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Noel L. Clemente – Ethics and Education, 2024
Intellectual character education has been primarily expressed in terms of educating for intellectual virtues (EFIV). This aim of teaching intellectual virtues has received some challenges, such as how it fails to articulate adequate action guidance through exemplarist pedagogy, and how it neglects the pervasiveness of intellectual vice among…
Descriptors: Ethics, Values Education, Teaching Methods, Moral Values
Katy Dineen; Loretta Goff – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2024
While the integrity of academic work has always been vitally important, since the establishment of the International Center for Academic Integrity in 1992 increasing attention has been paid to the area. The term academic integrity now explicitly appears in policy and in job titles or offices tasked with either detection, training, or both.…
Descriptors: Integrity, Ethics, Intellectual Development, Moral Values
Demetriou, Andreas; Liakos, Antonis; Kizilyürek, Niyazi – Journal of Intelligence, 2021
This paper invokes cognitive developmental theory as a means for preparing citizens to deal with and resolve conflicts within or across nations. We take the centuries-old Greek-Turkish dispute as an example. We first outline a theory of intellectual development postulating that mental changes emerge in response to changing developmental priorities…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Reflection, Intellectual Development, Conflict Resolution
Palmer, Dajanae; Washington, Sylvia; Silberstein, Samantha; Saxena, Pooja; Bose, Suparna – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2022
This paper highlights the perspective of five doctoral students' socialization in a feminist focused research group. Utilizing collaborative ethnography, this paper challenges the current conceptions of graduate student socialization that emphasizes neoliberal values such as individualism and competition that is normalized within doctoral…
Descriptors: Socialization, Doctoral Students, Feminism, Ethnography
Roumell, Elizabeth A.; Bian, Xinyi; Sun, Qi – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2020
A burgeoning body of literature discusses the process of being and becoming a doctoral scholar, suggesting that graduate students should move beyond performing the role of 'good student' and transform into doctoral scholars and stewards of the profession. More recently, research has been conducted to identify more commonly held competencies and…
Descriptors: Doctoral Students, Professional Identity, Scholarship, Personality
Chinn, Clark A.; Barzilai, Sarit; Duncan, Ravit Golan – Educational Researcher, 2021
In the so-called "post-truth" world, there exists widespread confusion and disagreement over what is known, how to know, and who to trust. Current education has largely failed to meet the challenges of this world. Grounded in a new analysis of the goals of epistemic education, we argue for new directions in instruction. Our analysis…
Descriptors: Ethics, Educational Change, Epistemology, Reliability
Kotsonis, Alkis – Journal of Moral Education, 2022
My aim in this paper is to examine the epistemic habits that agents develop through frequent social media usage. I point out that extensive social media usage is conducive to the development of closed-mindedness and unreflective thinking and accordingly argue that social media act as inadvertent educators of epistemic vices. I contend that…
Descriptors: Social Media, Epistemology, Social Attitudes, Barriers
Woodhouse, Howard – Philosophical Inquiry in Education, 2020
This article shows how Bertrand Russell and Noam Chomsky's approaches to humanistic education are grounded in the concepts of growth, knowledge, language, freedom, and social justice. Despite their epistemological differences, Russell and Chomsky agree on the need for educating the public to abuses of power. Their own practice of education is a…
Descriptors: Humanism, Educational Philosophy, Social Justice, Epistemology
Watson, Lani – Journal of Moral Education, 2019
One natural application of Linda Zagzebski's exemplarist moral theory (EMT) is found in the context of moral and intellectual character education. Zagzebski discusses this application in her recent book, commenting that 'exemplars can serve as a guide for moral training' (p. 129) and endorsing 'the learning of virtue by imitation' (p. 129). This…
Descriptors: Values Education, Moral Values, Theories, Ethics
Kuhn, Deanna – Educational Psychologist, 2022
The construct of metacognition appears in an ever increasing number and range of contexts in educational, developmental, and cognitive psychology. Can it retain its status as a useful construct in the face of such diverse application? Or is it merely an umbrella term for diverse mental phenomena that are loosely if at all connected? Here I argue…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Learning Processes, Cognitive Psychology, Role
Kotsonis, Alkis – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2020
In the "Republic," Plato developed an educational program through which he trained young Athenians in desiring truth, without offering them any knowledge-education. This is not because he refused to pass on knowledge but because he considered knowledge of the Good as an ongoing research program. I show this by tracing the steps of the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Values Education, Educational Theories, Teaching Methods
Kotzee, Ben – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
Two classic questions in epistemology concern whether knowledge is firstly propositional or firstly practical (the know-that/know-how debate) and whether testimony is a basic source of epistemic justification (the reductionism/anti-reductionism debate about testimony). In this paper, I consider the relationship between these two classic debates in…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Correlation, Knowledge Level, Educational Philosophy
Taylor, Rebecca M. – Educational Theory, 2016
Open-mindedness is widely valued as an important intellectual virtue. Definitional debates about open-mindedness have focused on whether open-minded believers must possess a particular first-order attitude toward their beliefs or a second-order attitude toward themselves as believers, taking it for granted that open-mindedness is motivated by the…
Descriptors: Intellectual Development, Intellectual Experience, Beliefs, Theory of Mind
Rampal, Shelly; Smith, Sue Erica; Soter, Anna – Qualitative Research Journal, 2022
Purpose: In this paper we seek to provide insight as to how wisdom is, or might be, perceived and enacted in Higher Education contexts. Selected constructs of wisdom derived from the "Bhagavad Gita" provided a platform from which seven invited College of Education faculty participants considered their own framings of wisdom in the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Faculty, Schools of Education, Indians
Cowley, Christopher – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2017
In a recent thought-provoking piece, Peter Roberts argues against the central role of happiness as a guiding concept in education, and argues for more attention to be paid to despair. This does not mean cultivating despair in young people, but allowing them to make sense of their own natural occasional despair, as well as the despair of others. I…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Moral Issues, Moral Development, Role of Education