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Keri Facer – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
Climate change has been called both a 'slow emergency' and an 'urgent crisis', it creates tensions between human and non-human temporalities, it asks some communities to 'speed up' and demands others slow down, and requires choices between present needs, historical responsibilities and future consequences. If students are to understand and…
Descriptors: Climate, Imagination, Educational Practices, Time Perspective
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Tuure Tammi; Riikka Hohti; Maria Saari – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
The inability to respond to the environmental crises has been argued to stem from the crisis of imagination that underlies modernity. In response, the potentials of speculative approaches have been explored. This article presents a speculative worldmaking project conducted in a secondary school with young people. The project involved three…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Time Perspective, Secondary School Students, Intervention
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Bradley, Joff P. N. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
Devoted to the late Paul Virilio (1932-2018) and in the advent of debates surrounding the Anthropocene and in light of corresponding changes to conceptions of scale and image, this paper attempts to extrapolate a Virilian pedagogy of the image. It is Virilio's work which remains timely and singularly fecund in this area and it is for this reason…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy, Climate, Attitude Change
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McGinley, William; Kamberelis, George; White, John Wesley – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
To engage in critical readings of literary texts, in ways that are also ethical and compassionate, requires readers to enter emotionally and imaginatively into the complex, textual worlds of others as they are portrayed in stories. Such stories have the potential to create new worlds that make visible our collective being in ways that allow us to…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Literature, Critical Reading, Ethics
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Paul Ferguson, Joseph; Prain, Vaughan – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2020
Peirce made repeated attempts to clarify what he understood as abduction or creative reasoning in scientific discoveries. In this article, we draw on past and recent scholarship on Peirce's later accounts of abduction to put a case for how teachers can apply his ideas productively to elicit and guide student creative reasoning in the science…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Creativity, Thinking Skills, Scientific Research
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Leask, Ian – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2018
This paper approaches the question of Spinoza and education via the work of Louis Althusser. One important aim is to show how Spinoza's description of the imagination underpins Althusser's description of the ideological 'infrastructure' of educational practices and institutions. To achieve this, I begin by addressing Spinoza's treatment of the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Imagination, Educational Practices, Ideology
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Grushka, Kathryn; Lawry, Miranda; Chand, Ari; Devine, Andy – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
The image is the raw material of the twenty-first century. Images infiltrate all social and cultural spaces. Its digital-mediated realities drive communication, industry and knowledge. Images saturate life and adolescent learners are familiar with the participatory nature of image production and its social, educational and personal communicative…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Imagination, Imagery, Artists
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Magrini, James M. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2017
In response to the so-called crisis in contemporary education in the institutions of higher learning (USA)--the encroachment of corporatism and pervasion of standardization--there is a move to offset this dominance by reconceiving the university in terms of an intimate space of dwelling in learning and education. In light of this moribund…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Educational Philosophy, Higher Education, Commercialization
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English, Andrea R. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2016
Reforms surrounding the teacher's role in fostering students' social competences, especially those associated with empathy, have moved to the forefront of global higher education policy discourse. In this context, reform in higher education teaching has been focused on shifting teachers' practices away from traditional lecture-style…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Empathy, Educational Policy, Educational Philosophy
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Egan, Kieran; Judson, Gillian – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2009
Both local and global issues are typically dealt with in the Social Studies curriculum, or in curriculum areas with other names but similar intents. In the literature about Social Studies the imagination has played little role, and consequently it hardly appears in texts designed to help teachers plan and implement Social Studies lessons. What is…
Descriptors: Imagination, Social Studies, Values, Lesson Plans
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Conroy, James C.; Davis, Robert A. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2002
In this essay, the authors suggest that there is another, different and more ancient way of looking at the moral and social role of the teacher and the processes of education in which she is involved. This alternative perspective draws on older, more imaginative and complex sources of meaning than the latest Gallup poll or the latest adjusted…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Educational Change, Calculus, Educational Practices