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Christopher S. Fowler – Geography Teacher, 2024
Gerrymandering, or more broadly legislative redistricting, is almost unique as a focus of geographic inquiry in that a typical young adult will (a) know what it is, (b) recognize it as geography, and (c) think it is important. These qualities make redistricting an excellent choice for drawing students into the discipline of geography while…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, School District Reorganization, High School Seniors, Secondary School Curriculum
Nicholas Brake – Educational Policy, 2024
This article draws from primary and secondary historical sources such as public policy documents, speeches, and media reports to trace attempts made by the Kentucky legislature to ban controversial topics in public school curriculum--evolution in 1922 and critical race theory in 2022. Kingdon's multiple streams framework (MSF) serves as the model…
Descriptors: Critical Race Theory, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Evolution, Public Schools
Evaporative Economics: A Truth-Telling Metaphor to Displace the Trickle-Down Lie That Just Won't Die
Wright-Maley, Cory; Hall, Delandrea; Finley, Shakealia Y. – Journal of Social Studies Education Research, 2023
Trickle-down economics is a fallacious metaphor that hurts working people and the civic commons. In this paper, we discuss the role and impact metaphors have in economics education. We explore the stickiness of "truthy" but ultimately false metaphors and offer economics educators alternative metaphors to displace this problematic…
Descriptors: Ethics, Figurative Language, Economics Education, Language Usage
Leonardo V. Marcelino; Erica D. S. Dias; Patricia L. Ru¨ntzel; Ju´lio C. L. Milli; Jefferson S. Santos; Leila C. A. B. Souza; Carlos A. Marques – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
The present paper analyzes and discusses specific methodological aspects instrumental in promoting the teaching of Green Chemistry (GC); it examines proposals and teaching experience reports from 284 papers published in the "Journal of Chemical Education" (JChemEd), until 2019. Using Discursive Textual Analysis and drawing upon previous…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Intervention
Shiv K. Tripathi; Wolfgang C. Amann; Agat Stachowicz-Stanusch – International Society for Technology, Education, and Science, 2023
The effective anti-corruption education requires careful understanding of the teaching-learning context. At the different stages of the designing an anti-corruption focuses course, we need to consider factors related to target learning group as well as the respective context in which they are. Learning style versatility is an important factor that…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Computer Software, Synchronous Communication, Computer Oriented Programs
Fiona A. E. McQuarrie – British Columbia Council on Admissions and Transfer, 2024
The purpose of this report is to examine and compare course outlines at BC Transfer System member institutions, and to provide recommendations for course outline content and format to facilitate request for transfer credit. This project examined course outlines and/or syllabi from 36 BC Transfer System member institutions, along with each…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Transfer Policy, Educational Policy, Institutional Cooperation
Judith Hope Munter; Nathan Harkleroad; Manuel Cervantes; Andrea Tinajero – Experiential Learning and Teaching in Higher Education, 2022
The urgent issues impacting the U.S. and global communities today open new horizons for deep inquiry into relevant, timely curriculum content and for re-examining parameters of education's role in the cultivation of new mindsets. Finding common ground will mean translating conceptions of justice from societal equity to environmental sustainability…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Experiential Learning, Agricultural Laborers, Educational Innovation
Davidson, Guy – CEA Forum, 2021
Using as a case study the experience of teaching Jane DeLynn's "Leash" (2002), a "pornosophical" novel about a sadomasochistic lesbian relationship, I argue in this essay for the pedagogical value of shock. I argue that shocking works of pornography can unsettle not only students' comfortable understandings of sexuality, but…
Descriptors: Novels, Pornography, Homosexuality, Reading Material Selection
Leech, Tony – Research Matters, 2023
Assessment policy in England is often of public significance. Assessments, especially GCSEs, A levels and their vocational equivalents, have significant stakes for candidates and wider society (including for school accountability and for selection to higher education). Such assessments are frequently critiqued. There has been little major…
Descriptors: Evaluation, Educational Policy, Educational Change, Testing
Allen, Louisa – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2023
Is it ethical to want students to become non-queerphobic as an outcome of our teaching? This question is situated within thinking about teaching for social justice. It takes an event where a student challenges a course's queer pedagogy and thinks with it to expose 'the inherent paradox of education'. This is the notion that in its desires for…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Higher Education, LGBTQ People, Ethics
Reflecting on Students' Perspectives of a Pre-Entry Psychology Course in Academic Skills (2017-2021)
Gillian Hendry; Zara P. Brodie; Claire Wilson; Jim McKechnie – Psychology Teaching Review, 2023
It is known that first-year retention rates are a cause for concern within higher education. One way in which to tackle this is to consider how institutions can best prepare new students for the transition to university. The current paper details a project from the University of the West of Scotland where first year psychology students enrolled on…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Psychology, College Preparation, Academic Ability
Robert Jean LeBlanc – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2024
This article explores the potential of narrative interest for secondary literature education. Narrative is a purposeful construction which is organised with the intent of having effects on readers. For rhetorical narratologists, narrative is driven by the production of narrative gaps -- suspense, curiosity, and surprise -- which in turn drive…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Literature, Secondary School Teachers, Personal Narratives
Dilek Girit-Yildiz; Fadime Ulusoy – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2024
It is difficult for mathematics teachers to find and utilize relevant historical content for their students. In this study, we aimed to examine how prospective mathematics teachers (PMTs) evaluate the history of mathematics (HM) in curriculum resources and how they integrate the HM into lesson plans. We collected data through PMTs' evaluation…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Lesson Plans, Teaching Methods, Textbook Evaluation
Óscar F. Gil-García; Büsra Sati; Justin M. Martin; Luz F. Velazquez – Teaching Sociology, 2024
Conversations surrounding decolonial humanistic sociology have been guided by a moral imperative--to advance a radical critique of society for the purpose of reducing inequality. Storytelling has been used by marginalized groups to advance decolonization. Exactly how can instructors use the power of storytelling and maps to facilitate the study of…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Humanism, Teaching Methods, Global Approach
Hugh Lauder – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
This paper examines the contribution that Martin Thrupp made to educational policy and teachers' practice in the light of the present threat to democracy presented by the authoritarian right. Martin's work on school composition is extended to an analysis of the prospects and practice for a education for democratic citizenship. It focuses on the…
Descriptors: Authoritarianism, Teaching Methods, Democracy, Educational History