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Wahl, Rachel – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2022
Enhancing agency--or in a more colloquial term, promoting empowerment--is typically viewed as an unquestioned good. International organisations promote the empowerment of girls and other vulnerable groups around the world. Domestically, democracies rely for their legitimacy on the idea that citizens have agency; hence, civic educators aim to…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Student Empowerment, Citizen Participation, Justice
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Lee, Soyoung – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2021
Teaching poetry presents difficulties of various kinds, and these can be illustrative of wider curricular and pedagogical challenges. This paper considers questions of knowledge and remembrance as they arise in two poems--Paul Celan's "Todesfuge" and Seamus Heaney's 'Mid-Term Break'--placing these in relation to Jean-François Lyotard's…
Descriptors: Poetry, Memory, Responsibility, Ethics
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Conroy, James – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
This essay critiques the infection of the curriculum with the concerns of the adult political community, treating successive generations of children as if they were responsible for changing the world and that education was the vehicle. Such impulses are, in part, the result of a failure to consider childhood as a particular, liminal, space rather…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Role of Education, Politics of Education, Children
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Lilja, Peter; Dahlbeck, Johan – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2019
Taika Waititi's recent film 'Hunt for the Wilderpeople' (2016) portrays the coming-of-age of a young boy, Ricky, in a world with few recognisably responsible adults. While the film does not engage explicitly with formal education, it raises several questions central for understanding education as formation, highlighting the generational aspects of…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Adults, Films, Role of Education
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Smith, Richard – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2016
Traditional epistemology is often said to have reached an impasse, and recent interest in virtue epistemology supposedly marks a turn away from philosophers' traditional focus on problems of knowledge and truth. Yet that focus re-emerges, especially among "reliabilist" virtue epistemologists. I argue for a more "responsibilist"…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Educational Philosophy, Ethics, Responsibility
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Morabito, Christian; Vandenbroeck, Michel – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2015
This article aims to explore the relations between equality of opportunity and early childhood. By referring to the work of contemporary philosophers, i.e. Rawls, Sen, Dworkin, Cohen and Roemer, we argue for different possible interpretations, based on political discussions, concerning how to operationalize equality of opportunities. We represent…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Equal Education, Educational Opportunities, Philosophy
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d'Agnese, Vasco – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2015
Since Plato, Western thought has framed knowing as a method within "some realm of what is" and a predetermined "sphere of objects". The roots and the consequences of this stance towards reason and truth were noted by Heidegger, who equates the history of Western thought with the history of metaphysics. Since Plato, truth has…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Philosophy, Epistemology, Violence
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Smeyers, Paul – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2012
This paper is the sequel to Part 1, which appeared in this Journal, Vol. 46 No. 2, 2012. Following Cavell and his insistence that we should not try to escape from the existential conditions we find ourselves in and look for false certainties, the relevance of embracing a particular stance is elaborated. A commitment to giving substance to an ideal…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Freedom, Child Rearing, Responsibility
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Hodgson, Naomi – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2012
Recent European and member state policy shows innovation to be a current guiding logic of government. This article offers an analysis of how innovation, seen partly in terms of learning but more significantly in terms of research, forms part of the discourses and practices of government today. Research is now something that all actors must engage…
Descriptors: Public Policy, Innovation, Foreign Countries, Parent Participation
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Brown, Alexander – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2006
Adult education has long been the Cinderella of the education system. This is not helped by the fact that there is currently an impasse between employers, government and individuals over who should finance such training. So what, if anything, can philosophers do to help resolve the normative question of who ought to pay, setting aside for the…
Descriptors: Educational Opportunities, Equal Education, Responsibility, Educational Philosophy