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Showing 1 to 15 of 66 results Save | Export
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Madhu Prabakaran – Higher Education for the Future, 2025
This article explores the diverse epistemic perspectives on intelligence, tracing its conceptual evolution across early Indian philosophy, Western philosophical thought and contemporary computational theories. Intelligence is examined as a dynamic, multifaceted phenomenon that transcends mere cognition, extending into embodied, ecological and…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Artificial Intelligence, Computer Software, Philosophy
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Russell Butson; Rachel Spronken-Smith – Higher Education Research and Development, 2024
This article weighs in on the developing discourse on AI's role in higher education research through a structured dialogue between two diametrically opposed academics. Utilising a dialectical framework, the discourse transcends surface-level debates to grapple with ethical, methodological, and epistemological questions that are often overlooked,…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Educational Research, Higher Education, Technology Uses in Education
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Silberberger, Jan – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2022
Based on an ethnographic study on studio teaching at five leading European architecture schools, the paper at hand identifies three repeatedly occurring deficiencies (as well as one related problem) in the teaching of architectural design. Drawing on empirical data, the paper describes how 'epistemic positions' are shifted without reflection, that…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Architectural Education, Ethnography, Epistemology
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Bozalek, Vivienne – Education as Change, 2022
Understanding how indeterminacy is different from uncertainty is crucial to posthumanism and has major implications for reconfiguring curriculum. Uncertainty has to do with "epistemology," about not knowing whether a state of affairs is or is not; for instance, one would not know whether something is here or there, now or then.…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Ambiguity (Context), Humanism, Epistemology
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Palmer, Dajanae; Washington, Sylvia; Silberstein, Samantha; Saxena, Pooja; Bose, Suparna – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2022
This paper highlights the perspective of five doctoral students' socialization in a feminist focused research group. Utilizing collaborative ethnography, this paper challenges the current conceptions of graduate student socialization that emphasizes neoliberal values such as individualism and competition that is normalized within doctoral…
Descriptors: Socialization, Doctoral Students, Feminism, Ethnography
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Panjwani, Farid – Educational Theory, 2023
A key epistemological assumption in the ideologies of many of the groups termed extremist is that there is an unmediated access to a Divine Will. Driven by this assumption, and facilitated by several other factors, a range of coercive actions (including violence) to force others into submission to the perceived Will of God are seen as justified by…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Terrorism, Antisocial Behavior, Criticism
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Woldegiorgis, Emnet Tadesse – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
The notion of decolonisation implies the existence of a territory, entity, structure, or system which has previously been colonised by exogenous forces and thus needs to be liberated. In most African countries, the discourses of decolonisation of higher education emanate from the shared experience of imposed European colonisation that perpetuated…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Policy, Indigenous Knowledge, Futures (of Society)
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Davies, Adam – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
This article engages in an autoethnographic analysis to offer an argument for the importance of bringing mad studies to pre-service early childhood education and care (ECEC) programs. Through both analysing reflections on two "maddening moments" during pre-service teaching as a mad-identified pre-service ECEC educator and discussing…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Early Childhood Education, Mental Health, Mental Disorders
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Erikson, Martin G.; Erikson, Malgorzata – Studies in Higher Education, 2019
The notion of critical thinking and its theoretical complexity are used as a case for an epistemological critique of the model of intended learning outcomes. The conclusion is that three problems of learning outcomes, previously discussed in the literature, become even more challenging when seen in the light of critical thinking. The first problem…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Outcomes of Education, Criticism, Epistemology
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Burnett, Greg – International Journal for Academic Development, 2021
Constructive alignment as a way of framing curriculum has wide appeal in many tertiary education contexts. At one Pacific regional tertiary institution, it has recently been embraced as a means toward greater program quality. Its unquestioned acceptance, however, raises the need for critical reflection. This reflection critiques constructive…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Alignment (Education), Educational Quality, Curriculum Development
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Burston, Mary A. – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2020
A government report criticised Australian universities for low proficiency in commercialising epistemic production (research and knowledge). A critical omission was a comparable measure of academic productivity to substantiate whether underperformance correlated with the commercialisation value of research output or whether academic productivity…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Productivity, Correlation, Commercialization
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Bindewald, Benjamin; Hawkins, Joshua – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
How should those who value reasonable pluralism navigate ethical and epistemological challenges related to speech and inquiry in higher education? We propose the ethical pursuit of public knowledge as a guiding vision for public colleges and universities with the understanding that other institutions will serve different purposes. The ethical…
Descriptors: Freedom of Speech, Epistemology, Higher Education, Ethics
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Morrison, Heather – History Teacher, 2019
This article describes a book review assignment that is an application of enlightenment practices to a modern learning environment. This paper encourages both student learning in the content of enlightenment ideas and the methods of critical, accessible writing. Students engage in metacognition by using the critical reasoning capacities of their…
Descriptors: Book Reviews, History Instruction, European History, Undergraduate Students
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Hinchliffe, Geoffrey – Ethics and Education, 2018
First of all, I define the concept of epistemic freedom in the light of the changing nature of educational practice that prioritise over-prescriptive conceptions of learning. I defend the 'reality' of this freedom against possible determinist-related criticisms. I do this by stressing the concept of agency as characterised by 'becoming'. I also…
Descriptors: Freedom, Ethics, Criticism, Beliefs
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Ruwhiu, Diane; Staniland, Nimbus; Love, Tyron – Higher Education Research and Development, 2021
Indigenous academics are often faced with a balancing act between the danger and risk of critiquing the institutions within which they reside, and the duty or obligation they feel to do so. As Indigenous Maori academics located within three different business schools across Aotearoa New Zealand, our work in both research and teaching is often…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Indigenous Populations, Risk, Criticism
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