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Showing 1 to 15 of 25 results Save | Export
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Kevin Proudfoot – Journal of Education Policy, 2025
Teachers' negative experiences of high-stakes accountability have been documented extensively, but the ways in which teachers are able to engage in tactics of resistance in response are less well known. This is most especially true in terms of the subtle, covert forms of resistance which occur through the practice of teachers' everyday working…
Descriptors: Resistance (Psychology), Teaching Experience, Teacher Attitudes, Negative Attitudes
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Ripani, Giulia – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2022
Flourishing has become a popular ideal in the educational debate. Could flourishing guide meaningful choices in education? My skepticism rests on unclear definitions of flourishing, a hidden insistence of theories of flourishing on selfish and individualistic themes, and an elitist vision of flourishing as the consequence of favorable conditions.…
Descriptors: Music Education, Teaching Methods, Decision Making, Greek Civilization
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Soha Tarek Nouh – NORDSCI, 2023
This report embarks on an exploration of the profound role philosophy has played in shaping education across various historical epochs, commencing with an investigation into the history and fundamental purpose of education. Philosophy has consistently served as a cornerstone, propelling the refinement of learning and teaching methods while…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational History, Teaching Methods, Curriculum Development
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Peterson, Heather W. – International Journal of Christianity & Education, 2022
In "To Young Men," Basil of Caesarea asserted that pagan literature could be read discerningly for the pursuit of virtue. As a professor of English, I recognize Basil as an exemplar pedagogue in my own insistence that Christian students read secular texts. Not a scholar of Greek, I rely on patristic scholarship to understand Basil's…
Descriptors: Churches, Religious Education, Christianity, Teaching Methods
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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
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Lehman, Geoff; Weinman, Michael – SUNY Press, 2018
Discusses the importance of the early history of Greek mathematics to education and civic life through a study of the Parthenon and dialogues of Plato. "The Parthenon and Liberal Education" seeks to restore the study of mathematics to its original place of prominence in the liberal arts. To build this case, Geoff Lehman and Michael…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Liberal Arts, Greek Civilization, Educational Philosophy
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Abdul-Jabbar, Wisam Kh. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2020
This article presents Al-Kindi as the first Arab intercultural curriculum theorizer, rather than the first Arab philosopher as is often argued. He envisioned an intercultural and interdisciplinary curriculum within the Arabic intellectual tradition. This article proposes Al-Kindism as a conceptual framework for education that revisits…
Descriptors: Arabs, Multicultural Education, Educational Philosophy, Cultural Awareness
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Baron, Christopher; Hamlin, Christopher – Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy, 2015
Between 1906 and 1909 the biologist Ronald Ross and the classicist W.H.S. Jones pioneered interdisciplinary research in biology and history in advancing the claim that malaria had been crucial in the decline of golden-age Greece (fourth century BCE). The idea had originated with Ross, winner of the Nobel Prize for demonstrating the importance of…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Social Science Research, Scientific Research, Biology
Murphy, Madonna M. – Online Submission, 2015
This paper examines Plato's Philosophy of Education asking what he would say about the current Common Core initiative which is to better help students to become college and career ready. Plato would be in favor of the common core in as much as the standards are tied to specific skills needed in various career jobs as he was a proponent of…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Academic Standards, State Standards, Greek Civilization
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Mintz, Avi I. – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2011
Scholars who have taken interest in "Theaetetus'" educational theme argue that Plato contrasts an inferior, even dangerous, sophistic education to a superior, philosophical, Socratic education. I explore the contrasting exhortations, methods, ideals and epistemological foundations of Socratic and Protagorean education and suggest that Socrates'…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices, Philosophy, Educational Theories
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Edyvane, Derek – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2011
A central aspiration of the "Britishness" agenda in UK politics is to promote community through the teaching of British values in schools. The agenda's justification depends in part on the suppositions that harmony arising from agreement on certain values is a necessary condition of social health and that conflict arising from pluralism…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Conflict, Role of Education, Ideology
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Watson, Ken – English in Australia, 2010
The paper first traces the history of thinking about language from the Greek writers of the fifth century BC to the development of the first Greek grammar in about 100 BC. Since the glories of Ancient Greek literature predate the development of grammar, there is every reason to doubt the received wisdom that one must have an explicit knowledge of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grammar, Role, Literature
Poulakos, Takis – Pre/Text: An International Journal of Rhetoric, 1988
Looks beyond the abstract realm of shared beliefs in order to strengthen epideictic's relation to the social sphere. Argues that epideictic oratory in classical Greece is a worthy object of study and provides an opportunity for inquiring into the relation between epideictic oratory and society. Argues that epideictic oratory gives artistic…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Greek Civilization, Rhetorical Criticism
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Parker, Jan – London Review of Education, 2008
The "New Humanities" has called for new ways of engaging with Humanities texts; the European Science Foundation is just one major research funder to demand that the Humanities contribute to interdisciplinary collaborations. Meanwhile, traditionally trained disciplinary academics have resisted bringing traditional texts into…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Humanities, Humanities Instruction, Intellectual Disciplines
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Swearingen, C. Jan – Rhetoric Society Quarterly, 1992
Argues that Plato's representations of women transmit from previous tradition positive views of feminine activities such as weaving, conceiving, midwifery, giving birth, and nurturing. Asks at what point the discovery of Plato's appropriation of the feminine and female itself becomes appropriate. (SR)
Descriptors: Feminism, Greek Civilization, Higher Education, Rhetoric
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