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Virginie F. C. Servant-Miklos; Eleanor F. Dewar – Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
This single-participant idiographic study examines the implications of a student's identity crisis in the climate classroom through the lens of existential phenomenology. The study analyses the ontological sense-making process of a mixed-race, bisexual female student reckoning with the racial dimensions of climate change during an environmental…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Climate, Environmental Education, Phenomenology
Brad Rowe – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2024
In this Presidential Address, the author wants to turn our attention to an interpretation of identity that invites us to rethink our relationships with each other and with Earth. First, the author will briefly discuss recent work by OVPES colleagues, Lauren Bialystok and Bryan Warnick, to provide some background and initial framing of key…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Relationship, Climate, Self Concept, Ethics
Susan T. Gardner; Wayne I. Henry – Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis, 2023
In this article, the authors will first make the case that, though humans is rife with division, evidence suggests that in fact, they are all pretty much the same, and that therefore there are grounds for perceiving the pursuit of a collective identity as genuinely legitimate. They will then explore the many factors that have helped to…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Cooperation, Climate, Social Action
Sean-Jason Schat – Journal of Invitational Theory and Practice, 2022
Invitational Theory is rooted in three theoretical foundations, the perceptual tradition, self-concept theory, and a democratic ethos (Purkey, Novak, and Fretz, 2020). This essay focuses in on the first of these foundations, which the author intentionally describes as "perceptual theory." Perceptual theory provides a theoretical…
Descriptors: Perception, Theories, Self Concept, Behavior Patterns
Davies, Bronwyn – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2021
In the last 30 years we have increasingly, as humans, been individualised and set in competition with each other in the quest for ever increasing productivity. Neoliberalism has exacerbated those very liberal humanist features that feminist poststructuralist theory set out to dismantle with its critique of binary thought and the ascendance of…
Descriptors: Individualism, Competition, Productivity, Neoliberalism
Sujung Um – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
This paper began with the assumption that the habitual practices of knowledge-creation, which have shaped the day-to-day contexts of teachers and researchers, are not greatly different from the practices that have led to human-made catastrophes in the Anthropocene. I pondered over my experiences as a researcher in an attempt to gain insights for…
Descriptors: Climate, Researchers, Research Methodology, Feminism
Sabucedo, Pablo – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2021
This article explores the similarities between humanistic (and existential) psychotherapy, represented here by the ideas of Viktor Frankl, Erich Fromm and Irvin Yalom, and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). Despite the ongoing dialogue between both therapies during the last decade, regarding both their convergences and divergences, there is…
Descriptors: Psychotherapy, Correlation, Humanism, Therapy
Liang, Yuanyuan – Children's Literature in Education, 2022
Oscar Wilde was described by W. B. Yeats as "a man of action, a born dramatist." Although people did not recognize him as a serious playwright until the 1890s, Wilde had managed to find other outlets for his theatrical passion, for example in writing fiction. In this paper, it is argued that Wilde incorporates metadrama into his 1888…
Descriptors: Literary Devices, Childrens Literature, Drama, Fairy Tales
Ros i Solé, Cristina – International Journal of Multilingualism, 2022
Until recently, the role of material culture in language has been little studied or seen as the context where language use is situated (Aronin et al., 2018). This article looks at the materiality of language in a new light by arguing that everyday objects such as kitchen utensils and wardrobes can be seen as deliberate and conscious collections…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Language Usage, Second Languages, Self Concept
Charles M. McCoin – ProQuest LLC, 2021
The purpose of this multi-method single-case study was to examine the application of Joseph Campbell's Heroic Journey model as a means of professional identity creation in the life of Walt Disney. Walt Disney was an entrepreneur, cartoonist, filmmaker, inventor, studio head, and family man whose career stretched through the first half of the 20th…
Descriptors: Professional Identity, Time Perspective, Biographies, Self Concept
Kuby, Candace R.; Price, Erin; Gutshall Rucker, Tara – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2022
The authors take up the guest editors' invitation to address the difference that posthumanist and feminist 'new' materialist theories make and why this matters politically and ethically. Alongside events from an early childhood (kindergarten) classroom, the authors engage with current conversations which build on and extend Kimberlé Crenshaw's…
Descriptors: Humanism, Feminism, Minority Groups, Early Childhood Education
Kashi, Shiri; Hod, Yotam – International Journal of Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning, 2022
Fast-moving changes to society as part of the digital age are posing new educational challenges that require students to be flexible, adaptive, and growth-oriented. Humanistic knowledge building communities (HKBCs) are a growth promoting pedagogy, suitable to address these challenges. Yet, the way that students' identities as knowledge builders…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Teaching Methods, Communities of Practice, Social Change
Moon, Seungho; Guo, Wenjin – Curriculum Journal, 2022
This study is about the curriculum theorizing of self-other and transformation. The two authors, both of Asian heritage, share their lived experience and interpretations of Chapter 20 of "I-Ching." This paper revisits a conventional, humanistic division of self-other as a launching pad to challenge the current discourse on cultural…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Social Cognition, Educational Theories, Humanism
Ho, Ka Lee Carrie – Education Inquiry, 2022
Despite the prevalence of aesthetic education as one of the main developmental objectives in curricular worldwide, the mainstream philosophical discourse on its definition is predominately framed by western philosophy due to a paucity of cross-cultural studies on the subject. The article aims to achieve a contemporary understanding of aesthetic…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Aesthetics, Religion, Buddhism
Malaviya, Ritambhara – Journal of Peace Education, 2021
This paper discusses the educational experiment of Rabindranath Tagore and its larger implications for world peace. As violence becomes the new normal amongst the youth of the world, the challenge for societies is to build cultures of peace instead of cultures of violence. In this context, this paper discusses the ideas of Tagore on education, and…
Descriptors: Peace, Teaching Methods, Violence, Self Concept