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Andy Curtis – BC TEAL Journal, 2023
This opinion essay begins by describing the problematic difference between "doing-research-on" and "doing-research-with," particularly in relation to classroom-based research on foreign/English language teaching and learning. In "doing-research-on," the researchers are the primary beneficiaries of the research they…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Teaching Methods, English (Second Language)
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Higgins, Andrew – Journal of Open, Flexible and Distance Learning, 2020
The premise of this brief opinion piece is that the fundamental paradigm of education appeared with Plato. It is that there is a co-location in time and space of learners, teachers, and resources. The absence of any of these elements can lead to shortcomings in the meaning of the term "to be educated". Recent events such as COVID-19…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, COVID-19, Pandemics, Distance Education
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Gnanadass, Edith – Adult Learning, 2014
This article examines the intellectual and experiential journey of a South Asian American (SAA) feminist who teaches about race and anti-racist praxis in the United States. It starts with her struggles trying to teach about race through the lens of White privilege and ends by sharing her current teaching practices which foreground the concept of…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Teaching Methods, Feminism, Asian Americans
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de Saxe, Jennifer – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2012
This theoretical paper analyzes the relationship between critical feminist theory and emancipatory education as it relates to transformative educational practices. The first section will discuss how the author understands critical feminist theory by looking to Chela Sandoval's theoretical framework of oppositional resistance. The author discusses…
Descriptors: Feminism, Elementary Secondary Education, Educational Practices, Higher Education
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Sriraman, Bharath; Adrian, Harry – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2008
The paper by White in this issue of Interchange contains an interesting model for a global educational perspective based on the writings of Aurobindo and Pierre Teilhard de Chardin. White proposes a foundation for this new perspective based on the synthesis of Aurobindo's and de Chardin's theories of global, social, and conscious evolution. In our…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Global Approach, Cultural Pluralism, Social Justice
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Cherland, Meredith – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2008
How do we become the people we are? Humanist common sense proposes that people are born with a rational "self." But poststructural theory proposes a subjectivity formed in interaction with cultural discourses. Poststructural theory offers teachers fresh ways to teach critical literacy and thinking and provides students with ways to resist ideas…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Discourse Analysis, Fantasy, Novels
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Bruce, Bertram C. – International Journal of Progressive Education, 2008
Stories are how we make sense of experiences, thus providing the historical sense of life. To paraphrase Dewey, extracting at each present time the full meaning of each present experience enables us to do the same for our pasts. The continual reconstruction of the past in the light of the present is integral to full engagement with the present…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Personal Narratives, Social Theories, Inquiry
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Tatum, Alfred W. – Harvard Educational Review, 2008
In this article, Alfred Tatum argues that the current framing of the adolescent literacy crisis fails to take into account the in-school and out-of-school challenges confronting many African American male adolescents today, particularly those growing up in high-poverty communities. Using the metaphor of literacy instruction as a human body, he…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Literacy, Teaching Methods, Males
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Stone, Brad Lowell – Teaching Sociology, 1992
Argues for the incorporation of classical liberal theory into undergraduate sociology theory courses. Urges that liberalism be contextualized in relationship to its intellectual predecessors. Suggests that understanding classical liberalism enhances understanding of Durkheim, Marx, and Weber. Recommends works that can be used as reading…
Descriptors: Course Content, Higher Education, Liberalism, Social Systems
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Pickhardt, Michael – Journal of Economic Education, 2005
The author extends the work of Holt and Laury (1997) on a simple noncomputerized card game for teaching the essential aspects of public goods theory. He suggests a course of several lectures and discusses the behavior of subjects in various game sessions. Among other things, the results provide experimental evidence with respect to the private…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Economics Education, Educational Games, Teaching Methods
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Zipp, John F. – Teaching Sociology, 2005
As we enter our second century, it is an appropriate time for sociologists to take stock of where we have been and where we are going. Although most of this reflection appears to focus on substantive matters, Timothy Patrick Moran is right in arguing that their gaze ought to extend to how they teach graduate statistics. This article presents the…
Descriptors: Social Scientists, Graduate Students, Statistics, Required Courses
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Tolman, Janice – Critical Inquiry in Language Studies, 2006
Seeking renewed articulation of praxis in cross-linguistic on texts, I turn to postcolonality, social theory, and feminism to illuminate and critique common practices with language--learning, teaching, and writing. Additionally drawing on my experience teaching immigrant youth and adults in the US, I reiterate and attempt to answer Gayatri…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Social Theories, Feminism, Criticism
Wagschal, Harry – 1982
Each of the four distinct ideological positions concerning the literacy problem is deficient. "Technological utopianism," the position arguing that traditional literacy standards are obsolete in the world of mass media, not only presents major conceptual and research difficulties but also suffers from the fact that its proponents, most…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Higher Education, Literacy, Mass Media Effects
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Alexander, Jonathan – College Composition and Communication, 2005
This essay attempts to demonstrate how transgender theories can inspire pedagogical methods that complement feminist compositionist pedagogical approaches to understanding the narration of gender as a social construct. By examining sample student writing generated by a prompt inspired by transgender theories, the author's analysis suggests how…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Rhetoric, Writing (Composition), Feminism
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Rodriguez, Alberto J. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2008
This paper provides a critical review essay of Ajay Sharma's "Portrait of a science teacher as a bricoleur: A case study from India." The main focus is two fold. First, arguments are presented to draw attention to how little advances in science teaching and science learning research have impacted teachers' practice and student…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Researchers, Educational Research, Theory Practice Relationship
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