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Peer reviewedEpstein, William M. – Society, 1996
Argues that sociopathy is the result of broad cultural failure and that social science has not demonstrated either the causes or the cures for sociopathy. Demonstrating social cause is beyond both the financial capacity and the ethical boundaries of society. Cultural and economic equality are potential solutions but society rejects these notions…
Descriptors: Antisocial Behavior, Criticism, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Financial Problems
Peer reviewedEisner, Elliot W. – Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education, 1996
Articulates a fundamental rationale for the practice of qualitative research in music education. Argues that knowledge and experience are by definition subjective and constructed, thereby validating research methodologies that incorporate and acknowledge these realities. Identifies eight "processes" that offer productive research opportunities.…
Descriptors: Criticism, Educational Development, Educational Improvement, Educational Quality
Peer reviewedFonte, John – Society, 1997
Examines the court transformation of civil rights from equal opportunity and nondiscrimination to racial/gender/ethnic proportional representation. It analyzes the implications for justice and equality and suggests that it is time to restore the moral ideals of the civil rights coalition of 1964. (GR)
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Civil Rights, Court Litigation, Criticism
Peer reviewedBenesch, Sarah – TESOL Quarterly, 1996
Argues that the current approach to needs analysis research in English for academic purposes (EAP) needs to be replaced with critical needs analysis that views the target situation as an opportunity for curriculum development. The article concludes that EAP classes can be agents for social change. (26 references) (Author/CK)
Descriptors: Change Strategies, College Students, Context Effect, Course Content
Matthews, Becky – Education Canada, 2003
If British Columbia education policy wanted to promote growth in numeracy and mathematics, the curriculum would provide opportunities to use mathematical concepts in social situations and give students time to move from concrete to abstract thought. Instead, the curriculum emphasizes extensive mechanical understanding and algorithmic manipulation…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, College Preparation, Critical Thinking, Criticism
Oppenheimer, Todd – Atlantic Monthly, 1997
Challenges research and prevailing attitudes that maintain that computers improve teaching and academic achievement. Criticizes and questions research methodology, computer literacy education, the need for computer skills to make a competitive workforce, support from the business community resulting from technology programs, and Internet use. (LRW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Literacy, Criticism
Shannon, Patrick; Edmondson, Jacqueline – Journal of Research in Rural Education, 2003
Since the authors' previous article was submitted, the Reading First proposal in question was funded without revisions. This may have happened because a new governor and political party had replaced those in charge of the Reading First program. Three implications arise: persist when values collide; who controls state government matters; and…
Descriptors: Criticism, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education, Federal Aid
Peer reviewedCrowe, Thomas Rain, Ed. – Appalachian Journal, 1990
Taped interview in which Appalachian Indian poet Marilou Awiakta examines her own life and work. Discusses effects of rural upbringing, Cherokee culture, modern science, and life abroad on writing. Examines themes of feminism and technology in life and work. Includes six poems. (TES)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, Creative Writing, Cultural Influences
Reconstructing <Equality>: Culturetypal and Counter-Cultural Rhetorics in the Martyred Black Vision.
Peer reviewedLucaites, John Louis; Condit, Celeste Michelle – Communication Monographs, 1990
Examines Black Americans' attempts in the 1960s to achieve legitimacy and <equality>, defined as ideological commitment to promote "sameness" and "identity" explicitly through rhetoric of control. Investigates how the culturetypal rhetoric of Martin Luther King, Jr., and the counter-culture rhetoric of Malcolm X…
Descriptors: Black Culture, Blacks, Communication Research, Cultural Context
Peer reviewedOlds, Clifton – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1990
Describes Jan Gossaert's painting of "St. Luke Painting the Virgin" and shows how it encompasses the intellectual pattern of early sixteenth-century thought. Discusses the arguments for and against the making of religious images and how artists overcame the potential threat to their livelihood from church authorities. Analyzes Gossaert's…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education
Peer reviewedHagaman, Sally – Art Education, 1990
Maintains that philosophical aesthetics must be an integral part of art education. Examines existing methods and materials for teaching philosophy to children from the Institute for the Advancement of Philosophy for Children (New Jersey). Describes a sample unit showing philosophical aesthetics in action in a fifth grade class. (KM)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Aesthetic Values, Art Criticism, Art Education
Peer reviewedTrimmer, Joseph F. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1990
Describes class discussions in an undergraduate English fiction class. Draws a parallel between students' reactions to reading material and the instructor's own responses to fiction as an undergraduate. Suggests that a literature teacher can depart from the usual role of telling students how they must read a given story. (SG)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Fiction, Literary Criticism
Peer reviewedDeHart, Florence E.; Bleeker, Gerrit W. – Journal of Youth Services in Libraries, 1988
Discussion of a project in which adolescent novels were analyzed in terms of the characters' incorporation of information skills in problem solving notes the lack of information skills models in adolescent literature. Ways to use these novels--even though they lack models--to teach adolescents information and problem solving skills are suggested.…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Critical Thinking, Decision Making, Information Seeking
Peer reviewedSpolsky, Ellen – ELT Journal, 1988
Argues that resisting reading, a kind of reading learned from recent feminist literary criticism, is a way of ensuring that learning about a foreign culture does not lead to the destruction of one's own identity. Students can read texts they are not sympathetic with because understanding does not mean accepting. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Cultural Differences, English (Second Language), Feminism
Peer reviewedGee, James Paul – Journal of Education, 1989
Analyzes oral narrative told to peers by a Black girl and compares it to one told to an adult female by a White middle-class girl. Proposes that the White girl's style is compatible with school-based values governing speech and writing, while the Black girl's style is compatible with cultures emphasizing verbal mastery but is not compatible with…
Descriptors: Black Students, Contrastive Linguistics, Cultural Differences, Educational Environment

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