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Jones, Sidney – Composition Forum, 2018
This review of Eli Clare's "Brilliant Imperfection: Grappling with Cure" (2017) and Eunjung Kim's "Curative Violence: Rehabilitating Disability, Gender, and Sexuality in Modern Korea" (2017) shows how both Clare and Kim critique the politics of cure in the U.S. and Korea. Specifically, these texts reveal the (at times) violent…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Books, Politics, Foreign Countries
Eden, Max – American Enterprise Institute, 2020
Conservatives should be for school safety. It sounds so easy that it should go without saying. But the sad fact is that the progressive-minded education establishment has subordinated safety to "social justice." America's schools should not be governed by the whims of progressive groupthink. They should be governed by school boards that…
Descriptors: School Safety, Educational Policy, Classroom Techniques, Teacher Attitudes
Tillson, John B. – Democracy & Education, 2017
In response to van Waarden's paper, which denied the possibility of horizontal tolerance between citizens, I argue that tolerance is both possible and often desirable between citizens. I also argue that a more substantive set of constraints are required for justice to be served than mere deference to whatever existing constitutions and laws happen…
Descriptors: Democracy, Social Attitudes, Justice, Politics
Galea, Sandro – Health Education & Behavior, 2016
In this column, Sandro Galea addresses what would be required to identify and implement solutions that can improve the health of populations. Galea suggests that two perspectives need to inform solutions that might prove successful. First, solutions that aim to improve the health of populations need to be grounded in clarity of purpose, aiming to…
Descriptors: Public Health, Politics, Health Promotion
Le Grange, Lesley; Aikenhead, Glen – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2017
This is a reply to an article authored by Enslin and Horsthemke (2014) published in" Educational Philosophy and Theory" ("EPAT"). Enslin and Horsthemke argue that those who they refer to as "friends of the subaltern" pit themselves against a straw-person that is swiftly dismissed in pointing out blindness of the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Western Civilization, Politics, Indigenous Knowledge
Thomas-Reid, Matthew – Democracy & Education, 2018
First, I review the context for the need of new deliberative models, specifically agonistic deliberative models, for public discourse and for use in training students for public discourse. I then highlight five specific points that I trouble and enrich, principally through the work of Giroux, Arendt, Biesta, and Duarte. While I agree that there is…
Descriptors: Democracy, Models, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Citizenship Education
Wallace, Maria F. G. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2018
Over the years neoliberal ideology and discourse have become intricately connected to making science people. Science educators work within a complicated paradox where they are obligated to meet neoliberal demands that reinscribe dominant, hegemonic assumptions for producing a scientific workforce. Whether it is the discourse of school science,…
Descriptors: Science Education, Neoliberalism, Ideology, Feminism
Herman, David, Jr.; Kraehe, Amelia; Bartholomee, Lucy; Lewis, Tyson – Policy Futures in Education, 2017
Today there is a lot of discussion about creative economies and how cities are the engines driving growth in a variety of industries. But cities are not merely rows of buildings, or sets of laws, such as zoning ordinances or parking regulations. A city is, rather, a set of dynamic experiences that we all participate in as co(labor)ators. As a way…
Descriptors: Urban Areas, Art Education, Activism, Urban Education
Bordelon, David – Thought & Action, 2017
David Bordelon identifies himself as one of the majority of Americans who voted to keep Trump out of office. In this article he discusses his confusion by the Tea Party's fixation on welfare fraud, and inability to recognize it in President Trump's behavior. The author says that he can only hope that his confusion will be shared, and progress to…
Descriptors: Elections, Political Campaigns, Political Candidates, Politics
Snaza, Nathan – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2017
This article is a response to Hugo Letiche's "Bewildering Pedagogy," an extended critique of many of Snaza's published texts. In it, Snaza selected four important points of disagreement and elaborated four tensions between Letiche's claims and his own present thinking--tensions that all turn on ontological and epistemological axioms…
Descriptors: Politics, Humanism, Definitions, Altruism
Zembylas, Michalinos – Democracy & Education, 2018
This is a response to Ásgeir Tryggvason's argument that the deliberative critique of the agonistic approach to citizenship education is based on a misreading of the main concepts in agonistic theory--a misreading that has important implications for any attempt to bring closer agonism and deliberation in citizenship education. My aim in this…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Debate, Politics, Citizenship Education
McWilliam, Erica – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 2017
In this commentary, author Erica McWilliam asserts that the 2016 victory of Donald Trump in the US election is a global punch to all teachers who value pluralism and human dignity. She further maintains Trump's wild card entry into the White House directly threatens the values that teachers attempt to impart to their students--such as democracy,…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Presidents, Elections, Values
Conway, Danielle M. – Creighton Journal of Interdisciplinary Leadership, 2019
Rural communities -- as well as other marginalized communities -- see their access to legal infrastructure declining, so much so that they feel disconnected from the rule of law. Current complex law and legal infrastructure focus on big "I" innovation, which is hyper-transactional and benefits the few. Rural communities, and others,…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Laws, Books, Authors
Dahlbeck, Johan – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2016
Johan Dahlbeck works as senior lecturer at Malmo University. His research interest is in the philosophy of education, focusing especially on ethics and the pedagogical implications of Spinoza's philosophy. In this article, he responds to Jim Mackenzie's "Dahlbeck and Pure Ontology" (EJ1105980), which was written in reply to his…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Philosophy, Civil Rights, Sustainable Development
Comstock, Patrick W. – Democracy & Education, 2015
Mindfulness is rapidly becoming a mainstream educational intervention. A growing number of schools, colleges, and universities are incorporating mindfulness into the curriculum, and while there is a substantial body of research literature in psychology attesting to the mental and physical benefits of mindfulness, critics of the movement have…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Psychology, Intervention, Mental Health