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Ivemark, Biörn; Ambrose, Anna – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2023
Previous research has examined how mismatched dispositions within a divided or 'cleft' habitus are subjectively experienced but has not adequately explored nor theorized the variety of ways in which the dispositional disjunctures that progressively give rise to a cleft habitus are initially generated. Combining recent sociological work on…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Social Theories, Social Influences, College Students
Fertig, Jason; Wells, Pamela – Management Teaching Review, 2023
This resource review focuses on the use of the DISCflex instrument in the classroom. While frequently administered in industry, DISC-style instruments are less frequently used in academic contexts, despite a usefulness in clarifying and working with preferred behaviors. This review provides a brief history and description of the DISCflex…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Profiles, Student Motivation, Success
'The Unbearable Surplus of Being Human': Happiness, Virtues and the Delegitimisation of the Negative
Hodgson, Naomi – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2022
The increased governmental focus on happiness since the late 1990s, and particularly since the economic crash of 2008, has been informed predominantly by a conceptualisation of happiness promoted by the field of positive psychology, and adopted and developed in fields such as behavioural economics and more recently in fields such as…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Psychological Patterns, Positive Attitudes, Satisfaction
Bier, Melinda C. – Journal of Character Education, 2021
The importance of a healthy K-12 education system cannot be overstated. In today's world it is a prerequisite to social justice, democratic community, a thriving economy, and a flourishing society. Likewise, the importance of the school principal (Louis & Murphy, 2018; Smylie et al., 2020), for it is the principal who is most responsible for…
Descriptors: Leadership Styles, Principals, Leadership, Social Justice
Monypenny, Alice – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2021
In this paper, I argue that focusing on resilience education fails to appropriately reflect the socio-political nature of character. I define protective epistemic character traits (PECTs) as epistemic character traits which aid students in avoiding, limiting or mitigating harm in the classroom. I argue that the relationship between epistemic…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Epistemology, Personality Traits, Psychological Patterns
Park, Jae; Bae, Anselmo – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
Humility is widely regarded as a moral excellence and telos, hence, openly inculcated-instructed. Character education in and for humility, however, sits uncomfortably against today's pedagogical maxims such as self-esteem and self-assertiveness. This article looks into this and other tensions from the perspective of humility as experience…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Experience, Phenomenology, Philosophy
Seeking Common Ground: Surveying the Theoretical and Empirical Landscapes for Curiosity and Interest
Alexander, Patricia A. – Educational Psychology Review, 2019
My purpose in this commentary was to seek out any common ground that might be found for theory and research on curiosity and interest as detailed by the contributors to this special issue. Despite the numerous differences that these authors demarcated, several areas of concurrence were readily identified. Those seven areas are, thus, specified and…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Interests, Differences, Research
Meredith King – Research Issues in Contemporary Education, 2024
This position paper introduces the idea of cognicy, the foundational ability to think and understand in a process that decouples cognitive processes from their tangible outcomes. Generative artificial intelligence (AI) can produce output often nearly indistinguishable from a human product, which presents a problem for educational assessment.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Artificial Intelligence, Metacognition, Individual Characteristics
Brookes, Andrew – Journal of Outdoor and Environmental Education, 2023
The idea that certain outdoor education (OE) programs consistently improve character traits has been a recurring theme not only in OE practice but also in some approaches to research and theory (Brookes, 2003a, 2003b). Sometimes referred to as "character building," such approaches to OE persist although perhaps less prominently than in…
Descriptors: Criticism, Outdoor Education, Personality Traits, Beliefs
Standish, Paul – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
Curiosity has rightly received much attention in epistemology and educational research. Although, through the centuries, it has been regarded with a degree of ambivalence, the trend now is towards its championing as an intellectual or epistemic virtue. The present discussion juxtaposes it against a contrasting way of knowing, which I refer to as…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Epistemology, Familiarity, Educational Practices
Milligan, Meg; Mankelwicz, John; See, Hoon Peow – Perspectives in Education, 2022
Narcissism, extreme self-interest, refers to a set of personality characteristics including arrogance, self-centeredness, need for admiration, sense of entitlement, grandiosity, lack of empathy, and interpersonal exploitation, which can range from normal to a diagnosable mental disorder, narcissistic personality disorder. Narcissism, deriving from…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Barriers, Sustainable Development, Global Approach
Rajic, Aleksandra Gojkov; Šafranj, Jelisaveta; Prtljaga, Jelena – Research in Pedagogy, 2022
The aim of this meta-analysis is to take a small step forward from the separate observation of the self-regulatory construct and the relationship of variables that seek to explain it, define its structure more clearly and make it available in practice. For this purpose, the question arises regarding the relationship between personality traits and…
Descriptors: Self Management, Personality Traits, Student Motivation, Second Language Learning
Drake, Riley D.; Rodriguez, Gabriel – Berkeley Review of Education, 2022
Although U.S. schools grapple with persistent racial inequities, niceness, a socioemotional way of being that privileges whiteness, regularly impedes equity efforts in K-12 and teacher education settings. In the Midwest, niceness is uniquely rooted in a historical "obsession with public civility" (Cayton & Gray, 2002, p. 159) that…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Whites, Racism
Sin, William – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
How do people acquire modesty? A simple answer is: if people see that modesty is a worthy trait, they will incorporate it into their character. However, sometimes the knowledge that one is modest would undermine one's modesty. So, Driver claims that the modest person must not know his merits. If we are to accept Driver's claim, it would be…
Descriptors: Confucianism, Personality Traits, Moral Values, Asian Culture
Cassam, Quassim – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
This paper argues that vice-charging, the practice of charging other persons with epistemic vice, can itself be epistemically vicious. It identifies some potential vices of vice-charging and identifies knowledge of other people as a type of knowledge that is obstructed by epistemically vicious attributions of epistemic vice. The hazards of…
Descriptors: Parents, Children, Immunization Programs, Parent Responsibility