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Ruano-Borbalan, Jean-Claude – European Journal of Education, 2022
The doctorate, as a ritualised form of evaluation, has existed for more than eight centuries--initially linked to Western medieval forms of knowledge production framed by religion, and to the professional training of lawyers and doctors. It nearly disappeared at the end of the modern era. Recast as a requirement for academic professions, it…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Educational History, Educational Change, Global Approach
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
Reeploeg, Silke – History Education Research Journal, 2023
In a 2017 book chapter on the continuing erasure of Indigenous epistemes in academia, the Sami scholar Rauna Kuokkanen posed an important question: is it acceptable for a site of learning to be so ignorant? Foregrounding Indigenous scholarship from the Arctic, this article examines the potential of history education to address this question. Based…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Thinking Skills, Indigenous Knowledge, Epistemology
Paraskeva, João M.; Huebner, Dwayne – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2023
"Dialectic Materialism as a Method of Doing Education" - was written over 30 years ago by one of us -- Huebner. Following an interesting dialogue we had over the last years, Dwayne suggested co-re-writing a revised piece to be published under both names. It explores at greater length the ideas that structured the initial piece and offers…
Descriptors: Nontraditional Education, Learning Theories, Epistemology, Curriculum
Miranda, Constanza; Goñi, Julian; Sotomayor, Trinidad – International Journal of Technology and Design Education, 2022
Today, engineers are expected to face challenges that involve complicated social elements related to new technological developments and their adoption. In this scenario, there needs to be a renewed attention to the instilment of general epistemic beliefs that facilitate multidisciplinary collaboration and the incorporation of social science…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Engineering Education, Foreign Countries, Epistemology
Ayelet Becher – Journal of Teacher Education, 2024
Globally, enduring skepticism around professionalism in education systems has questioned the efficiency in which teachers meet students' educational needs and their authority to do so. Presently, efforts toward professionalization in teacher education (TE) are threatened by neoliberal reforms promoting alternative pathways into teaching and…
Descriptors: Professionalism, Teacher Education Programs, Neoliberalism, Democratic Values
Brady Anthony Tyburski – ProQuest LLC, 2024
A common educational assumption is that coherence is a pre-requisite for a "good" curriculum. Indeed, in mathematics education this perspective has persisted both nationally and internationally as a foundational principle for curriculum design, reform, and evaluation. While curricular coherence is often unquestioningly accepted as…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Figurative Language, Student Attitudes
Barritt, Laura – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2021
This article argues that a UK education system is required such that it specifically recognises the particular dynamic, co-constructive nature of complex and rapid contemporary entanglements (both human and non-human) and how they inform the epistemic and ontological development of students. This article draws from posthumanist theory and uses the…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Art Education, Foreign Countries, Educational Theories
Disobedience, (Dis)Embodied Knowledge Management, and Decolonization: Higher Education in The Gambia
A. T. Johnson; Marcellus F. Mbah – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
In this work, we sought to uncover the key strategies and challenges to the integration of Indigenous knowledge as knowledge management practices at a public university in The Gambia. It is often axiomatic in the literature that the incorporation of diverse epistemologies is a key resource for sustainable development; therefore, activities…
Descriptors: Resistance to Change, Educational Change, Decolonization, Knowledge Management
Chater, Mark – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2022
This article, which is developed from a keynote given to the Humanists UK RE conference on 28 November 2020 draws attention to the interest groups that operate in and around the world of professional religious education (RE) in England. It argues that reform of RE could still fail. Two factors could spell its end. First is the "politics of…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Conferences (Gatherings)
McCowan, Tristan – Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
The planetary crisis facing humanity makes essential the incorporation of learning about climate change and sustainability in the university curriculum. Yet the ooting of climate change in values, knowledge systems and societal structures means that this incorporation must be more than just addition of knowledge content into a pre-existing…
Descriptors: Climate, Educational Change, Teaching Methods, Epistemology
Hwami, Munyaradzi – ECNU Review of Education, 2022
Purpose: This article examines the adverse impact of international economic sanctions on pedagogy. The article considers the contemporary times as a period of misinformation, false news, and untruths. Utilizing anti-hegemonic literature, international economic sanctions are viewed as neoliberalism's instrument of coercion, a Western weapon used to…
Descriptors: International Relations, Sanctions, Authoritarianism, Neoliberalism
Pacheco, José Augusto – Prospects, 2021
Effects rippling from the COVID 19 emergency include changes in the personal, social, and economic spheres. Are there continuities as well? Based on a literature review (primarily of UNESCO and OECD publications and their critics), the following question is posed: How can one resist the slide into passive technologization and seize the possibility…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Educational Change, Educational Technology
Wyatt, Tasha R. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2022
As HPE begins to turn their attention to the lived experiences of minoritized groups in society, health professions education (HPE) researchers need to be aware of the history of social science research and the ways it contributes to creating systems of oppression. This is because as 'knowledge producers,' we make decisions about how to design our…
Descriptors: Health Occupations, Medical Education, Research, Diversity
Shim, Soo-Yean; Krist, Christina – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2022
This commentary to Ha and Kim's article suggests three ways to expand the interpretive functions of framing to explore and support marginalized students' participation in collaboration and learning, based on our comprehensive review of Ha and Kim's and other relevant studies. We argue that framing can be a useful tool for (1) understanding both…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged, Power Structure, Students, Student Participation