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Attfield, David – British Journal of Religious Education, 2008
John Hull's recent educational writings have included several on what he calls the "money culture". This is analysed and criticised in this article. Hull offers a Marxist and a neo-Marxist account of the role of money in western societies utilising the labour theory of value, false consciousness and the materialist interpretation of history. It is…
Descriptors: Ideology, Consumer Education, Marxian Analysis, Social Stratification
Martinson, David L. – Social Studies, 2008
Critics charge that social studies education often fails at the most rudimentary level because there is a tendency to "play it safe" by focusing on general abstractions while avoiding discussion of specific--and often times controversial--topics. In this article, the author argues that one way in which social studies teachers can overcome such…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Teaching Methods, Religious Cultural Groups, Thinking Skills
Hand, Michael; Pearce, Joanne – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2009
How should patriotism be handled in schools? We argue that schools cannot afford to ignore the topic, but nor are they justified in either promoting or discouraging patriotic feeling in students. The only defensible policy is for schools to adopt a stance of neutrality and teach the topic as a controversial issue. We go on to show that there is…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Press Opinion, Teaching Methods, Patriotism
Scott-Kennel, Joanna; Salmi, Asta – Journal of Teaching in International Business, 2008
The rise of Brazil, Russia, India, and China will shape global resource use, the location of market demand and international institutions and interdependencies in the decade to come. In this paper we argue that an understanding of the historical and institutional context of the BRICs, and the potential shift towards a multi-polar world is…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, International Trade, Foreign Countries, Economic Factors
Renner, Adam – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2009
America's sense of community is broken down; its sense of connectedness and the collective is "collapsing." That these senses ever existed is a matter for considerable debate. But, as the new millennium gains momentum and neoliberalism seeks expansion, the author argues that a focus on rekindling these concepts of community,…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Democracy, Community, Curriculum Development
Neal, Maureen; Jones, Ed – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2008
The preceding two essays focus on the ongoing challenge to engage students in meaningful conversation with the course content, their reading, their instructor, and one another. The authors, Maureen Neal and Ed Jones, have read each other's essays and provided the following brief responses. This cross talk between the writers is an attempt to make…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Student Participation, Course Content, Reading Materials
Munson, Lynne; Bornfreund, Laura – American Educator, 2010
This article presents the authors' critique of lessons proposed by the Partnership for 21st Century Skills (P21). The authors initiate a discussion about content that they hope will play out in schoolhouses and statehouses across the country. They take on a different task: they present a handful of lesson ideas from P21 that could enhance studies…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Public Schools, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education
Ford, N. J. – Education for Information, 2007
A number of recent criticisms relating to education for library and information work are discussed. These criticisms are interpreted as centring on the level of "meaningfulness" of such education, in terms of deep critical understanding; relevance of content to working practice; and development of personal qualities additional to narrower…
Descriptors: Library Education, Educational Quality, Professional Education, Course Content
Fish, Stanley – Oxford University Press, 2008
What should be the role of our institutions of higher education? To promote good moral character? To bring an end to racism, sexism, economic oppression, and other social ills? To foster diversity and democracy and produce responsible citizens? In "Save the World On Your Own Time", Stanley Fish argues that, however laudable these goals might be,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Academic Freedom, Political Attitudes, College Role
Scott, Eugenie C. – McGill Journal of Education, 2007
Teachers are often exhorted by creationists to "teach the controversy." Although such encouragement sounds on the surface like a proposal for critical thinking instruction, the history of the creationist movement in North America belies this claim. Rather than teach students to analyze and evaluate actual scientific controversies, the intent of…
Descriptors: Criticism, Creationism, Critical Thinking, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
Phelps, Christopher – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2006
Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle" describes a callous America in which the dollar trumps justice. It famously exposed the American meatpacking industry's loathsome practices and prompted federal consumer-protection laws. It is, however, primarily a sympathetic sketch of the foreign born, those fabled "masses yearning to breathe free" that Americans…
Descriptors: Course Content, American Studies, Didacticism, Literary Criticism
Iannone, Carol – Academic Questions, 2007
In ubiquitous writings, a Brooklyn College professor has repeatedly drawn attention to the excesses of radical ideologues in higher education. He took his own provost to task for indoctrinating students in a politically myopic policy, inaptly named: "global citizenship." He was most articulate of those who sought redress for the witch hunt…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Profiles, Personal Narratives, Interviews
Kamolnick, Paul – Academic Questions, 2007
In this article, the author presents a case of a professor who, in electing to teach a special-topics course on human sex differences, discovers an entire program in the College of Arts and Sciences--Women's Studies (WMST)--whose criteria for course inclusion are in direct violation of several major rules and regulations governing academics at…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Womens Studies, Gender Differences, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
Model, David – College Quarterly, 2007
This author, a teacher of political science and liberal studies, states his belief that challenging students to examine and analyze radical ideas develops their capacity to think clearly and skeptically. Following in this spirit, this essay examines the discrepancy between the stated objectives of American foreign policy and its practice. The…
Descriptors: Political Science, Foreign Countries, Foreign Policy, Death
Settelmaier, Elisabeth – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2010
In this paper I respond to Long's paper in which he uses an ethnographic snapshot of a rally of scientists against the perceived "dumbing down" effect of the new Answers in Genesis Museum in Kentucky to raise educational concerns about the effects of creationist influence on the science curriculum in American schools. In my response I…
Descriptors: Social History, Conflict, Educational Change, Science Curriculum