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Rob Loren Hill – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2025
Neoliberalism is ubiquitous in higher education. In its dedication to efficiency and measurement, neoliberalism poses threats to the arts and humanities, especially their least measurable, most human qualities. Guided by an institutional logics framework, this multiple case study gauged how arts and humanities faculty can navigate this tension as…
Descriptors: Job Skills, Art Education, Humanities Instruction, Neoliberalism
Helena Kadmos; Jessica Taylor – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2024
Humanities educators are frequently frustrated by students' poor engagement in reading. The contemporary student experience is characterised by disruption and precarity. Similarly, is that of teachers who work in casual employment. This discussion is located within broader conversations around the neoliberal university, but aims to make more…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Neoliberalism, Humanities, Humanities Instruction
Shreya Singh; Cecilia Cerja; Catherine Helen Palczewski – Communication Education, 2024
Long before the Dobbs decision, abortion was a fraught topic in communication classes. Post-Dobbs, the disincentives to discussing abortion intensified as a slew of state legislative actions-imposed restrictions not only on abortion access, but also on anything that might be construed as support for abortion. The purpose with this essay is to…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Pregnancy, College Faculty, State Legislation
Sarah Wyman; Andrea Roxana Bellot – Intercultural Education, 2025
In a literary studies-focused Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL) project, students?from Catalonia, Spain and the U.S. experienced holistic learning activities that hinged experiential analysis and interpretation practice to urgent problems of social and economic instability. By using the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Electronic Learning, Sustainability, Humanities Instruction
Rachael Ruegg – Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice, 2025
Many previous studies have compared automated analyses to writing experts' assessments, and less is known about the relationship between such features and content instructors' assessments of writing. The data analysed in this study is part of a larger study investigating growth in academic writing skills during undergraduate study. In this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Freshmen, Writing Assignments, Humanities Instruction
Rebecca Sullivan; David T. Hansen – Teachers College Record, 2025
Background/Context: In this article, we elucidate the meaning and value of a mode of inquiry we call "bearing witness." These words are frequently heard in educational and public discourse. They sometimes serve as a stand-in for awareness and concern regarding trauma or constitute a shorthand for the tasks of journalism (e.g.,…
Descriptors: Humanities, Humanities Instruction, Educational Practices, Humanism
Cori-Lynn Maier Gillespie – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The content of a humanities course allows students to understand other philosophies, cultures, and values different from their own. The problem is that although the literature indicates the many benefits of completing a humanities course, the prioritization of academic performance in core courses such as reading, math, and science, coupled with…
Descriptors: Principals, Secondary Schools, Humanities, Courses
Brimzhanova, Saule; Atanov, Sabyrzhan; Moldamurat, Khuralay; Baymuhambetova, Botagoz; Brimzhanova, Karlygash; Seitmetova, Aitkul – Education and Information Technologies, 2022
Computer-based testing of humanities students has some inconveniences and difficulties, where the whole learning process is practically based on communicative methods. In this regard, one needs such a testing system, which would allow one to ask open-ended questions, and students would be able to enter detailed answers. Despite the popularity of…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Humanities Instruction, Humanities, Mathematics
Alma S. Espartinez – Journal of Information Technology Education: Innovations in Practice, 2025
Aim/Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore the integration of Design Thinking (DT) into a philosophy course and its impact on student learning and engagement. The problem addressed is the traditional approach to philosophical education, which often lacks practical relevance and fails to engage students in meaningful ways. Background:…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Humanities Instruction, Design, Cognitive Processes
Fatima M. M. Hasan; Moayad A. Wahsheh; Zeinab M. Hassan – International Review of Education, 2025
The COVID-19 pandemic has led to the widespread adoption of flexible learning, which allows students to access educational materials and participate in classes remotely. Self-determination theory, a focus of this article, promotes self-motivation in the digital world of flexible learning. This study aimed to determine the link between…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Satisfaction, Blended Learning, COVID-19
Rachel Elizabeth Scott; Ana Dubnjakovic – College & Research Libraries, 2025
Several studies have noted that humanists have not been as quick or enthusiastic in their adoption of Open Access (OA) as their colleagues in other disciplines. This article leverages the Ithaka S+R US 2021 Faculty Survey to provide contextualized analysis of the OA and Open Education Resources (OER) preferences of humanities scholars, as well as…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Humanities, Scholarship, College Faculty
Lori Czerwionka; Siddhant S. Joshi; Gabriel O. Rios-Rojas; Kirsten A. Davis – Journal of Engineering Education, 2025
Background: Engineering problems are open-ended and complex, involving technical and social aspects, yet engineering education focuses on technical training and closed-ended problems. To prepare engineering students, curricula should foster sociotechnical thinking--the ability to consider the interplay of technical and social factors during…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Humanities Instruction, Thinking Skills, Problem Solving
Vincent C. A. Crone; Merel van Goch – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2024
This study explores the perception of critical thinking (CT) among students in undergraduate humanities programs. It uncovers a strong alignment between the learning objectives of CT within the curriculum and students' perceptions. Students not only recognize CT but also underscore its importance, affirming their perceived improvement in critical…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Humanities, Humanities Instruction, Student Attitudes
Loreal E. Robertson – ProQuest LLC, 2023
This phenomenological study sought to explore the racialized educational experiences of graduate students of color (GSOC) seeking degrees in humanities disciplines. While some research studies have focused on minority graduate student experiences, there has been less focus on minority graduate student experiences in the humanities. Utilizing…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Minority Group Students, Humanities, Humanities Instruction
Hiro, Molly; McDaneld, Jen – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2022
This essay uses the experience of building a new public humanities program to explore approaches for revitalizing the field. While public humanities scholars have recently focused much of their attention on the "public" part of the public humanities, in the day-to-day institutional context the lack of attention on the…
Descriptors: Humanities, Humanities Instruction, Fellowships, Higher Education

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