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Sara A. Rich – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2024
It has become increasingly apparent that anti-colonial and antiracist pedagogies are necessary in higher education classrooms, and honors education as an experimental zone is an ideal place to test ideas that can be taken into the wider university community. Honors professors epitomize the teacher-scholar model, and this paper presents a six-year…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Honors Curriculum, Teaching Methods, Social Justice
Richmann, Christopher J.; Fogleman, Alex – Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL) is a new discipline, with seeds sown by educational theorists of the early twentieth century and blossoming in the 1990s. As an inherently interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary field focusing on higher education, SoTL interrogates a range of subjects, encompasses a variety of genres, and uses a…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Scholarship, Instruction, Learning
Gomis, Antonio Giner; Martínez, Marcos Jesús Iglesias; Cabezas, Inés Lozano – International Education Studies, 2018
The use of Classical Greek myth as a narrative and metaphorical tool can contribute to the construction of a professional teaching identity. Adopting a biographical narrative approach, the present study sought to assess this contribution in a group of teacher and researcher trainees undertaking a postgraduate university course. The construction of…
Descriptors: Mythology, Professional Identity, Professionalism, Personal Narratives
Lee, Jeong-Kyu – Online Submission, 2017
The purpose of this paper is to discuss whether higher education is a necessary good or evil from the perspective of happiness education. To review the paper systematically, four research questions are addressed. First, what is the purpose of higher education? Second, is higher education a necessary good? Third, is higher education a necessary…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Role of Education, Psychological Patterns, Well Being
Wintrol, Kate – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2014
The liberal arts, first described in Republican Rome, have been a component of higher education since the advent of the medieval university in the eleventh century. Despite such historical lineage, the value of a liberal arts education is continuously and publicly called into question, and this is a special problem for honors programs, most of…
Descriptors: Liberal Arts, Educational Benefits, Higher Education, Role of Education
Berges, Sandrine – Gender and Education, 2013
An important part of making philosophy as a discipline gender equal is to ensure that female authors are not simply wiped out of the history of philosophy. This has implications for teaching as well as research. In this context, I reflect on my experience of teaching a text by medieval philosopher Christine de Pizan as part of an introductory…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Philosophy, Gender Bias, Sex Fairness
Zeeman, Estelle; Lotriet, Marena – Teaching in Higher Education, 2013
The teaching of classical Greek dramas is integral to drama education at the University of Pretoria. In the past few years these dramas increasingly faced the danger of becoming "foreign"/irrelevant to modern day students. The introduction of performance practice to teach these dramas brought a whole new dimension to teaching and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Drama, Classical Literature
De Botton, Alain – Liberal Education, 2009
The contemporary university is an uncomfortable amalgamation of ambitions once held by a variety of educational institutions. It owes debts to the philosophical schools of Ancient Greece and Rome, to the monasteries of the Middle Ages, to the theological colleges of Paris, Padua, and Bologna and to the research laboratories of early modern…
Descriptors: Schools, Foreign Countries, Sciences, Humanities
Holowchak, Mark A. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2009
This paper is an indirect critique of the practice of American liberal education. I show that the liberal, integrative model that American colleges and universities have adopted, with one key exception, is essentially an approach to education proposed some 2400 years ago by Stoic philosophers. To this end, I focus on a critical sketch of the Stoic…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Principles, Role of Education, Educational History
Fike, Matthew A. – CEA Forum, 2007
This article reports on a challenging and effective assignment on thinking in a discipline that the author gave during fall 2006 in his sophomore-level "Critical Reading, Thinking, and Writing" (CRTW) course at Winthrop University. Required of all students, the course follows Writing 101: Composition; and a multi-disciplinary course…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Critical Thinking, Assignments, Critical Reading