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Schuller, Tom – Adults Learning, 2011
Lifelong learning has a crucial role in enabling individuals to handle key transition points in their lives, but what can education do to prepare them for the final, inevitable transition. Some of the educational contribution to managing the final transition is very broad, a matter of general enlightenment. But there are some more specific…
Descriptors: Social Attitudes, Lifelong Learning, Death, Health Education
Morris, Charles E., III – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
AIDS, from the beginning, has been a mnemonic pandemic. Remembering and forgetting have reflected and constituted the vicissitudes of HIV/AIDS, its inventions, significations, and transformations in and across time, then and now and into the welter, promise and pitfall, of future and futurity. The 25th anniversary of AIDS Coalition to Unleash…
Descriptors: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Mnemonics, Activism
Gingrich-Philbrook, Craig – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
Revisiting AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP) restarts the "panic of loss" characterizing the author's youth. The author argues that the 25th anniversary of ACT UP marks the failure to consider Raymond Williams's "structure of feeling". Williams counterposes this structure against falsely viewing the past as formalized into something…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Activism, Consciousness Raising
Sue, Derald Wing – Counseling Psychologist, 2011
In this article, the author comments on the substance of Todd and Abrams's study on "White Dialectics: A New Framework for Theory, Research, and Practice With White Students" (2011). The study is a major contribution to the importance of raising awareness of how Whiteness, White privilege, and one's own complicity in the perpetuation of racism are…
Descriptors: Whites, Advantaged, Socialization, Social Attitudes
Nakayama, Thomas K. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
The francophone world has always been at the center of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. From the mythical (French Canadian) "patient zero," Gaetan Dugas, to Rock Hudson's flight to Paris for medical treatment and the blaming of Haiti for AIDS, as well as the close relationships between Belgian and French and their former African colonies,…
Descriptors: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Medical Services, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Foreign Countries
Vallejos, Vanessa – Harvard Educational Review, 2011
America is supposed to be a place of freedom and kindness. People from other countries look at America and see a place of opportunity where they can raise their children. Immigrants see America as a place where their children can receive a solid education and have a chance for a better life. Unfortunately, many Americans do not see it the way…
Descriptors: Freedom, Altruism, Economic Impact, Immigrants
Coote, Anna – Adults Learning, 2010
A 21-hour working week is a long way from today's standard of 40 hours or more, but not so far-fetched when people consider the infinitely varied ways in which they actually spend their time. On average, people of working age spend 19.6 hours a week in paid employment and 20.4 hours in unpaid housework and childcare. These averages mask huge…
Descriptors: Scheduling, Time, Economic Factors, Working Hours
Fanshawe, Simon; Sriskandarajah, Dhananjayan – Adults Learning, 2010
Britain is not only more diverse than ever before, but that diversity itself is growing more diverse. Britain's simplistic "tick-box" approach to identity is in danger of inhibiting the very equality it seeks to promote. To question the tick-box is not to accuse local authorities of "political correctness gone mad". The notion…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Student Diversity, Ethnic Diversity
Jiaxiang, Wu – Chinese Education and Society, 2011
The book "China Is Unhappy" that made the list of best sellers not so long ago is blowing like an icy wind in spring and is poisoning the nation's mental state as though laden with a virus of unhappiness. Those who are most susceptible to it are groups of underage persons with mentalities that are still fragile and young people who have…
Descriptors: Nationalism, Foreign Countries, Ideology, Political Attitudes
Shain, Farzana – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2012
The disturbances that took place across English towns and cities in 2011 raised significant debate and discussion about their causes and the motivations of the "rioters". Media and official explanations citing criminality and opportunism, repeated the now familiar narratives of cultural deficit, blaming absent fathers, poor parenting and…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Aspiration, Social Mobility, Social Discrimination
Gould, Deborah B. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2012
The author's reflections on this 25th anniversary of ACT UP's founding were spurred by a comment made to her recently that indicated that ACT UP's memory and legacy are haunted by the perception that it was racist. In this essay, the author considers the claim that ACT UP was a racist organization. In addition to the question of historical…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Racial Discrimination, Social Change, Activism
Turner, David A. – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2010
Professor Roy Harris (2009) criticises me for ignoring freedom of speech in order to focus on "soft" issues, such as game theory, decision theory and chaos theory. In this response, I accept most of his arguments relating to freedom of speech, but argue that, in order to develop better systems of education, we need to pay more attention to the…
Descriptors: Freedom of Speech, Reader Response, Foreign Countries, Educational Practices
Toor, Rachel – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
In this article, the author describes her friend Lynn, a girlie-girl of the highest order. Lynn wears shiny, pointy shoes, never has a hair out of place, and can appear glamorous in jeans and a T-shirt. She puts a zillion products on her face, but never looks like one of those women who use too much makeup. Her clothes are hip and trendy, and…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Personality Assessment, Teacher Characteristics, Dress Codes
Bowring, Bill – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2012
This article attempts a contrast to the contribution by Hugh Starkey. Rather than his account of the inexorable rise of human rights discourse, and of the implementation of human rights standards, human rights are here presented as always and necessarily scandalous and highly contested. First, I explain why the UK has lagged so far behind its…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Citizenship, Citizenship Education, Foreign Countries
Iannone, Carol – Academic Questions, 2009
This article presents an interview with Professor David Popenoe, author of the controversial book "Disturbing the Nest: Family Change and Decline in Modern Societies" (1988). Popenoe heads the National Marriage Project at Rutgers University, where he taught sociology for forty-five years until his recent retirement. Here, Popenoe discusses his…
Descriptors: Family Life, Marriage, Feminism, Scholarship
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