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Stabler, Albert – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2018
A primary function of schooling is to impart moral discipline, and art education distills this role to its core imperative of mandated pleasure, summarised by Jacques Lacan as the 'will to enjoy'. This manifests in the insistence that, despite producing similar outcomes, students come to recognise themselves as unique and creative. In the…
Descriptors: Art Education, Moral Values, Foreign Countries, Artists
Sanderse, Wouter – Ethics and Education, 2019
As neo-Aristotelian character education approaches have become more popular, the list of objections has increased too. This paper focuses on the objection that while character education proponents claim to be 'progressive' and 'reformative' they seem to maintain the educational status quo. This paper examines what happens to neo-Aristotelian…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Values Education, Teaching Methods, Ethics
Hunt, Stephen A. – History of Education, 2020
Correspondence education, or learning by post, lasted over 100 years in the UK; it had its roots in the nineteenth century, peaking in the mid-1960s. It was also widespread, numbering hundreds of thousands of enrolments, significantly increasing access to higher education. Yet it has been marginalised in accounts of British higher education. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Correspondence Study, Higher Education, Professional Education
Fensham, Peter J. – School Science Review, 2017
Changes in society can, on occasion, lead to new demands on schooling, and on science education in particular. A major such demand in the 1960s led to a conceptual form of science that has dominated school science education ever since. Subsequent major societal demands have usually not been nearly as successful in redefining school science…
Descriptors: Social Change, Science Education, Educational Change, Educational History
Rodwell, Grant – Routledge Research in Education Policy and Politics, 2021
This work attempts a comparative description and analysis, focusing on the US, the UK, and Australia on the topic of the Right, educational policy, and schooling. It adopts as its underlying theme the burning fuse in tracing the topic back to Joseph de Maistre a Rightist who fled revolutionary France to seek safety in the company of Tsar Alexander…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Education, Educational Policy, Policy Formation
Admirand, Peter – International Studies in Catholic Education, 2018
This article examines why liberation theology needs to be a core resource in religious education settings, especially in Catholic secondary schools. It will first touch on key tenets of liberation theology and the reasons why it was silenced and underused. It will then analyse poverty in the Jewish tradition as an interfaith resource and…
Descriptors: Catholics, Secondary School Students, Educational Benefits, Catholic Schools
Traxler, John – Research in Comparative and International Education, 2018
This article addresses the need to build sustainable, appropriate and authentic foundations for learning with mobiles in the Global South. It does this in two ways: first, by reviewing aspects of the current environment, namely the nature of learning with mobiles in the Global North, the relationships between research and policy in relation to…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Telecommunications, Handheld Devices
Lau, Tracy Chui Shan – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2018
The process of Chinese nation-building in education reveals the hegemonic strategies of the colonial power and the adaptation of indigenous forces when Hong Kong was undergoing decolonisation and the transfer of sovereignty. The return of Hong Kong to Chinese sovereignty has been a crucial indicator for the potential re-unification of China, as it…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Foreign Countries, Nationalism, Foreign Policy
Moscardini, A. O.; Strachan, R.; Vlasova, T. – Studies in Higher Education, 2022
This is a conceptual paper that examines the origin and development of universities and their current role in global society. There has been an unprecedented and exponential growth of technology and artificial intelligence capabilities over the past ten years which is challenging current working practices and affecting all areas of society. The…
Descriptors: Universities, College Role, Social Change, Teaching Methods
Spencer, Stephanie – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2017
The remit for this short piece was to identify themes emerging from the articles in this edition by Julie McLeod, Duncan Waite and Eugenie Samier, to consider how these themes reflect on the current field, and to identify their ongoing relevance. Additionally, I was asked to consider the current challenges that the field is facing and what this…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Educational Research, Educational Administration, Educational Policy
Day, Mike; Dickinson, Jim – Higher Education Policy Institute, 2018
In this report, Mike Day and Jim Dickinson look at the past, present and future of student unions. Although almost every university has a students' union, there is little research or reliable data on their form, role or successes. They are often seen and judged through a 'student politics' lens and face criticism for being too radical, not radical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Unions, Educational History, Educational Trends
Caruso, Marcelo – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2019
Calligraphic culture in education had a long tradition in the Hispanic World. This entailed the cultivation of specific forms of script to the detriment of others. Since the late eighteenth century, discussions about the shape of letters and the differences between different alphabets were associated with national characters. The "letra…
Descriptors: Educational History, Written Language, Alphabets, English
Batsleer, Janet – Education Sciences, 2021
This essay offers a broken narrative concerning the early history of anti-oppressive practice as an approach in the U.K. to youth and community work and the struggles over this in the context of UK higher education between the 1960's and the early 2000's. Educating informal educators as youth and community workers in the UK has been a site of…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Educational Practices, Experiential Learning, Informal Education
Gumpel, Thomas Peter; Koller, Judah; Weintraub, Naomi; Werner, Shirli; Wiesenthal, Vered – Journal of Educational Administration, 2020
Purpose: This article presents a conceptual synthesis of the international literature on inclusive education while expanding upon, and incorporating, the articles in this special issue. The authors present their 3P model (philosophy, policy and praxis) and relate each paper in this special issue to different aspects of their model.…
Descriptors: Sustainability, Educational Change, Educational Administration, Inclusion
Ecclestone, K.; Rawdin, C. – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2016
Pessimistic discourses about crises in youth and children's well-being, mental health and vulnerability permeate English educational policy and practice. These generate vague and slippery elisions of wellbeing and mental health, and the related rise of an ad hoc, confusing market of psycho-emotional interventions promoted by new types of…
Descriptors: Well Being, Mental Health, Educational Policy, Intervention