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Showing 1 to 15 of 83 results Save | Export
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Stern, Julian; Walejko, Malgorzata – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
This article proposes a distinct role for solitude in education, specifically as a means of promoting self-realisation. Solitude is understood as a willed disengagement, as described by Koch, and its relationship to loneliness and to silence is explained. Notwithstanding a degree of disengagement, solitude can be and often is experienced as…
Descriptors: Self Actualization, Social Isolation, Self Esteem, Psychological Patterns
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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
Jackson, Philip W. – University of Chicago Press, 2011
One day in 1938, John Dewey addressed a room of professional educators and urged them to take up the task of "finding out just what education is." Reading this lecture in the late 1940s, Philip W. Jackson took Dewey's charge to heart and spent the next sixty years contemplating his words. The stimulating result of a lifetime of thinking about…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Objectives, Moral Issues
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Brook, Cheryl; Christy, Gill – Action Learning: Research and Practice, 2013
The question addressed in this paper is whether action learning as a management development technique can be more effective in promoting ethical decision-making than more traditional approaches. Recent examples of moral failures which have emerged in both corporate and public sector organisations in the UK during recent years have prompted a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Experiential Learning, Ethics, Moral Issues
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Peters, Michael A.; Besley, Tina A. C. – Open Review of Educational Research, 2014
This article offers a broad philosophical and historical background to the dyad of social exclusion/inclusion by examining the analytics and politics of exclusion first by reference to Michel Foucault who studies the modern history of exclusion and makes it central to his approach in understanding the development of modern institutions of emerging…
Descriptors: Social Isolation, Inclusion, Educational Theories, Ecology
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Cooke, Sandra; Carr, David – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2014
Recent reflection on the professional knowledge of teachers has been marked by a shift away from more reductive competence and skill-focused models of teaching towards a view of teacher expertise as involving complex context-sensitive deliberation and judgement. Much of this shift has been inspired by an Aristotelian conception of practical wisdom…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Personality, Professional Identity, Ethics
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Friedman, Randy L. – Education and Culture, 2011
Critics of Dewey's metaphysics point to his dismissal of any philosophy which locates ideals in a realm beyond experience. However, Dewey's sustained critique of dualistic philosophies is but a first step in his reconstruction and recovery of the function of the metaphysical. Detaching the discussion of values from inquiry, whether scientific,…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Criticism, Democracy, Ethical Instruction
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Roth, Klas – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2011
Why should we deliberate? I discuss a Kantian response to this query and argue that we cannot as rational beings avoid deliberation in principle; and that we have good reasons to consider the value and strength of Kant's philosophical investigations concerning fundamental moral issues and their relevance for the question of why we ought to…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Educational Practices, Critical Thinking, Moral Issues
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Giesinger, Johannes – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2012
This article discusses the educational significance of the moral demand for respect. In "Ethics and Education," Richard Peters presents a conception of educational respect that was recently taken up by Krassimir Stojanov. This article responds to both Peters' and Stojanov's contributions and proposes another understanding of educational respect:…
Descriptors: Ethics, Human Dignity, Moral Issues, Role of Education
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Kennedy, R. M. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2011
Hannah Arendt articulates natality as the very "essence of education." Natality expresses the unique capacity of each person to bring about something new in relation to an inherited world. Education's difficult work, in Arendt's view, is not only to introduce students to the truths of the world as it is, but also to nurture the capacity to make…
Descriptors: Social Differences, Educational Theories, Citizenship Responsibility, Humanism
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Zapalska, Alina M.; Wingrove-Haugland, Erik; LaMonica, Christopher; Rivero, Elizabeth – Universal Journal of Educational Research, 2013
In preparing cadets to be officers, the U.S. Coast Guard Academy (CGA) is committed to developing "the whole person." CGA has increasingly developed program-specific ways to achieve educational goals and learning outcomes. While character development and ethical education have long been important learning outcomes, today's CGA curriculum…
Descriptors: Global Education, Undergraduate Students, Undergraduate Study, Military Personnel
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Ambrosio, John – Educational Theory, 2008
In this essay, John Ambrosio examines the role of ascetic writing practices in Michel Foucault's conception of ethical self-formation. Ambrosio argues for an interpretation of Foucault's later writings as representative of both an extension, and a dramatic break, from his previous writings--from demolishing the subject to embracing the notion of…
Descriptors: Moral Issues, Ethics, Moral Development, Social Environment
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Weston, Anthony – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2009
Ethical issues in adult education are often open-ended, complex, problematic situations. The real question is not which side is right, or to which moral choice principle practitioners must appeal, but simply how they can engage those situations intelligently and constructively. In this article, the author proposes a "meta-ethical reorientation,"…
Descriptors: Ethics, Moral Values, Moral Issues, Social Theories
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Blum, Lawrence – Theory and Research in Education, 2008
White privilege analysis has been influential in philosophy of education. I offer some mild criticisms of this largely salutary direction--its inadequate exploration of its own normative foundations, and failure to distinguish between "spared injustice", "unjust enrichment" and "non-injustice-related" privileges; its inadequate exploration of the…
Descriptors: Whites, Advantaged, Educational Philosophy, Social Justice
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Milligan, Tony – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2007
In analytic moral philosophy it is standard to use unrealistic puzzles to set up moral dilemmas of a sort that I will call Lockean Puzzles. This paper will try to pinpoint just what is and what is not problematic about their use as a teaching tool or component part of philosophical arguments. I will try to flesh out the claim that what may be lost…
Descriptors: Moral Issues, Educational Philosophy, Teaching Methods, Problem Solving
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