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Gerrard, Jessica – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2023
In response to the contemporary problematic of populism and associated reactionary right-wing politics, this paper argues for a greater analytic focus on the role of schools and teacher expertise in understanding the social relations of populism. This conceptual paper builds a conjunctural conceptualisation of populism that understands it as an…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Democracy, Intergroup Relations, Politics
Shaw, Martha – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2023
Within plural democracies, the concept of 'religious literacy' is commonly understood as denoting the knowledge, skills and understanding "vis-à-vis" religious diversity required of the citizen. In schools across Europe such learning is traditionally housed within Religious Education (RE), the aims of which are increasingly framed in…
Descriptors: World Views, Literacy, Religious Education, Citizenship Education
Sarah E. Stanlick; George DeMartino; Sharon D. Welch – Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement, 2023
The democratization of knowledge is liberating and has presented some new and difficult challenges. When everyone can position themselves as an expert, how do we create new frames of intellectual and pragmatic knowledge with integrity? How do we understand the histories of expert privilege and harm that have led us to this time of uncertainty? And…
Descriptors: Expertise, School Community Relationship, Power Structure, Ethics
Bastalich, Wendy – Higher Education Research and Development, 2023
This paper argues that public accountability discourse and research quality processes designed to support it are associated with the validation of methodological approaches in social research which claim to capture the real condition of the social world and to remedy its ailments, supporting an expansion of representative modes of scholarship, and…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Reflection, Social Science Research, Higher Education
Scheiner, Thorsten – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2022
This paper examines fundamental assumptions about the notion of transforming subject matter, which is widely regarded as a core practice of teacher work, a crucial feature of teacher knowledge and a measure of teacher expertise. First, the notion of transforming subject matter and the ways it has been taken up in Anglo-American discourses of…
Descriptors: Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Teaching Methods, Expertise, Epistemology
Jackson, Grant R. – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2022
Research indicates that students' developmental capacity must be accounted for if postsecondary institutions' various diversity programs, pedagogies, and related efforts are to be successful. One such effort that has increased in prevalence in recent years, intergroup dialogue (IGD), is a pedagogy that brings together diverse groups of students to…
Descriptors: Student Development, Intergroup Relations, Epistemology, Social Justice
Zembylas, Michalinos – Ethics and Education, 2022
This article examines some aspects of the entanglement between aesthetic injustice and epistemic injustice, paying special attention to how aesthetic injustice can be resisted in the classroom. The article brings into conversation Boal's notion of aesthetic injustice with Rancière's work on the overlapping of aesthetics and politics to suggest…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Epistemology, Justice, Politics of Education
Bagnall, Richard G.; Hodge, Steven – Palgrave Studies in Adult Education and Lifelong Learning, 2022
This book presents and advocates for a framework of competing epistemologies and conceptions of ethics as a way of understanding modernist lifelong learning. These epistemologies are grounded in a recognition of the normative nature of knowledge that informs lifelong learning; each being framed by a different account of the sort of knowledge that…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Ethics, Adult Education, Lifelong Learning
Guershon Harel – ZDM: Mathematics Education, 2024
"Epistemological justification" is a way of thinking that manifests itself through perturbation-resolution cycles revolving around the question "why and how was a piece of mathematical knowledge conceived?" The paper offers a conceptual framework for constituent elements of epistemological justification. The framework provides:…
Descriptors: Mathematical Concepts, Mathematics Education, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Skills
Gift Sonkqayi – Educational Review, 2024
Epistemicide occurs when one knowledge is exalted at the expense of local or indigenous knowledge systems leading to the demise of such knowledge systems. In this article, I focus on how some conceptions and ways of incorporating indigenous knowledge systems seem to be entangled in the same misnomer to which they owe their existence (i.e. a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Epistemology, Indigenous Knowledge, Misconceptions
Cristiano Mattos; André Machado Rodrigues – Advances in Research on Teaching, 2024
In this chapter, we examine the negative impact of excessive teacher entitlement on school life. We argue that teacher entitlement goes beyond individual traits, intricately linked to sociocultural processes and power dynamics within and outside educational institutions. The focus is on theoretical foundations to understand pedagogical practices…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Teacher Attitudes, Expectation, School Culture
Mikeas Silva de Lima; Salete Linhares Queiroz – Journal of Chemical Education, 2024
In the context of academic and professional training, effectively constructing arguments is a fundamental skill for chemists. In this way, educational practices that promote this skill are a constant target of attention, as is the analysis of the quality of arguments produced by students. Models capable of supporting this analysis gain importance,…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Undergraduate Students, Science Instruction, Epistemology
Saeverot, Herner – Educational Theory, 2021
This article searches for an autonomous discipline of education, one that is a self-governing discipline and exercises the right to organize its own activities and to make independent decisions. In undertaking this quest, it asks: how may education be organized to safeguard its autonomy so as to be able to generate strong and unique educational…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Educational Practices, Intellectual Disciplines, Foundations of Education
Duschl, Richard; Avraamidou, Lucy; Azevedo, Nathália Helena – Science & Education, 2021
Grounded within current reform recommendations and built upon Giere's views (1986, 1999) on model-based science, we propose an alternative approach to science education which we refer to as the "Evidence-Explanation (EE) Continuum." The approach addresses conceptual, epistemological, and social domains of knowledge, and places emphasis…
Descriptors: Science Education, Epistemology, Data, Observation
Keenan, John; Kadi-Hanifi, Karima – Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
The question of why the works of Michel Foucault, Pierre Bourdieu and Jacques Derrida are often attributed to France by HE lecturers and students when the origins or developments of their key ideas come from northern Africa is examined from critical and personal standpoints. The article joins the call for the decolonisation of the HE curriculum…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Philosophy, Foreign Countries, College Curriculum