between schools and optimise resource allocation. Previous research has focused on the purposes and achievements of education collectives rather than…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cooperation, Partnerships in Education, Figurative Language
Brdar, Mario – Applied Linguistics, 2021
Two issues pertaining to the use of metonymy that plays a central role in Slabakova et al. (2016) are mentioned in the very title of their study--novel metonymy and regular metonymy. In this article I draw attention to some problems with the identification of these as well as with the assumption that these are opposites of each other.
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Language Usage, Language Role, Applied Linguistics
Chandana Sanyal; Mary Hartog; Julie Haddock-Millar – Action Learning: Research and Practice, 2024
This account of practice offers reflections and insights on facilitating Action Learning (AL) in Leadership Programmes within the Higher Education context. The account shares our reflections and key observations as practitioner academics, facilitating AL Sets within three higher education leadership programmes. We draw on our knowledge and…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Leadership Training, Professional Development, Higher Education
Sternberg, Robert J. – Roeper Review, 2023
Two implicit metaphors can be seen as having dominated the study of the gifted--the savings bank and the investment bank. In the savings-bank metaphor, people have differential levels of IQ or general intelligence, which is viewed as determining whether they are gifted. Their cognitive ability is their metaphorical "money in the bank."…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Gifted, Intelligence Quotient, Cognitive Ability