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Aburabia-Queder, Sarab – Higher Education Quarterly, 2011
This article examines two groups of Bedouin women who studied in different cultural spaces. The first group, due to a lack of high schools in the Negev (during the 1970s), were obliged to leave the village to study and reside in boarding schools in the central and northern regions of Israel. These women returned to their society of origin after…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Jews, Females, Boarding Schools
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Greninger, Nicole Michelle – Journal of Jewish Education, 2010
Tefillah is a central component of the curriculum at many congregational schools. Yet despite the time and resources that congregational schools dedicate for "tefillah education," large numbers of Jews (both children and adults) continue to feel uncomfortable and incompetent in Jewish worship. This research begins to answer the question, "How…
Descriptors: Jews, Religious Education, Judaism, Religious Factors
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Gur-Ze'ev, Ilan – Policy Futures in Education, 2010
A new critical language is possible yet its becoming is not guaranteed. Its roots and sources should be diverse, universal and Diasporic. Jewish negative theology is ultimately Diasporic and could become one of its edifying sources. Diaspora is not only an intellectual state, not necessarily collective but communal. One of the things that makes…
Descriptors: Jews, Children, Philosophy, Violence
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Cowan, Paula; Maitles, Henry – Prospects: Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 2010
In contrast to the situation in England and Wales, Holocaust education in Scotland is not mandatory and is not delivered to every school student. Still, it is offered frequently. In this article we show how Scotland's changing curriculum, the introduction of Holocaust Memorial Day, and the Lessons from Auschwitz Project have contributed to the…
Descriptors: Jews, Foreign Countries, Comparative Analysis, Comparative Education
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Beck, Bernard – Multicultural Perspectives, 2010
Minority groups are often justified in being watchful for the difficulties that negative reputations can bring on them. The necessity for discovery and discussion of serious issues within a minority community is real, but the resistance to such a candid approach is founded in their position of vulnerability and the power of old stereotypes. Two…
Descriptors: African Americans, Jews, Audiences, Minority Groups
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Fagen, Ruth S. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2010
This article presents the author's response to Jon A. Levisohn's article entitled "A Menu of Orientations in the Teaching of Rabbinic Literature." In the last section of his article, Levisohn claims that when considering the field of teaching rabbinic literature, "the menu of orientations holds the potential to raise the level of pedagogic…
Descriptors: Educational Improvement, Teaching Methods, Theory Practice Relationship, Judaism
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Lehman, Marjorie – Journal of Jewish Education, 2010
This paper presents the author's response to Jon A. Levisohn's article entitled "A Menu of Orientations in the Teaching of Rabbinic Literature." Levisohn has made a significant contribution to the scholarship of teaching in his article proposing that the teaching of rabbinic literature is most successfully accomplished when teachers think about…
Descriptors: Jews, Scholarship, Teaching Methods, Religious Education
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Zisenwine, David – Journal of Jewish Education, 2010
In this article, the author talks about Jon A. Levisohn's article that develops a menu of orientations for the teaching of rabbinic literature. The author suggests that Jon A. Levisohn's article should be required reading for all Jewish educators who are interested in curriculum and teaching. The essay is a vehicle for introducing a way of looking…
Descriptors: Jews, Judaism, Religious Education, Teaching Methods
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Boschki, Reinhold; Reichmann, Bettina; Schwendemann, Wilhelm – Prospects: Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 2010
This article provides an overview of education after and about Auschwitz (Holocaust education) in Germany in both theory and practice, with particular attention to three critical areas. The first is the status of research in, as Adorno famously phrased it, "education after Auschwitz" within the context of contemporary Germany. German…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Jews, Death
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Payes, Shany – Intercultural Education, 2013
The case of education in the mixed Arab-Jewish city of Jaffa, Israel, demonstrates the dialectical role of education in conflict-affected societies. As scholars of transformative education and critical pedagogy have noted, education tends to serve as an instrument of the dominant ideology of social and political elites, yet it is also a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Arabs, Jews, Conflict
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Holt, Ann – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2012
Viktor Lowenfeld (1903-1960) has been abundantly documented as having influenced art teaching in the United States. Scarce attention, however, has been given to the significant and remarkable advancements he made to resist structures of institutionalized racism and promote inter-racial cooperation. Lowenfeld was a mentor to several notable African…
Descriptors: Art Teachers, Empowerment, Resistance (Psychology), Activism
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Metzger, Scott Alan – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2012
This case study explores potential educational tensions in historical empathy for learning about emotionally difficult topics through lessons that use dramatic feature films (movies). It investigates one case of historical empathy in the classroom by analyzing what a high-school teacher and her students do and talk about in class. The observed…
Descriptors: Caring, War, Films, Empathy
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Aflalo, Ester – Issues in Educational Research, 2012
This study furthers the understanding of the connections between learning approaches and learning strengths. The research population embraced 65 males from the Jewish ultraorthodox community, who abide by distinct methods of study. One group follows the very didactic, linear and structured approach with performance orientation, while the second…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Jews, Research Tools, Foreign Countries
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Ross, Renee Rubin – Journal of Jewish Education, 2012
Given that all schools solicit parent participation, an important question is whether and how this varies by school. I draw on observation and interviews with parents, teachers, and administrators at a Jewish day school and Catholic school to identify forms and patterns of participation. I found that communicating and volunteering were similar at…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Jews, Catholics, Day Schools
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Fischer, Shlomo; Hotam, Yotam; Wexler, Philip – Review of Research in Education, 2012
In this article, the authors attempt to show what it means to think about democracy and education "within" society, culture, and religion. They use the term religion to discuss both "religion" as a social phenomena and "religiosity" as a spiritual, aesthetic individual commitment to the transcendent, eternal, and…
Descriptors: Social Theories, Context Effect, Social Environment, Cultural Context
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