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Michael Hand – Educational Theory, 2025
For at least half a century, there has been a broad consensus that indoctrination is a pernicious form of miseducation and a distinctive vice of teaching. In recent years, a number of educational theorists have sought to cast doubt on this view. They suggest that the attention traditionally given to the threat of indoctrination, and the anxiety…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Ideology, Information Dissemination, Misconceptions
Kate R. Johnson; Heidi Lyn Hadley; Allison Schoonbeck; Sarah E. Benson – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2025
The religiopolitical movement of White Christian nationalism has increasingly impacted policy and practice in public education in the United States. This theoretical paper examines how White Christian nationalist ideologies and rhetoric are influencing the discourse of schooling and education. We use Butler's (2016) definition of frames,…
Descriptors: Whites, Christianity, Nationalism, Religious Factors
Brett Drake – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2025
Social work pedagogy is at a crossroads. A classically liberal approach is being replaced by one derived from postmodernism and critical theory (PCT). As this shift is mainly paradigmatic, the first half of this paper describes the nature and history of these two competing perspectives. Key differences between liberalism and PCT are discussed and…
Descriptors: Postmodernism, Critical Theory, Social Work, Ideology
Lewin, David – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2022
The indoctrination debates have been a key feature of the philosophy of education over the past 50 years. While it is generally acknowledged that the pejorative associations of indoctrination only emerged over the last 100 years, those normative associations are widely taken to be an essential part of the concept itself as are the positive…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Ideology, Information Dissemination, Educational Philosophy
Ballard, William Walker – Theory and Research in Education, 2023
This article argues for the need of a new, pragmatic response to claims of indoctrination in public school classrooms across the United States. While attempts at defining indoctrination and moral arguments for and against certain pedagogical practices may be worthwhile, the article maintains that claims of indoctrination, whether substantive or…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Ideology, Educational Practices, Teacher Effectiveness
Rona Tamiko Halualani – Communication Teacher, 2025
This essay highlights a critical assessment approach for intercultural communication courses that engages in a "doing--undoing" practice for instructors, with the aim of "doing" culture as learned through society and traditional intercultural communication instruction with the limited, romanticized, and settler colonial…
Descriptors: Intercultural Communication, Teaching Methods, Cultural Awareness, Colonialism
Hand, Michael – Educational Theory, 2023
Schools plausibly have a role to play in countering radicalization by taking steps to prevent the acquisition of extremist beliefs, dispositions, and attitudes. A core component of the extremist mindset is aversion to compromise. Michael Hand inquires here into the possibility, desirability, and means of educating against this attitude. He argues…
Descriptors: Ideology, Antisocial Behavior, Violence, Social Influences
Matthew Overstreet – Composition Studies, 2024
Within the rhetoric and composition literature, liberal and liberalism often denote unsophisticated theory and insufficiently progressive practice. I argue that such a view distorts the liberal tradition. Liberalism is, in fact, a potent reform project deeply connected to university writing instruction. During our field's social turn of the 1980s,…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Writing Instruction, Ideology, Teaching Methods
Dan Martin – Across the Disciplines, 2024
The invention of composition as a required course in the United States, a booming textbook industry, and an increased focus on nationalism perpetuated the standardizing of English language practices and curriculums in secondary and postsecondary schools in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Composition textbooks circulated both standard…
Descriptors: Nationalism, Writing (Composition), Textbooks, Standard Spoken Usage
Himani Bannerji – Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education, 2024
Equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI)--or sometimes styled EDID by including decolonization--is an institutionalized response to demands for access, inclusion, recognition, and redistribution by communities of people excluded from traditional centres of power. Under the banner of EDI(D), educational institutions have launched an extensive program…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Equal Education, Diversity, Inclusion
Araújo, Leonardo Augusto Luvison – Journal of Biological Education, 2022
The central importance of evolution to all biological sciences is recognised by many authors. Despite this scientific consensus, the theory of evolution is commonly presented as one discrete topic among many in the biology curriculum. Possible reasons for this scenario include discomfort with the content, ideological opposition and teachers'…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Biology, Science Instruction, Evolution
Gunansyah, Ganes; Ariadi, Septi; Budirahayu, Tuti – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2023
This article reviews critical pedagogy challenges, opportunities, and limitations in paying attention to environmental issues and crises. Pre-disaster efforts in preventing and overcoming environmental damage and crime can be pursued through environmental education at all levels, from primary education to higher education. There is a need to…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Citizenship, Democracy, Critical Theory
Christopher Samuell – Language and Intercultural Communication, 2024
The relationship between concepts of 'native-speakerism', English language education and their effects on local stakeholders are continually evolving. As such, this paper critically analysed native-speakerist ideologies in the Japanese EFL teaching context with the aim of illustrating the complicated nature of native-speakerism as it currently…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Native Speakers, Ideology, Global Approach
Angela Patricia Velásquez-Hoyos; Luis Herney Villegas López – HOW, 2024
This reflective article examines the emerging tendencies in critical perspectives within English Language Teaching (ELT). The article begins by providing a brief historical overview of ELT's critical pedagogies and discussing its perspectives in the post-pandemic era. It highlights the need for critical approaches that address power dynamics,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language Teachers, Second Language Instruction, English (Second Language)
Jane Fenton – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2025
This paper uses a modest finding from a research study as a window into the world of social work education in Scotland. The study demonstrated that students believed by their classmates to be most dominant (white, straight men) were in fact the most reluctant to speak out. This finding is woven into an examination of a social work pedagogy…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Counselor Training, Social Work, Social Status