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Kazuya Yanagida – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
Higher education has often been accused of its anti-social character, represented by the metaphor of the 'ivory tower'. However, the idea of the pursuit of knowledge per se, which is associated with the ivory tower, has not been widely recognized as a public ideal of higher education. In this study, by drawing on the 20th-century British…
Descriptors: General Education, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Learning
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Daniel Clark – Learning, Media and Technology, 2024
Whilst technology may have been the 'saviour' of HE from the immediate challenges of the pandemic, the opportunistic dialogue emerging in response is imbued with notions of the pandemic as a catalyst for change. Empowered by the apparent success of technology's deliverance, the door has been opened to unprecedented investment into a pervasive and…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Higher Education, Consumer Economics, Neoliberalism
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Kathleen Lynch – Educational Researcher, 2024
Teacher professional development (PD) is among the most prominent levers used to improve teaching quality. The findings of research studies examining PD interventions are heterogeneous, with meta-analyses indicating mean positive impacts but also the existence of many ineffective programs. "Educational Researcher" has served as a…
Descriptors: Economics, Consumer Economics, Economic Factors, Faculty Development
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Peleckis, Kestutis; Peleckiene, Valentina; Peleckis, Kestutis; Leonaviciene, Edita – International Journal of Learning and Change, 2022
The extent of competition in the market affects the balance of bargaining power of market participants. When price discrimination is low, it increases consumer welfare - that is, if the price does not correspond to the evaluation of each product by the consumer, then discrimination allows for additional consumers to buy the product at a price,…
Descriptors: Consumer Economics, Consumer Education, Costs, Negotiation Agreements
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John E. Petrovic – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
This article defines a public good, arguing that higher education should be considered a public good. This requires moving away from an orthodox economistic understanding of public goods. It also requires understanding the relationship between higher education as both a private good and a public good to the extent that it promotes individual…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Prosocial Behavior, Altruism, Sharing Behavior
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Herz, Rachel S.; Larsson, Maria; Trujillo, Rafael; Casola, Marisa C.; Ahmed, Farah K.; Lipe, Stacy; Brashear, Morgan E. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2022
Humans have deliberately scented their environment for purpose or pleasure for millennia. In the contemporary marketplace most consumers prefer and purchase scented versions of common household products. However, the drivers of this consumer preference have not been elucidated. To explain the attraction to scent in household products we propose a…
Descriptors: Olfactory Perception, Consumer Economics, Preferences, Purchasing
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Hoiem, Elizabeth Massa – Children's Literature in Education, 2021
This paper analyzes "production stories," a genre of information literature and media responsible for teaching children how everyday things are made. As nineteenth-century families increasingly consumed tropical commodities produced by slave labor, including sugar, tea, coffee, rum, and tobacco, the production story developed in Britain…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Race, Slavery, Manufacturing
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Ord, Jon – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2022
This paper critically evaluates the concept of innovation, in the context of the funding of youth work within Erasmus+ Key Acton 2, but the findings are applicable to other settings which emphasise innovation. The paper argues that, first, innovation is problematic because it lacks a definition. Second, innovation is founded on a neoliberal…
Descriptors: Innovation, Neoliberalism, Business, Models
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Morris, Karen V. A. – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2022
Consumerist views have increased in English higher education. At the same time, the wellbeing of university students is of growing concern. Some research suggests that consumerist views amongst students link to lower wellbeing and achievement. This prompted the current paper which speculates that the concept of autonomy (as depicted in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Well Being, Personal Autonomy
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Deng, Tao; Kim, Hyejin; Uysal, Nur – Journal of Advertising Education, 2023
This paper explores the potential of a collaborative research laboratory to enhance advertising education by catalyzing student learning, engagement, and faculty interaction. By offering a comprehensive blueprint through this lab, we illuminate how institutions can leverage the benefits of such labs through immersing students in practical consumer…
Descriptors: Advertising, Professional Education, Teaching Methods, Faculty Workload
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Chinchanachokchai, Sydney; McKelvey, James – Marketing Education Review, 2023
Technology continues to change and improve the marketing profession. Marketing research technologies such as eye-tracking and facial expression analysis allow marketers to gain more insights into consumer behaviors. Recently, these technologies have become more affordable and applicable in the classroom learning environment. A very recent addition…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Business Administration Education, Marketing, Eye Movements
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Demirpolat, Aznavur – Educational Policy Analysis and Strategic Research, 2021
Due to the Industrial Revolution in Britain, the spread of production and consumption paved the way for consumption, especially excessive and luxury consumption, ceasing to be the privilege of aristocrats and other upper social classes. With the development of modern capitalism, the bourgeoisie/middle classes, which started to rise in the West,…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Policy Analysis, Social Systems, Social Change
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Ssebagala, Ralph Abbey – Journal of Financial Counseling and Planning, 2017
A large fraction of South African consumers are highly leveraged, inadequately insured, and/or own little to no assets of value, which increases their exposure not only to idiosyncratic risk but also to severe indebtedness and/or default. This scenario can present negative ramifications that lead well beyond the confines of individual households.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Debt (Financial), Consumer Economics, Legislation
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Frank, Pascal – International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education, 2021
Purpose: Despite advances in Environmental and Sustainability Education (ESE) scholarship and practice, ESE has not yet contributed to mitigate the sustainability-related problems it is meant to remedy. As part of an explanation, some scholars have argued that current ESE scholarship and practice overemphasizes intellectual and neglects…
Descriptors: Sustainable Development, Environmental Education, Consumer Economics, Scholarship
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Gibbs, Paul – Journal of Marketing for Higher Education, 2018
Consumerism acts to maintain the emotional reversal of work and family. Exposed to a continual bombardment of advertisements through a daily average of three hours of television (half of all their leisure time), workers are persuaded to 'need' more things. To buy what they now need, they need money. To earn money, they work longer hours. Being…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Marketing, Consumer Economics, Anxiety
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