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Potter, Michael K.; Raffoul, Jessica – International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2023
The scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) defines itself as an inclusive field of study, and scholars have long lauded its ability to engage academics from each and every discipline. Yet SoTL's research culture has long been dominated by a narrow conception of social science. As a result, the lived experience of scholars from other…
Descriptors: Alienation, Scholarship, Instruction, Learning
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Windeyer, Richard C. – Research in Drama Education, 2019
As information literacy and data-driven program evaluations have become growing obsessions within academic institutions, how might liberal arts and humanities programmes engage students in both critical and creative explorations of contemporary human-data relations? Inspired by the variety of metaphors that currently shape human-data relations and…
Descriptors: Information Literacy, Theater Arts, Liberal Arts, Humanities
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Ng, Sin Fai Eric; Ng, Chin Hung – Journal of Learning for Development, 2021
A small project of STEAM education called "Innovation for Love and Care" was implemented in a local secondary school in Hong Kong. Four seventh-grade students participated from November 2020 to February 2021. The project aims to integrate humanism into the traditional STEAM curriculum, to stimulate the students' innovation in a…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Humanities, Humanism, Art Education
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Howlett, Caitlin – Issues in Teacher Education, 2018
Education faces a tenuous future, straddling a growing divide between a no-longer-relevant past and an uncertain future, a future that calls into question the future of humanity altogether. In the face of such a future, posthumanism stands as a reminder that the divides we make in education are unstable, that things could and likely will be…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Humanism, Humanities, Humanization
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Higgins, Chris – Educational Theory, 2015
In this essay, Chris Higgins sets out to disentangle the tradition of humane learning from contemporary distinctions and debates. The first section demonstrates how a bloated and incoherent "humanism" now functions primarily as a talisman or a target, that is, as a prompt to choose sides. It closes with the image of Doris Salcedo's…
Descriptors: Humanism, Culture, Research Universities, Humanities
Hartzell, Richard – Independent School, 2017
The false dichotomy that suggests schools must choose between STEM (or STEAM) and the humanities would not merit the time it takes to write an article if not for a dangerous crescendo of backlash clouding the senses of boards and administrations around the independent school world. In this article, the author, an upper school principal of Taipei…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Art Education, Humanities, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Hansen, James T. – Journal of Humanistic Counseling, 2012
The author reflects on the collaborations that led to this special issue. The author also reviews some of his original ideas, comments on the values embodied in this issue, and outlines some of his hopes for the future of the counseling profession.
Descriptors: Counselors, Humanism, Correlation, Counseling
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Jacobs, Jonathan – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2012
Humanistic studies cultivate types of conceptual fluency and modes of awareness important to thought concerning values. Not all knowledge is scientific knowledge. There is genuine comprehension of some valuative matters--they are not all to be interpreted in expressive or subjective terms. Education in the humanities can encourage value-relevant…
Descriptors: Specialization, Humanities, Moral Development, Humanism
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Hansen, James T. – Journal of Humanistic Counseling, 2012
Founding humanists argued that counseling should be ideologically grounded in the humanities. Currently, professional counseling culture is largely structured by scientific assumptions, which, the author maintains, have had a detrimental impact on the profession. Specific recommendations for shifting professional counseling culture to a humanities…
Descriptors: Counselor Training, Humanities, Ideology, Counseling Techniques
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Jiang, You Guo – Frontiers of Education in China, 2012
Ma Xiangbo was born in 1840 and became a pioneer of educational reform during the republican period. He was responsible for introducing the idea that science and humanities should be valued equally in liberal arts education, a concept that became key to the model of university education. Ma's view of education combined Western humanism and science…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Liberal Arts, Universities, Educational History
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Suthakaran, V. – Journal of Humanistic Counseling, 2012
Hansen (2012b) reiterates his view that the humanities should form the ideological foundation of the counseling profession by challenging the validity of the central premises for the author's argument that the humanities and science should have equal ideological standing. The author attempts to explain the reasons for their conflicting ideas on…
Descriptors: Counselors, Cultural Background, Educational Philosophy, Counselor Training
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Leibert, Todd W. – Journal of Humanistic Counseling, 2012
The author contends that it was economic interests, not reductionist scientific methods, that displaced the humanities as the basis for counseling profession. Attacking scientific methods may inadvertently marginalize humanistic counselors. Instead, science in counseling should be viewed more broadly and thereby support the humanities as a basis…
Descriptors: Counselors, Humanistic Education, Humanism, Economic Factors
Peters, Michael A. – Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2012
In the World Library of Educationalists series, international experts themselves compile career-long collections of what they judge to be their finest pieces--extracts from books, key articles, salient research findings, major theoretical and/practical contributions--so the world can read them in a single manageable volume. Michael A. Peters has…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Philosophy, Politics of Education, Racial Relations
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Miller, Alistair – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2007
This paper argues that the modern curriculum of academic subject disciplines embodies a rationalist conception of pure, universal knowledge that does little to cultivate, humanise or form the self. A liberal education in the classical humanist tradition, by contrast, develops a personal culture or "paideia", an understanding of the self as a…
Descriptors: General Education, Rhetoric, Humanities, Intellectual Disciplines
Benson, Ronald – Alternative Higher Education: The Journal of Nontraditional Studies, 1981
Humanities programs that involve citizens in discovering the relevance of the humanities to contemporary American experience are supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities through its state affiliates. State humanities agencies, catalysts in program design and delivery, and some programs are described. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Adult Students, Agency Role, Higher Education, Humanism
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