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Noel L. Clemente – Ethics and Education, 2024
Intellectual character education has been primarily expressed in terms of educating for intellectual virtues (EFIV). This aim of teaching intellectual virtues has received some challenges, such as how it fails to articulate adequate action guidance through exemplarist pedagogy, and how it neglects the pervasiveness of intellectual vice among…
Descriptors: Ethics, Values Education, Teaching Methods, Moral Values
Russell McPhee; Damian Cox – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
Critical thinking is often nominated as a graduate attribute, a learning outcome, and is even offered as a discrete subject in schools and universities. Therefore, it is important to gain clarity about the fundamental goal or purpose of critical thinking education. What should instructors be aiming at when they seek to instil critical thinking in…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Intellectual Freedom, Personal Autonomy, Inquiry
Bor Luen Tang – Research Ethics, 2024
Scientific research is supposed to acquire or generate knowledge, but such a purpose would be severely undermined by instances of research misconduct (RM) and questionable research practices (QRP). RM and QRP are often framed in terms of moral transgressions by individuals (bad apples) whose aberrant acts could be made conducive by shortcomings in…
Descriptors: Scientific Research, Ethics, Integrity, Cheating
Gerry Dunne; Alkis Kotsonis – Educational Theory, 2024
This paper proposes a novel educational approach to epistemic vice rehabilitation. Its authors Gerry Dunne and Alkis Kotsonis note that, like Quassim Cassam, they remain optimistic about the possibility of improvement with regard to epistemic vice. However, unlike Cassam, who places the burden of minimizing or overcoming epistemic vices and their…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Rehabilitation, Demonstration Programs, Inquiry
Finley, Cassie – Educational Theory, 2023
Andrew Aberdein recently explored whether Aristotle held a (proto-)virtue argumentation theory, which would evaluate a good argument in terms of whether the arguers engaged virtuously. Aberdein admits, however, that connections between virtue, character, and argumentation are scarce within Aristotle's works. Accordingly, here Cassie Finley…
Descriptors: Ethics, Educational Theories, Moral Values, Personality Traits
Fowers, Blaine J. – Journal of Moral Education, 2022
The purpose of this paper is to argue that social science is an inherently moral enterprise. There are four reasons to see science as a moral endeavor based on the neo-Aristotelian recognition that morality is centered on human goods (e.g., justice and knowledge), not just right action. First, science is guided by epistemic values (e.g., accuracy,…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Science Education, Educational Philosophy, Justice
Simpson, Ashley – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
This conceptual paper argues for the reconfiguring of Intercultural Communication Education (ICE) through a dialogical engagement with "Istina" (Truth) and "Pravda" (Truth in Justice). The paper argues that the field of ICE is predominantly characterised by normative conceptualisations of truth (e.g., characterised by fixed or…
Descriptors: Intercultural Communication, Dialogs (Language), Ethics, Justice
Merzifonluoglu, Samet; Hamarat, Ercenk – Ethics and Education, 2022
There is growing interest in epistemic injustice and its connection to education. However, the relation between social studies and epistemic injustice has not yet been adequately explored and this topic has been given insufficient attention by social studies educators. But it is regarded as an important resource for students who are socially…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Social Studies, Moral Values, Social Justice
Zimmerman, Aaron S. – Journal of Character Education, 2021
In this article, Aaron Zimmerman defines epistemological virtues as the manner in which knowledge and truth are discussed. For example, consider the following questions: (1) How does one judge whether or not something is true? (2) Who serves as the arbiter as to whether or not something is true? (3) What are the ethical implications of truth…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Ethics, Leadership Styles, Teaching Methods
Fennell, Jon; Simpson, Timothy L. – Theory and Research in Education, 2021
What would we have the school teach? To what end? In the name of democracy, and building on the pioneering epistemology of Michael Polanyi, Harry S. Broudy, a leading voice in philosophy of education during the twentieth century, calls for a liberal arts core curriculum for all. The envisioned product of such schooling is a certain sort of person.…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Role of Education, Liberal Arts, Core Curriculum
Baker, Bernadette M. – Educational Theory, 2020
Since the early 1800s, mainstream Western discourses that entwined racializing and ableizing discourses have involved, among other things, particular notions of temporality and ways of privileging scopic regimes that presume surface-depth relations mediated by a theory of time and materiality. In this essay, Bernadette Baker analyzes the link…
Descriptors: Human Body, World Views, Time, History
Stoddard, Jeremy – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2022
Over the past decade, scholars from a variety of epistemological and theoretical backgrounds have begun to engage more deeply with history as a form of difficult knowledge. It is difficult to comprehend and can be traumatic for different groups for different reasons. History as a school subject has largely been used as a tool of hegemony by…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Epistemology, Teaching Methods, Trauma
Shaffer, David Williamson – Journal of Experimental Education, 2021
This paper explores methodological questions in the study of identity through an examination and discussion of the empirical papers in this special issue. Particular attention is paid to the ways identity is operationalized in the study of how learning environments foster changes in students' sense of self. The paper concludes that identity is a…
Descriptors: Identification (Psychology), Educational Environment, Environmental Influences, Self Concept
Edling, Silvia; Sharp, Heather; Löfström, Jan; Ammert, Niklas – Citizenship, Social and Economics Education, 2020
Historical consciousness is regarded as an important means to stimulate moral citizens through history education. This article conceptually examines the moral dimension associated with historical consciousness by revisiting the paradigm wars between natural science based on positivism and human and social sciences during the 1960s-1990s as…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Citizenship Education, History Instruction, Teaching Methods
Hadjipanteli, Angela – Curriculum Journal, 2018
The article aims to introduce the epistemology of aretaic pedagogy as a refreshing paradigm of good teaching, situating at its centrality, instead of a knowledge-based perspective, a virtue-based approach to education. Its origins are in Aristotelian virtue ethics, which premise the acquisition of intellectual and ethical virtues as the highest…
Descriptors: Ethics, Moral Values, Aesthetics, Epistemology