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Claudi, Alessio – Australian and International Journal of Rural Education, 2021
Often in the past, historians tended to study and write mainly about key figures, such as rulers or very famous people. However, in recent decades, historians have started to focus on local figures who had a role in their community. This paper narrates the life of one of those characters, an interesting individual who led a varied and interesting…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Biographies, Educational History, Educational Theories
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Axelrod, Paul – Canadian Journal of Higher Education, 2021
Academic freedom has a long, complex history in Canada and elsewhere. For reasons that are at times justifiable and at times indefensible, academic freedom has been constrained in a variety of ways, and not only by institutional or political authorities. Using illustrations drawn from Canada and beyond, this article tracks the history and progress…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Barriers, Foreign Countries, Educational History
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De Costa, Peter I.; Sterling, Scott; Lee, Jongbong; Li, Wendy; Rawal, Hima – Language Teaching, 2021
The growing concern for ethics in applied linguistics may be attributed to attempts to stem the rising incidence of ethical lapses in order to ensure that the core ethical principles of: (1) respect for persons; (2) yielding optimal benefits while minimizing harm; and (3) justice are preserved. Following a brief historical review of this topic,…
Descriptors: Ethics, Language Research, Applied Linguistics, Research Methodology
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McNulty, Margaret A.; Wisner, Rebecca L.; Meyer, Amanda J. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2021
The law of Non-Original Malappropriate Eponymous Nomenclature (NOMEN) states that no phenomenon is named after its discoverer. However, eponymous terms are rife in the anatomical and medical literature. In this viewpoint commentary, the authors discuss the history of anatomical eponyms, explain the additional cognitive load imposed by eponyms that…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Vocabulary, History, Cognitive Processes
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Bulatov, Ivan – History of Education, 2021
Following the civil war in Russia, many Russian people ended up in exile. Amongst many other challenges, they were faced with the unique threat of losing their national identity. The key defenders of Russianness were the traditional institutions of identity construction. Youth movements also assisted them in this work, through the use of the Scout…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, War, Identification, Youth Programs
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Karp, Alexander – ZDM: Mathematics Education, 2021
This paper is a survey paper for the special issue on changes in Eastern European mathematics education in recent decades. In it I attempt to describe briefly the development of Eastern European mathematics education during the years that preceded the changes of the late 1980s and early 1990s, and to indicate certain questions for research…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mathematics Education, Educational Change, Educational History
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Varga, Bretton A.; Agosto, Vonzell; Maguregui, Julian – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2021
This article takes an arts-based approach to unmasking the (wounded) naming histories of public schools within a 20-miles radius of a university in central Florida. It applies an artistic methodology that was inspired by the abstract artwork of Mark Bradford. Through the application of this methodology (e.g. research, layer, excavate), the authors…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Art Activities, Cartography, Maps
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Frederick-Frost, Kristen – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
As a member of the team that created elements 104 and 105 at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, James Andrew Harris [1932-2000] was the first African American credited in the discovery of an element. This factoid has been posted on social media, used in a quiz game, and repeated on numerous Web sites. The story (if any context is offered at all) is…
Descriptors: Scientists, Chemistry, Discovery Processes, African Americans
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Money, Nicholas P.; Fischer, Mark W. F. – American Biology Teacher, 2021
Cell size is an important variable in the study of cellular growth, metabolism, and the cell cycle. The large size of "Amoeba proteus" and the ease with which it can be collected and cultured have made it a star in biology education--and it was a model for research on cell biology before the introduction of molecular genetic methods.…
Descriptors: Cytology, Biomechanics, Measurement, Science Experiments
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Peña, Ernesto; Dobson, Teresa M. – Journal of Visual Literacy, 2021
Until today, the most accepted notion about the coinage of visual literacy as a concept has been credited to John Debes in the late 1960s. In this paper, the authors describe the use of available digital tools to unearth a history of the concept of visual literacy in education that precedes in roughly 30 years these events. These overlooked years…
Descriptors: Visual Literacy, Educational History, Influence of Technology, Educational Policy
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Burke, Kevin J.; van Kessel, Cathryn – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
This article is about evil and its function in educational discourse. The research posits, using work in postsecularism and particularly through an historical, legal, and theological read of prophetic indictment and the function of the jeremiad in educational policy, that the terms of educational debate are rendered in a legal rather than a…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Policy, Educational History, Antisocial Behavior
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Paton, Michael John – Science & Education, 2021
Fengshui was originally a methodology for nurture of both spirit and fertility based on the relationship between water, wind, and qi, and was first used in the selection of sites of habitation on the loess plateau of northern China. An analysis of this methodology for nurture of the physical is the purpose of this paper. Its prism is the history…
Descriptors: Science Education, Interior Design, Psychological Patterns, Philosophy
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McCreary, Michael – Educational Theory, 2021
Jacques Rancière's "The Ignorant Schoolmaster" confronts its reader with an intellectual adventure. In this article, Michael McCreary interrogates why Rancière might have chosen to share Joseph Jacotot's pedagogical ideas with us and how the method in which he casts them might be internal to their teaching. In the first section, McCreary…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Books, Intelligence, Educational Theories
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Holton, Derek – Australian Primary Mathematics Classroom, 2021
This article recounts the life of mathematician Leonhard Euler and discusses the use of Graph Theory in student learning.
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Professional Personnel, Educational History, Problem Solving
Applegate, Edd – Online Submission, 2021
This paper examines several correspondence schools that developed courses in advertising for young men and women who were interested in learning about the subject but who were not necessarily interested in attending a college or university. In addition, the paper discusses the founding of the National Home Study Council, which developed standards…
Descriptors: Correspondence Schools, Advertising, Academic Standards, Educational History
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