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Liz Jackson; Gina A. Opiniano – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
One major aspect of interest in Filipino philosophy is education. Reflecting on the nature, aims, and problems of education, Filipino philosophy of education investigates philosophical issues and emerging trends of philosophical thinking in education which are distinctive to the Filipino context. Filipino philosophy of education has a rich…
Descriptors: Asians, Educational Philosophy, Foreign Countries, Educational Trends
Vlieghe, Joris – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2018
In this article, I critically engage with a vital assumption behind the work of Paulo Freire, and more generally behind any critical pedagogy, viz. the belief that education is fundamentally about "emancipation." My main goal is to conceive of a contemporary critical pedagogy which stays true to the original inspiration of Freire's work,…
Descriptors: Empowerment, Critical Theory, Literacy, Educational Philosophy
Areekkuzhiyil, Santhosh – Online Submission, 2017
Disciplines have contrasting substance and syntax, ways of organizing themselves and of defining rules for making arguments and claims that others will warrant. They have different ways of talking about themselves and about the problems, topics, and issues that constitute their subject matters. The evolution of a discipline begins with knowledge…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disciplines, Educational Development, Educational Change, Intellectual History
"I Ulu No Ka Lala I Ke Kumu", The Branches Grow Because of the Trunk: Ancestral Knowledge as Refusal
Chandler, Kapua L. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2018
This paper will discuss the ways that Native Hawaiian scholars are engaging in innovative strategies that incorporate ancestral knowledges into the academy. Ancestral knowledges are highly valued as Indigenous communities strive to pass on such wisdom and lessons from generation to generation. Ancestral knowledges are all around us no matter where…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, American Indian Education, Hawaiians, Higher Education
Nelson, Robert; Dawson, Phillip – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2017
In this article, we investigate competition in education, asking if it is good or bad, and especially if it is old and necessary or new and questionable. Using philological methods, we trace the history of competition and relate it to contemporary educational ideas. In history and modern pedagogical research, competition has a "dark…
Descriptors: Competition, Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices, Educational History
The Ambivalent Legacy of Dartmouth Five Decades On: What, Now, Should We Teach the English Teachers?
Jones, Jo – English in Australia, 2017
This essay expresses a profoundly ambivalent response to the legacy of Dartmouth, particularly Dixon's "Growth" Model of English. English educators owe a debt to Dixon in terms of innovative pedagogical methods that are part of the daily shapes of tertiary and high school English classes, including the way drama and performance invoke…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Instructional Innovation, Recognition (Achievement), Educational Practices
Heffron, John M. – Management in Education, 2018
This research poses two interrelated questions. How important is it for the formation of democratic ideas about educational leadership that the group or individual promoting those ideas is operating within a democratic political environment or, to the contrary, in the absence of one? And second, in the case of the latter, what are the available…
Descriptors: Principals, Democratic Values, Educational Administration, Educational Resources
Papastephanou, Marianna – Education Sciences, 2017
The centennial anniversary of John Dewey's "Democracy and Education" has been celebrated this year in a reconstructive and utility-based spirit. The article considers this spirit and the need to complement it with a critical-deconstructive and "use-less" prism that will reveal shortcomings in Dewey's and our own political…
Descriptors: Democracy, Change Agents, Educational Philosophy, Educational Principles
Kwan, Alistair – Physics Teacher, 2016
I investigated two late 19th-century methods for capturing magnetic field images from iron filings for historical insight into the pedagogy of hands-on physics education methods, and to flesh out teaching and learning practicalities tacit in the historical record. Both methods offer opportunities for close sensory engagement in data-collection…
Descriptors: Physics, Hands on Science, Intellectual History, Science Education History
Greenslade, Thomas B., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 2016
This article is about a late 19th-century teacher of secondary school physics. I was originally interested in the apparatus that he sold. This led me to the physics books that he wrote, and these took me to his unusual ideas about ways to use laboratory time to introduce students to the phenomena of physics. More than 100 years later educational…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Physics, Science Laboratories, Educational Practices
Alkin, Marvin C.; King, Jean A. – American Journal of Evaluation, 2016
The first article in this series traces the initial development of the concept of evaluation use. As a field, evaluation has always paid attention to the potential for use, both in decision-making and in changing people's thinking. The broad history of the field as we know it today stemmed from two streams: one focused on tests and measurement,…
Descriptors: Evaluation Utilization, Educational Development, Educational History, Measurement Objectives
Gronn, Peter – Management in Education, 2016
Recently, distributed leadership (DL) has become a popular approach to leadership across the social sciences, including education. This article documents reasons for the emergence of a distributed perspective and summarizes some of the background against which DL's popularity emerged, in a field of study with a traditional adherence to leadership…
Descriptors: Participative Decision Making, Transformative Learning, Social Sciences, Individualism
Lumby, Jacky – Management in Education, 2016
Despite frequently expressed reservations concerning its fundamental theoretical weakness, distributed leadership (DL) has grown to become the preferred leadership concept and has acquired taken-for-granted status. This article suggests that the dominance of DL can best be understood as a fashion or fad rather than as a rational choice. It…
Descriptors: Participative Decision Making, Transformational Leadership, Adoption (Ideas), Social Theories
Shpeizer, Raz – Research in Education, 2018
During the second half of the 20th century, a new pedagogical movement emerged, which centered around the concept of "critical thinking." While the movement soon became a significant player in the pedagogical field, its proponents continued to develop the theoretical and practical aspects of critical thinking, aiming to transform it into…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Social Development, Individual Development, Educational History
Shane, Joseph W.; Binns, Ian C.; Meadows, Lee; Hermann, Ronald S.; Benus, Matthew J. – Journal of Science Teacher Education, 2016
Science and religion are two indisputably profound and durable cultural forces with a complex history of interaction. As ASTE members are aware, these interactions often manifest themselves in classrooms and in the surrounding communities. In this essay, we encourage science teacher educators to broaden their perspectives of science-religion…
Descriptors: Science Education, Religion Studies, Fused Curriculum, Evolution