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Wolhuter, Charl; Janmaat, Jan Germen; van der Walt, Johannes L.; Potgieter, Ferdinand J. – South African Journal of Education, 2020
In view of the serious moral decay in South African society, this article reports on our research regarding the role of the school in the inculcation of citizenship values (as part of the brief of South African education). We regard a set of citizenship values consonant with a democratic dispensation to be a core component of a moral order…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Citizenship Education, School Role, Democratic Values
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Jeyaraj, Joanna Joseph; Wald, Navé – Teaching in Higher Education, 2020
This paper explores barriers to realising the social purposes of higher education within a context of dominant hierarchical socio-cultural norms. Those norms are examined to reveal how they hinder students and teachers from engaging with critical thought and social justice issues in Malaysian higher education. The impact of these norms is examined…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Reflection, Barriers, Critical Thinking
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Carrasco, Diego; Banerjee, Robin; Treviño, Ernesto; Villalobos, Cristóbal – Educational Psychology, 2020
The endorsement of anti-corruption norms is a normative assumption in legal systems with freedom of information acts, where citizens are expected to act as monitors of the public service. Tolerance of corruption counteracts this assumption. We studied tolerance of corruption among 8th graders from Latin-American samples of the International Civic…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Grade 8, Socioeconomic Status, Authoritarianism
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Chesebro, Joseph L.; Lyon, Alexander – Communication Education, 2020
This study used rhetorical and relational goal theory to examine the different ways college instructors respond to disruptive behaviors by students in the classroom. Student participants provided and described a critical incident involving a disruptive classmate that either was or was not handled effectively by the instructor. Results identified…
Descriptors: Teacher Response, Behavior Problems, Student Behavior, Classroom Techniques
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Cameron, Jacquelyn; Moore, Randy – American Biology Teacher, 2015
Many biology teachers visit Dayton, Tennessee, to experience "ground zero" of the evolution-creationism controversy. This article provides concise descriptions, addresses, and GPS coordinates for the trial-related sites in and around Dayton.
Descriptors: Biology, Creationism, Evolution, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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Allen, Amy – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2019
Early in the semester, during a seemingly benign math lesson over money, one of the students in my second and third grade blended classroom halted the instruction to ask "Wait! Why are there no women on money? Is there any money with women on it?" Never one to miss an opportunity to get my students thinking critically, we took some time…
Descriptors: Females, United States History, Monetary Systems, Banking
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Fukami, Cynthia V.; Mayer, Don – Management Teaching Review, 2019
To connect course material to executive MBA student workplace experiences and current events more clearly, we created an online space for students to bring up relevant workplace experiences or to post links to articles on domestic and international developments relevant to the week's course topics and materials. The activity has brought forth…
Descriptors: Relevance (Education), Prosocial Behavior, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Business Administration Education
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Kus, Zafer; Öztürk, Durdane – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2019
In today's globalised world, many issues have become controversial. These controversial issues affect society and the individuals who form them. It is inevitable that these topics are brought into social studies classrooms, because this learning area is profoundly related to society. Social studies teachers' behaviours, attitudes, and professional…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods
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Hung, Yu-Han – Journal of International Social Studies, 2019
This study utilized the term "teacher as stranger" from Maxine Greene's (1973) "Teacher as Stranger" to explore how teachers teach contemporary controversial public issues in Taiwan (e.g., national identity, sovereignty, and ethnic issues). Using a case study design, this study documents how six social studies teachers make…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Case Studies, Foreign Countries
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Werman, Amy; Adlparvar, Fatemeh; Horowitz, Jane K.; Hasegawa, Micah O. – Journal of Social Work Education, 2019
Difficult conversations about "isms", power, privilege, and oppression are an essential part of social work education, and they present unique challenges for students and faculty. The current study examined students' and faculty's perceptions of the safety of the classroom and the competence of the faculty in facilitating difficult…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Social Work, Professional Education, Graduate Students
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Spencer, Leland G.; Kulbaga, Theresa A. – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2018
The fierce public and scholarly debate over trigger warnings in university classrooms has often characterized the issue as one of academic freedom and ignored the social justice arguments for trigger warnings. In this essay, we argue that trigger warnings expand academic speech by engaging students more fully in their own learning. Specifically,…
Descriptors: College Students, Social Justice, Emotional Response, Student Reaction
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Batchelor, Katherine E.; Ramos, Maria; Neiswander, Samantha – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2018
LGBTQ themes are often neglected in many schools' curriculum. Currently, an LGBTQ-inclusive curriculum framework is not required in most school districts across the county. Therefore, it is important to understand how teachers regard LGBTQ issues; how they address the needs of students in the middle school and high school English classroom who…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Adolescent Literature, Teaching Methods
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Kibler, M. Alison – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2018
M. Alison Kibler is Professor of American Studies and Women's Gender and Sexuality Studies at Franklin and Marshall College. She has taught "Rights and Representations", a seminar for first year students, focusing on the tension between free speech and equality in American law and politics, for fifteen years. In this article, Kibler…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Rights, First Year Seminars, Freedom of Speech
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Milligan, Andrea; Gibson, Lindsay; Peck, Carla L. – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2018
This article explores the relationship between the philosophy of ethics, history education, and young people's historical ethical judgments. In the last two decades, "ethical judgments," which focus on making decisions about the ethics of historical actions, has been acknowledged as a second-order historical thinking concept in history…
Descriptors: Ethics, Decision Making, History Instruction, Thinking Skills
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Greenfield, Jennifer C.; Atteberry Ash, Brittanie; Plassmeyer, Mark – Journal of Social Work Education, 2018
For social work educators, teaching social policy in the current political climate in the United States may seem daunting and energizing at the same time. Students are often acutely aware of the political and policy-related controversies raging in Washington, D.C. and local governments, and yet their position on these issues may be unexplored or…
Descriptors: Social Work, Counselor Training, Public Policy, Political Attitudes
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