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Showing 1 to 15 of 165 results Save | Export
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Denise Heppner – Learning Professional, 2024
In Saskatchewan, teachers are guided by educational policy that envisions placing Indigenous knowledge systems, cultures, and languages at the foundation of their structures, policies, and curricula. However, Non-Indigenous teachers in Canada remain uncertain about how to integrate Indigenous knowledge and teaching methods into their classrooms…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Multicultural Education, Individual Development
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Gabriel Fortes; Leandro De Brasi; Michael Baumtrog – Frontline Learning Research, 2024
Argumentation-based classroom interventions are a growing alternative for stimulating conceptual learning, thinking, and communicative skills. However, not all classroom argumentation is desired, nor does every argumentation design lead students to develop their abilities and understanding. In the educational literature, productive argumentation…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Intelligence, Teaching Methods, Individual Development
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Kaplan, Sandra N. – Gifted Child Today, 2023
The classroom can become the primary source to introduce students to the processes that promote opportunities for self-differentiation or personal intellectual challenges. A missing component in some differentiated experiences is the need to provide gifted students with opportunities to gain the independence that fosters their abilities to assume…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Gifted Education, Independent Study, Self Concept
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Xiong, Qinjing; Ju, Yucui – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
The concept of Tao occupies a core position in Taoism and even the entire Chinese classical philosophy. For philosophical Taoism, 'Tao' is the ultimate reality. Therefore, exploring Taoist epistemology, its role in governance, education and self-cultivation is necessary. The only way that can be approached beyond human ability to fathom 'Tao' is…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy, Asian Culture, Religion
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Rödl, Sebastian – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
The essay represents teaching as the coming to be of the human individual. In order to do so, it reflects on the character of human life by which it is knowledge of itself. Being knowledge of itself, human life is self-determining or free. Therefore generality and particularity come together in the human being in a distinctive way: a human being…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Teaching Methods, Self Determination, Individual Development
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Ryohei Matsushita – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
Although modern education is expected to solve social problems, it has brought about new problems. While theoretical critiques of education have not always been successful, with the transition to a data-driven society, education as a historical product is actually losing its efficacy. However, this does not mean that acquisition of knowledge and…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Teaching Methods, Educational Theories, Educational Change
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De Lissovoy, Noah; Armonda, Alex J. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
The work of Hardt and Negri offers the field of education important theoretical resources for reconceptualizing subjectivity as a site of politics. Yet recent shifts on the Left toward more articulated mobilizations, along with the emergence of new decolonizing movements that interrogate the undifferentiated character of the common, partly affirm…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy, Power Structure
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Brookfield, Katherine – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2022
Accumulating evidence suggests that a range of benefits might accrue from conducting teaching and learning outside in natural environments, and more broadly, from incorporating some kind of contact with nature into teaching and learning activities. Although this evidence does not stem from studies that have focused on geographical higher…
Descriptors: Environment, Teaching Methods, Geography Instruction, Higher Education
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Lewis, Rolla E.; Herb, Courtney; Mundy-Mccook, Erin; Capps-Jenner, Natalie – Educational Action Research, 2019
This article is a collaboration involving a professor and three graduate students. Together, they explore lifescaping action research pedagogy guided by the participatory inquiry process. Since the lesson taught is not the lesson learned, the first author presents a perspective about teaching PIP followed by the graduate students' collective…
Descriptors: Action Research, Individual Development, Participatory Research, Inquiry
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Riser, Diana K.; Clarke, Stephanie D.; Stallworth, Allison N. – Psychology Learning and Teaching, 2020
Social media is riddled with memes (i.e., captioned images intended to convey cultural ideas or beliefs) that often promote maladaptive and unsupported beliefs about human development and parenting. This paper presents a scientific writing assignment designed to help spread accurate information on human development beyond the classroom through…
Descriptors: Social Media, Visual Aids, Teaching Methods, Scientific Literacy
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McKenzie, Cori Ann; Bender, Geoff – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2021
Purpose: This paper encourages teachers and scholars of English Language Arts to engage deliberately with literary ambiguity. Design/methodology/approach: Through close attention to ambiguous moments in commonly taught texts, the essay argues that explicit attention to ambiguity can support four enduring goals in the field: fostering social…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Individual Development, Childrens Literature, Adolescent Literature
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de Muynck, Bram; Visser-Vogel, Elsbeth – Journal of Research on Christian Education, 2020
Though personhood formation is often perceived as an important aim of Christian education, there is little clarity about how the concept can be understood from a Christian perspective. Furthermore, teachers lack the tools to nourish the development of students' personhood. In this article, we develop a framework that aims to fill these gaps. The…
Descriptors: Christianity, Religious Factors, Self Concept, Religious Education
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Childhood Education, 2020
Education is a social institution through which a society's children are taught basic knowledge, skills, and cultural norms. Social change can often lead to transformation within the social organization of a society, as it can affect not only people but also social institutions. Social change occurs when people call for change to meet human needs.…
Descriptors: Social Change, Social Systems, Role of Education, Correlation
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Sutherland, Sue; Stuhr, Paul T.; Ressler, James; Smith, Carol; Wiggin, Anne – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2019
Group processing is arguably the pivotal element when implementing cooperative learning (CL). It is the primary vehicle to help group members reflect on behaviors that impede or enable group work. Participating in group processing facilitates students' understanding of their own personal and social development as they recognize how they have…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Teaching Methods, Social Development, Individual Development
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Deng, Zongyi – London Review of Education, 2018
The question of content -- that is, knowledge in the curriculum -- has all but disappeared from global policy and academic discourses concerning teaching and teachers. Invoking the work of Michael Young and his colleagues concerning 'bringing knowledge back in', Bildung-centred Didaktik, and Joseph J. Schwab's curriculum thinking, this article…
Descriptors: Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Educational Philosophy, Teaching Methods, Course Content
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