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Sara A. Rich – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2024
It has become increasingly apparent that anti-colonial and antiracist pedagogies are necessary in higher education classrooms, and honors education as an experimental zone is an ideal place to test ideas that can be taken into the wider university community. Honors professors epitomize the teacher-scholar model, and this paper presents a six-year…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Honors Curriculum, Teaching Methods, Social Justice
Dennis Sansom – International Journal of Christianity & Education, 2024
An Augustinian understanding of original sin can significantly contribute to the purpose of the teaching of the humanities. It helps at the point where Martha Nussbaum's understanding of the humanities is inconsistent. She argues that the humanities should cultivate a "world citizen," that is, a people aspiring towards a universal…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Humanities, Christianity, Philosophy
Kloeg, Julien – Journal of Problem Based Learning in Higher Education, 2023
In this paper, this theme of the open question is offered as a hermeneutical approach to problem-based learning. Most of the scientific literature on problem-based learning is in the realm of the behavioral-sciences. To the extent that the latter becomes the exclusive focus of research on problem-based learning, there is a risk of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Problem Based Learning, Hermeneutics, Learning Processes
Jennifer Tosti-Kharas; Julie Levinson – Journal of Management Education, 2024
In the contemporary work landscape, individual workers increasingly create, sustain, and manage their own careers. Business schools prepare students to enter careers using a vocational approach that neglects the cultural lens on why students desire the careers they do and how they perceive those careers over time. In this essay, we argue that…
Descriptors: Career Education, Teaching Methods, Films, Career Development
Koczanowicz, Leszek; Wlodarczyk, Rafal – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2022
The current heated debate on the deteriorating status of the university raises a range of pertinent questions, including: What role can the humanities play in culture today in the face of the crisis of higher education? To answer this question, the authors begin by problematizing the relationship between culture, the humanities, and education. In…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Higher Education, Humanities, Role
Susan C. Pearce; Jennifer O'Neill – Teaching Sociology, 2024
This Teaching Note examines the implementation of a full-semester course model for digital exchanges between students across countries. The model, Global Understanding, created and administered by East Carolina University, is a platform for humanistic pedagogy that dovetails seamlessly with sociological content, methods, and principles. Through an…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Undergraduate Students, Interdisciplinary Approach, Global Approach
John Zubizarreta – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2022
In response to the issue of why and how the humanities--and more broadly the liberal arts and sciences--have historically dominated honors education and disregarded preprofessional fields, the author finds that the crux of the problem is not the nature or worth of the disciplines involved or why this or that subject area is de facto included or…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Educational Practices, Humanities, Liberal Arts
Laurance J. Splitter – Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis, 2020
I trace the beginnings of my journey in both P4C and p4c2 to my first encounter with Matthew Lipman, in his "office" which was, in fact, a caravan parked on the campus of Montclair State College. That was in August 1982, just prior to my oral examination at Oxford, in which I managed to persuade the examiners that my thesis in the…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Children, Inquiry, Questioning Techniques
Simsek, Erhan – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
The split between analytic philosophy (AP) and Continental philosophy (CP) has mainly preoccupied scholars of philosophy so far, but in fact, it has broader pedagogical implications. This article argues that conventions of argumentative writing, as taught in colleges today, have their roots in analytic philosophy and its assumptions regarding ways…
Descriptors: Academic Language, Writing (Composition), Educational Philosophy, Teaching Methods
Sandra Leaton Gray; Mutlu Cukurova – Cogent Education, 2024
Debates surrounding the use of data science in educational AI are frequently rather entrenched, revolving around commercial models and talk of teacher replacement. This article explores the potential for digital textual analysis within humanities and social science education, advocating for a sociologically-driven approach that complements, rather…
Descriptors: Humanities, Social Sciences, Social Science Research, Research Methodology
Vanzant, Kevin – History Teacher, 2019
Narrative in a United States survey course is hard to avoid. The question that the author has confronted in his classes is simple: do narratives still work in the surveys now that students understand their subjectivity, in many cases, as much as their teachers? Students, like most humans, tend to like stories. As the humanities at large and…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Teaching Methods, Fiction, Student Interests
Nichols, T. Philip; Johnston, Kelly – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2020
Multimodal composing using digital media has long emphasized forms of meaning making that extend beyond printed text to include a wider range of available semiotic resources. However, recent research has complicated this notion by highlighting how this availability does not follow inevitably from digital tools but arises from the interplay of…
Descriptors: Multiple Literacies, Multimedia Materials, Computer Software, Humanities
Halpern, Faye – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2023
The folklorist Vladímir Propp identified a curious phenomenon in his study of 100 Russian fairy tales: despite their tremendous surface variety, they followed a single narrative structure or morphology. This article argues that the same phenomenon applies to SoTL articles: despite the tremendous variety of content and methods that SoTL articles…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Research Reports, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes
Goetz, Greta – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
Bernard Stiegler highlights many of the problems faced by education with respect to the 'bringing forth' of knowledge on an individual, collective, and technical level in the Anthropocene. These problems include the short-circuiting of dreams, automatization of thought, and toxic digital networks. Stiegler's [foreign characters] (pharmakon) seeks…
Descriptors: Climate, Teaching Methods, Computer Software, Educational Philosophy
Pawlett-Jackson, Sarah P. – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2019
In this paper, I examine some of the presuppositions that underpin the practice and interpretation of multi-person dialogue -- that is, in contexts involving more than two interlocutors -- with particular thought for the university seminar. I outline the 'dialogical phenomenology' of Beata Stawarska as useful on this count; however, I argue that…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Seminars, College Instruction, Phenomenology