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Showing 1 to 15 of 17 results Save | Export
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Jan G. Pouwels – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2024
Dealing with conflicts seems to be a great challenge in society today. But not only in society. Higher education displays an air of resoluteness with certainty and security that disguises the conflicts and the fear of conflicts in a substantial number of subjects. If not in a state of denial, higher education avoids taking up conflicts over…
Descriptors: Conflict, Religion, Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories
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Feldt, Jakob Egholm – Studies in Higher Education, 2023
In this article, I discuss how the principle of exemplarity developed in the 1970s by the Marxist educators and theorists Oskar Negt and Knud Illeris can be a model for a deliberative curriculum. Today's crisis-ridden discourses of 'taking back', 'reclaiming', etc., the practices and purposes of the university are evidence of a widespread…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Curriculum, Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories
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Anke Schwittay – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2025
How can we teach critical hope, amidst contemporary challenges that seem intractable, within neoliberal educational institutions that work to foreclose transformative pedagogies and through academic critique that can result in cynicism and disillusionment among students? Here, I draw on the writings of Paolo Freire, J.K. Gibson-Graham and Sarah…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Critical Theory, Positive Attitudes, Experiential Learning
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Feldt, Jakob E.; Petersen, Eva B. – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2021
In this article, we present a new perspective on how to combine inquiry-based, problem-oriented learning with practices in the Humanities. Our particular interest is how the initial phase of finding "the problem" can be undertaken in a conjoint way with students, that is in the form of inquiry-based learning where there are no…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Active Learning, Humanities, Problem Based Learning
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Magrini, James M. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2017
In response to the so-called crisis in contemporary education in the institutions of higher learning (USA)--the encroachment of corporatism and pervasion of standardization--there is a move to offset this dominance by reconceiving the university in terms of an intimate space of dwelling in learning and education. In light of this moribund…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Educational Philosophy, Higher Education, Commercialization
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English, Andrea R. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2016
Reforms surrounding the teacher's role in fostering students' social competences, especially those associated with empathy, have moved to the forefront of global higher education policy discourse. In this context, reform in higher education teaching has been focused on shifting teachers' practices away from traditional lecture-style…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Empathy, Educational Policy, Educational Philosophy
Botstein, Leon – Liberal Education, 2018
Few subjects have suffered as much as the liberal arts from the power of stale rhetoric, hollow appeals to tradition, and journalistic misrepresentation. Leon Botstein, begins this article by saying that together, these three factors have generated and legitimated public skepticism about the liberal arts. A liberal arts education (which is rarely…
Descriptors: Liberal Arts, Educational Attitudes, Educational Philosophy, Misconceptions
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Barnett, Ronald – Oxford Review of Education, 2011
What is it to be a university? In what does the being of the university reside in the 21st century? To draw on a Heideggerian expression, what is its "being possible"? To address such questions seriously, we are drawn to imagine the university as it might unfold and so sketch out feasible utopias for it. But such a project of the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, School Role, Imagination, Futures (of Society)
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Marginson, Simon – Educational Theory, 2008
In this essay, Simon Marginson focuses on self-determining academic freedom in universities, and especially the conditions and drivers of the radical-creative imagination that is manifest in sudden intellectual breaks in knowledge. Marginson's objective is to establish foundations in political philosophy for a sociological study of the effects of…
Descriptors: Imagination, Academic Freedom, Creative Thinking, College Environment
Miller, James E., Jr. – ADE Bulletin, 1974
Argues that instruction in English should emphasize the creative and imaginative use of language. (RB)
Descriptors: Creativity, Educational Philosophy, English Instruction, Higher Education
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Berthoff, Ann E. – College Composition and Communication, 1978
Leo Tolstoy and Lev Vygotsky, like Sylvia Ashton-Warner, Maria Montessori, and Paulo Freire, base their educational philosophies on the heuristic power of language, the form-finding, and form-creating powers of the human mind. (DD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories, Higher Education
Berthoff, Ann E. – Freshman English News, 1975
Argues that compositions teachers need to develop an epistemology--as pragmatic as is possible--which asks how the composing process is an act of knowing. (R B)
Descriptors: Creativity, Educational Philosophy, English Instruction, Higher Education
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Sardello, Robert J. – Teachers College Record, 1980
The classroom is a ritual space in which the wisdom of the past is enacted and the shape of society to come is determined. As seen in literary works, there is a division between liberal learning and the world of action. Liberal learning enacts large, universal patterns of action. (JN)
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Expressive Language, Futures (of Society), General Education
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Phillips, D. C. – Educational Theory, 1995
This paper critiques and explores some of the fundamental issues that Elliot Eisner has raised in recent speeches and in an essay in this journal on art, curriculum, and educational research. The paper also examines the related essays on these topics in this journal. (JB)
Descriptors: Art, Educational Philosophy, Educational Research, Hermeneutics
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Eisner, Elliot W. – Educational Theory, 1995
This analysis describes some of the general features of art and goes on to look at what the artistic treatment of research entails. Artistically crafted research that includes coherence, imagery, and particularity can help to explain what is important about schools. Further, the education of teachers should be regarded as the education of artists.…
Descriptors: Art, Educational Philosophy, Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education
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