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Panjwani, Farid – Current Issues in Comparative Education, 2004
The paper assesses the dominant discourse on Islam and education that argues for an education derived from an exclusively "Islamic" vision. In addition to exploring the historical roots of this discourse, the paper analyses it with respect to its (i) arguments for an Islamic vision of education, (ii) conception of Islam, and (iii)…
Descriptors: Muslims, Islamic Culture, Islam, Discourse Analysis
Thurlow, Crispin – Language and Intercultural Communication, 2004
The central thesis in this essay is the need to get more "personal" and more "political" in our thinking and especially our teaching about interculturality. Offering a "radical" critique of the agenda of conventional Intercultural Communication scholarship, I draw my inspiration from the conceptual and philosophical roots of the field, while also…
Descriptors: Intercultural Communication, Critical Theory, Philosophy, Religion
Pakes, Anna – Research in Dance Education, 2003
Many UK universities now recognise that artistic practice can constitute a form of research in its own right; increasingly, practising artists are sponsored or employed to work creatively within the academy, whilst the regulatory frameworks of research degree programmes have evolved to enable practical doctoral submissions. These developments have…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Epistemology, Foreign Countries, Dance
Monceri, Flavia – Language and Intercultural Communication, 2003
The "Self" is a core notion in Western philosophy, which mainly defined it as an "autarchic individual", dependent on no "Other" whatsoever. Such a prevailing definition fails to recognise that just the "Other" is needed to properly define the "Self". As a result, Western mainstream philosophy…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Cultural Pluralism, Intercultural Communication, Epistemology
Carrington, Suzanne; Holm, Kris – Australasian Journal of Special Education, 2005
This paper reports on processes employed at a secondary state high school in Australia, where students directed inclusive school development. The procedures used in the study were developed from the Index for Inclusion and included a student forum; a student presentation to parents, principal and teachers and a focus group interview with members…
Descriptors: Student Empowerment, Inclusive Schools, School Culture, Focus Groups
Geffen, Rela Mintz – Journal of Jewish Education, 2005
Jewish education needs a philosophy if its practitioners are to be considered part of a "real" profession and its professors are to be thought of as having mastered a legitimate academic discipline. A strong cadre of researchers who have produced a valid and reliable body of research also is required to earn a respected place in the academy. Until…
Descriptors: Jews, Career Choice, Judaism, Intellectual Disciplines
Baker, Bernadette – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2005
This paper conjoins Derrida's analysis of aporia and boderlines with Foucault's genealogical sensibilities to rethink the attribution of recent events in education to globalisation. Three analytical domains are linked to historicise student-teacher interaction: studies of pedagogical techniques, sociological analyses of the state, and…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Global Approach, Human Relations, Teacher Student Relationship
Bonnell, Tom – Teacher Magazine, 2002
A Tibetan Buddhist monk, Lama Tenzin, spent a week at the Manhattan private school where the author of this article was the middle school director. Lama Tenzin did not come to introduce students to Buddhism or to explain the plight of the Tibetan people. Instead, he came to create a piece of art that is a specialty of his and his brother monks': a…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Middle Schools, Administrators, Child Development
Brookfield, Stephen – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2004
This response to Mayo's book emphasizes its Gramscian aspects and explores two dimensions not addressed in the original. The first is Cornel West's attempt to racialize Gramsci and examine how his ideas might serve the interests of African-Americans. The second is Michael Newman and Ian Baptiste's exploration of the partisan, directive role of…
Descriptors: Adult Educators, Adult Education, African Americans, Educational Philosophy
Krettenauer, Tobias – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2004
The present study investigates whether epistemic cognition in moral domain (dubbed "metaethical cognition") develops analogously to epistemic reasoning regarding empirical knowledge. The study's conceptual framework distinguishes two main areas of metaethical cognition (beliefs about the nature of moral judgments and conceptions of the process of…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Value Judgment, Moral Development, Ethics
Luckcock, Tim – British Journal of Religious Education, 2006
This paper is written from the perspective of an Anglican head teacher in the context of UK public educational policy in which managerialism is construed as the prevalent orthodoxy of reform. It seeks to bring the discipline of theology and the field of school leadership studies into closer dialogue around the theme of managerialism in a way that…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Instructional Leadership, Christianity, Educational Administration
Duckworth, Cheryl – Journal of Peace Education, 2006
Most educators are familiar with the principles of one of the founding mothers of peace education, Maria Montessori. Bringing an utterly fresh vision to notions of childhood and education, she re-imagined the classroom as one in which children would explore and discover their own interests and passions. With regard to conflict resolution, she…
Descriptors: Montessori Schools, Educational Philosophy, Peace, Conflict Resolution
Beauchamp, Gary – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2003
The official baptism of primary education offered in the "Hadow Report" of 1926 signalled a new beginning for "elementary" education. The indication that primary education would form the basis of a progressive and continuing education until the age of 14 was an important statement of intent. However, if Hadow signified the…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries
Suissa, Judith – Ethics and Education, 2006
Although children and parents often feature in philosophical literature on education, the nature of the parent-child relationship remains occluded by the language of rights, duties and entitlements. Likewise, talk of "parenting" in popular literature and culture implies that being a parent is primarily about performing tasks. Drawing on popular…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Parent Child Relationship, Moral Values, Social Values
White, John – British Journal of Religious Education, 2005
Andrew Wright has recently criticized an article penned by the author, which suggests that no good reasons have been given why religious education should be a compulsory school subject. In this article, the author explains the two misunderstandings Wright has about his position. First, Wright characterized the author's thesis as arguing "from…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Reader Response, Rhetorical Criticism, Compulsory Education

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