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McPherran, Mark L. – Oxford Review of Education, 2010
This paper focuses on the educational method--the "elenchos"--of Plato's Socrates, arguing, against some prominent interpretations, that it is love, both "eros" and "philia", that is the key that links Socrates' philosophy with his education. This analysis, of course, raises some difficult questions regarding the relationship between teacher and…
Descriptors: Educational Methods, Educational Philosophy, World History, Teacher Student Relationship
Ullman, Ellen – Community College Journal, 2010
Today's environment requires community college leaders to put student success and equity at the top of their leadership agendas. Thus, higher education institutions have realized a need to change the philosophies and programs that underpin the training of community college leaders. Other schools of education are adapting to give college leaders…
Descriptors: Fund Raising, Emotional Intelligence, Community Colleges, Educational Change
Schinkel, Anders – Educational Theory, 2010
Today, many liberal philosophers of education worry that certain kinds of education may frustrate the development of personal autonomy, with negative consequences for the individuals concerned, the liberal state, or both. Autonomy liberals hold not only that we should promote the development of autonomy in children, but also that this aim should…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Political Attitudes, Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories
Somerville, Margaret J. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
Around the globe people are confronted daily with intransigent problems of space and place. Educators have historically called for place-based or place-conscious education to introduce pedagogies that will address such questions as how to develop sustainable communities and places. These calls for place-conscious education have included liberal…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Teaching Methods, Educational Practices, Geographic Location
Koza, Julia Eklund – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2009
This essay examines control discourse in and out of educational settings, arguing that illusions of control are among the means by which governance is accomplished in domains far from schools. The tactical productivity of such illusions in non-school settings "necessitates" and explicates their prevalence in education. The first installment of…
Descriptors: Music Education, Discourse Analysis, Governance, Classroom Techniques
Robinson, Heather M. – Journal of Basic Writing (CUNY), 2009
At York College, many of the students fit the linguistic and educational profile of basic writers, and yet there is no remediation built into the curriculum. It falls to the writing center, then, to provide our students with the academic support that they need in order to move beyond being classified as developmental writers. In this article, I…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Educational Philosophy, Motivation, Remedial Instruction
White, John J. – International Journal of Educational Reform, 2009
The new history in Britain and the new social studies in the United States each grew out of a desire in the 1960s to reform education and to create an inquiry-based mode of instruction. Although the two movements shared many similarities, the British movement succeeded whereas the American movement largely failed. The failure of the new social…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Social Studies, Comparative Analysis, Foreign Countries
Rowe, Bradley D. – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2009
While the ethical dimension of human-animal relationships has become a legitimate, rich subject for contemporary moral philosophers, scholars of moral education, and to a large extent, philosophers of education, have remained surprisingly silent on this subject. The primary purpose of this essay is to illustrate the relationship between the moral…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Ethical Instruction, Animals, Moral Values
Smeyers, Paul – Ethics and Education, 2009
This article is the author's response to a paper presented by David Bridges. Bridges' central question: "Is there something exclusive and superior about insider understanding which the outsider cannot understand?" is indeed not only crucial to the contexts he explicitly deals with, i.e. religious understanding, ethnographic research and…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Educational Philosophy, Ethnography, Religious Factors
"Alternative" Education in Flanders, 1960-2000: Transformation of Knowledge in a Neo-Liberal Context
De Coster, Tom; Simon, Frank; Depaepe, Marc – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2009
The founding of "alternative" schools, mainly by parents or other individuals, has made New Education in Flanders tangible today for the general public. In this article, the authors set out to study the knowledge of the "emancipatory" starting points of the post-1968 movements and "alternative" schools in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nontraditional Education, Political Attitudes, Educational Change
Hofstetter, Rita; Schneuwly, Bernard – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2009
In the first decades of the twentieth century, it was the turn of the reformist movements themselves to become institutionalised to make their voices better heard, to test their theories, to promote their pedagogic doctrines: through editorial vehicles, social and scientific events, associative networks and movements. Beyond this diversity there…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Educational Change, Historians, Progressive Education
Peterson, Michael; Taylor, Patricia Diane – Reclaiming Children and Youth, 2009
The basic question of why schools exist can be addressed by two prevailing answers: to create workers and to develop citizens. The sorting and segregating and elimination of students who do not meet standardized expectations are a result of the belief that education should just produce workers. When creating workers is the focus of schools, the…
Descriptors: Educational Principles, Educational Benefits, Educational Philosophy, Educational Objectives
Watras, Joseph – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2009
Arthur E. Morgan and other self-made business leaders opened Moraine Park School in 1917 to provide a form of character training that they feared had ended in the United States. These men believed that young people gained the best social education when they had to run their own companies because such opportunities enabled students to acquire the…
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Corporations, Values Education, College Presidents
Barton, Keith C. – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2009
Home geography was the principal means by which primary students in the United States learned about the social world from the 1890s through the 1920s. This subject was rooted in the German subject of Heimatkunde, and it reflected the changing nature of the academic discipline of geography in the late nineteenth century. Its content focused on…
Descriptors: Discipline, Geography, Intellectual Disciplines, Foreign Countries
Egan, Kieran; Madej, Krystina – Education Canada, 2009
Nearly everyone who has tried to describe an image of the educated person, from Plato to the present, includes at least two requirements: first, educated people must be widely knowledgeable and, second, they must know something in depth. The authors would like to advocate a somewhat novel approach to "learning in depth" (LiD) that seems…
Descriptors: Pilot Projects, Learning Strategies, Knowledge Level, Educational Philosophy

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