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Aldridge, David – Educational Theory, 2018
This article by David Aldridge concerns the promise of knowledge "insertion." The promise can be elucidated as follows: knowledge could be inserted by a less time-consuming (and possibly in many senses less expensive) technological process than traditional learning, whereby, for example, some relatively swift procedure of implanting or…
Descriptors: Technology Uses in Education, Brain, Epistemology, Learning Processes
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Holma, Katariina – Educational Theory, 2012
Fallibilist pluralism is a moral and epistemological position that preserves both broadly conceived ethical pluralisms and the possibility of searching for a shared moral vision. In this essay Katariina Holma defends fallibilist pluralism as an important epistemological contribution to today's theories on citizenship education and analyzes the…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Citizenship Education, Moral Development, Epistemology
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Golding, Clinton – Educational Theory, 2012
In this essay Clinton Golding introduces a new construct and area of research--epistemic progress--and argues that it can shed new light on educational inquiry. By clearly distinguishing progress through developing better ideas (epistemic progress) from progress through developing better inquiry skills (procedural progress), teachers and students…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Epistemology, Inquiry, Student Improvement
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Toom, Auli – Educational Theory, 2012
The concepts of tacit knowledge and tacit knowing have been of interest to philosophers and epistemologists as well as behavioral and social scientists. The tacit dimension can be found in both individual and collective practices in versatile, implicit, informal, and unintentional ways. There is no clear, broadly accepted definition of tacit…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Epistemology, Knowledge Level, Skills
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Kotzee, Ben – Educational Theory, 2011
In this essay Ben Kotzee addresses the implications of Bernard Williams's distinction between "thick" and "thin" concepts in ethics for epistemology and for education. Kotzee holds that, as in the case of ethics, one may distinguish between "thick" and "thin" concepts of epistemology and, further, that this distinction points to the importance of…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Ethics, Epistemology, Educational Theories
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Jones, Ward E. – Educational Theory, 2012
Because higher education brings members of academic communities in direct contact with students, the reflective higher education student is in an excellent position for developing two important intellectual virtues: confidence and humility. However, academic communities differ as to whether their members reach consensus, and their teaching…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Faculty, Reflective Teaching, Epistemology
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Mintz, Avi I. – Educational Theory, 2012
One of the mantras of progressive education is that genuine learning ought to be exciting and pleasurable, rather than joyless and painful. To a significant extent, Jean-Jacques Rousseau is associated with this mantra. In a theme of "Emile" that is often neglected in the educational literature, however, Rousseau stated that "to suffer is the first…
Descriptors: Progressive Education, Epistemology, Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories
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Lang, James C. – Educational Theory, 2011
Epistemologies of situated knowledges, advanced by scholars such as Donna Haraway, Lorraine Code, and Maureen Ford, challenge mainstream epistemology's claim to be the gold standard in determining what counts as knowledge. In this essay, James Lang uses the work of these and other feminist theorists to explicate the notion of situated knowledges…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Postmodernism, Feminism, Learning Processes
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Holma, Katariina – Educational Theory, 2011
The crucial epistemological question for formulating the principles that underlie moral education concerns the status of rationality and objectivity in ethics and education. In this essay Katariina Holma argues that the intertwined understanding of the concepts of education, ethics, rationality, and objectivity is built into our language and our…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Ethics, Values Education, Moral Values
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Fulford, Amanda – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay Amanda Fulford examines the subject of inter-cultural understanding from two perspectives: first, through considering Naoko Saito's exploration of translation and inter-/intra-cultural understanding, and second, through a discussion of work from the field of literacy studies, in particular the New London Group's "pedagogy of…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Literacy Education, Cultural Awareness, Adult Literacy
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Hand, Michael – Educational Theory, 2008
There is an emerging consensus that to teach something as controversial is to present it as a matter on which different views are or could be held and to expound those different views as impartially as possible. This raises an important normative question that has yet to receive the attention it deserves from educational theorists: how are we to…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Epistemology, Educational Theories, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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Robertson, Emily – Educational Theory, 2009
In "Moderating the Debate: Rationality and the Promise of American Education", Michael Feuer argues that insights from cognitive science and the theory of bounded rationality can help us understand why educational policy makers overreach in seeking optimal solutions to educational problems. In this essay, Emily Robertson argues that cognitive…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Cognitive Psychology, Educational Policy, Cognitive Science
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Pollack, George – Educational Theory, 2007
What is the philosophical status of the philosophy of education? Is it philosophy, no different from the philosophy of science and the philosophy of mind? Much depends on where these latter derive their philosophical bona fides from. There are two ways of viewing the matter. On one account, they are subdivisions of the veritable philosophy…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Educational Philosophy, Philosophy, Social Influences
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Connell, Jeanne M. – Educational Theory, 2008
In this review essay, Jeanne Connell examines the influence of pragmatic philosophy on the scholarly works of twentieth-century literary theorist and English educator Louise Rosenblatt through the lens of a recent collection of her essays originally published between 1936 and 1999. Rosenblatt grounded her transactional theory of literature in…
Descriptors: Literary Criticism, Teaching Methods, Literature, English Instruction
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Boyles, Deron R. – Educational Theory, 2006
In an effort to navigate the treacherous path between professionalism and social relevancy, this essay takes up an area of professional philosophy--epistemology--with the intention of reclaiming the integrative role John Dewey held for philosophy and classroom practice. Deron Boyles asserts that epistemology can and should represent an area of…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Educational Philosophy, Teaching Methods
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