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Erol Koçoglu; Kübra Melis Avcu; Ülkü Ulukaya Öteles; Fatima Betül Demir Evcimen; Gülsemin Yildirim – Higher Education Studies, 2025
Education is based on a process that attempts to profile individual behavior via learning. Although this process includes formal and informal dimensions, it could be suggested that both dimensions are effective on the behavior of the individual. Several factors affect the educational process. These variables are significant determinants that…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes, Junior High School Teachers
Bohdan Szklarski – Journal of Adult and Continuing Education, 2025
Civics courses have a great significance -- they are supposed to train new cohorts of citizens to engage in multiple public roles in (democratic) society. How it is done depends on a multitude of factors, and teachers' performance and program contents are among the most important. In post-authoritarian order like Poland, civic contents of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Philosophy, Democracy, Democratic Values
Filiz Oskay; W. Walker Ballard – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2025
Drawing on critical theorist Herbert Marcuse's analysis of modern technological society in his 1964 book, "One-Dimensional Man," this article argues that the forces of one-dimensionality that characterize citizens under capitalism have necessarily found their way into schools, leading to what we see as an epidemic of the one-dimensional…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Social Systems, Individualism, Students
Jeremy Rappleye; Hikaru Komatsu; Suzuka Nishiyama – Oxford Review of Education, 2025
As the sustainability imperative looms, mainstream educational research in the English-speaking world continues a long tradition of failing to see food as integral to education. Japan's tradition of "Shokuiku" (food education) stands in stark contrast, providing an external reference point to direct critical attention on Anglo-American…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sustainable Development, Foods Instruction, Food Service
Sarah J. McCarthey; Ngan Vu; Jiadi Zhang – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
Through a qualitative, collective case study design, the study investigated children's demonstration of agency in composing writing projects in three elementary classrooms within one school. Researchers conducted interviews with the teachers, observed classroom writing instruction, interviewed children individually or in small focus groups, and…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Writing (Composition), Personal Autonomy, Writing Instruction
The Development of Korean Education Fever: From Japanese Colonial Period to Contemporary South Korea
Jeong-Kyu Lee – Online Submission, 2025
This article investigates the development of Korean education fever from Japanese colonial period to contemporary South Korea. To discuss this study logically, three research questions are addressed. First, what is education fever related to Korean higher education from the politico-economic, educational, and historic-cultural perspectives?…
Descriptors: Educational Development, Colonialism, Educational History, Higher Education
Sheena Tan – For the Learning of Mathematics, 2025
The research on mathematical argumentation has mainly adopted a dialectic lens which focuses on understanding the abstract and logical development of reasoning in argumentation. However, this approach may have overlooked other key aspects of mathematical argumentation, including the unfolding of the meaning-making experience and process during…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Skills, Persuasive Discourse
Te Kawehau Hoskins; Alison Jones – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
We will share some thoughts on what 'indigenising the academy' might mean, and why we might attempt it. We come at these questions from our different yet intertwined identities, experiences and lines of intellectual inquiry. Te Kawehau is of Ngati Hau and Ngapuhi tribal groups. Her indigenous ancestors arrived in Aotearoa about 1000 years ago.…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Land Settlement, Pacific Islanders, Ethnic Groups
Shaddai Tembo; Simon Bateson – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2025
This paper presents findings from our project entitled 'Diversity in Unity: Developing an anti-racist framework within Froebelian pedagogy'. We apply an ethnography by proxy approach informed by the work of Jones and Okun on colonial and decolonial habits. Drawing from two nursery settings in England and Scotland, we engage with the methodological…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Preschool Education, Play, Educational Philosophy
Kornilaev, Leonid – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2021
'The human being', Kant contends, 'is the only creature that must be educated'. Thus, for Kant, the concept of education plays a central role in the answer to one of the fundamental questions of philosophy: What is the human being? Education is the means by which the rational powers definitive of our humanity are actualised and cultivated. It is…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Artificial Intelligence, Role of Education, Educational Practices
Keij, Daan – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2021
This article assesses Bernard Stiegler's critique of infantilization. Contemporary education--and society in general--would no longer develop children into adults, but would keep them in their childish state. Stiegler's critique is explicitly inspired by Enlightenment ideals, characterized by a positive notion of maturity and a negative notion of…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Child Development, Maturity (Individuals), Educational Practices
Ottersland Myhre, Cecilie – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2021
This article feeds on new materialisms, especially the work of Barad, while re-turning and exploring child/LEGO/pedagogue/(re)searcher intra-actions in kindergarten and drawing attention to both human and non-human organisms as agentic forces that produce diffractions, affects and effects when they clash. The article places a special focus on one…
Descriptors: Toys, Play, Kindergarten, Preschool Children
Rosén, Maria; Arneback, Emma – Philosophical Inquiry in Education, 2021
This essay elaborates on the notion of risk in relation to democratically challenging situations in education. This refers to situations in which liberal democratic values are potentially challenged, such as in teaching about controversial issues and in moments of expressions of hurtful speech, which can create in teachers an ambivalence for how…
Descriptors: Risk, Democratic Values, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Educational Philosophy
Healy, Mary – British Educational Research Journal, 2021
The possibility of online Aristotelian virtue friendships via social network sites continues to be raised by philosophers, but as yet this has not been positioned within the realm of children or adolescents, who are known to be amongst the largest users of social media. Governmental agencies across the globe still struggle to define the boundaries…
Descriptors: Friendship, Computer Mediated Communication, Social Media, Educational Philosophy
Murphy, Michael P. A. – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2021
One outcome of the increasing interest from philosophy of education circles in the work of Giorgio Agamben has been the possibility of apparently small alterations to enact a radical emancipatory change. This 'weak utopianism' (Lewis, 2013) found in Agamben's work means that traditionally radical changes are viewed with skepticism, as grand…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Active Learning, Classroom Design, Educational Innovation

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