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Josekutty Thomas; Kunja Kusum Kakati – International Studies in Catholic Education, 2025
St John Bosco, popularly known as Don Bosco, was an educator of the nineteenth century. His educational system, the "Preventive method," is his best-known endeavour among the numerous ground-breaking efforts at forming the youth of his time. This method of educating young people was radical considering the time and his contemporary…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational History, Educational Philosophy, Foreign Countries
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Byrne, David – Education Research and Perspectives, 2021
The history of religion as a school subject, as with the history of the school curriculum in general and the history of individual school subjects in particular, tend to be neglected. As a contribution to that corpus of work, a study of religion as a school subject in Western Australian Catholic schools offers some interesting insights. In…
Descriptors: Clergy, Religious Education, Educational History, Catholic Schools
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Clarence, Mukti; Viju, P. D.; George, Tony Sam – International Studies in Catholic Education, 2022
Jesuit schools, in particular, have been known for a long time to be centres of learning in Chotanagpur area, India, where tremendous efforts were made to achieve a high level of academic excellence; yet it appears that this legacy is not being sustained among rural, tribal, vernacular schools of Chotanagpur these days because of varied reasons.…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Religious Education, Catholic Educators, Teacher Attitudes
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Ryan, Ann Marie – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2019
In the early twentieth century in the United States, Roman Catholic schools grew in number and became increasingly regulated by state departments of education. This led to the increased influence of public school reform movements in Catholic schools. Some Catholic educators questioned these movements, while others embraced them. Educational…
Descriptors: Catholics, Women Faculty, Catholic Educators, Beliefs
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Wouter Egelmeers – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
The optical lantern projector was first introduced as a teaching aid into schools all over the world at the turn of the twentieth century. Because slides were expensive, special slide lending services played an important role in supplying schools with images they could project. Existing studies on the use of this new medium in education have…
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Technology, Teaching Methods, Catholics
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Fischer, Luise; Withers, Charles W. J. – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2023
This paper examines debates over the nature, purpose, and reform of geographical education in schools in the eighteenth-century German-speaking territories. Attention is paid to contemporaries' concerns over the cognitive content of geography -- what geography was -- and, in greater detail, to their views concerning how the subject might be…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Educational History, Course Content, Teaching Methods
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Lee, Sun Young; Winandy, Jil – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2023
This article explores how the idea of teachers as agents of change is historically constructed through the institutionalisation, secularisation, and normalisation process of professional teacher knowledges. Authors comparatively examine eighteenth-century Habsburg Monarchy literary sources and nineteenth-century US documents on the formation and…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Teacher Education Programs, Change Agents, Pedagogical Content Knowledge
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Igelmo Zaldívar, Jon; Lemke Duque, Carl Antonius – International Studies in Catholic Education, 2018
This study focuses on two major aspects of Jesuit pedagogy in Spain that should be held in mind in order to understand Jesuit educational transformations after the Second Vatican Council: Firstly (A), the theological renewal undertaken since the end of the 1960s, mainly by the Jesuit institute "Fe y Secularidad" founded in 1967 and the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Catholics, Educational History, Catholic Schools
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Admirand, Peter – International Studies in Catholic Education, 2018
This article examines why liberation theology needs to be a core resource in religious education settings, especially in Catholic secondary schools. It will first touch on key tenets of liberation theology and the reasons why it was silenced and underused. It will then analyse poverty in the Jewish tradition as an interfaith resource and…
Descriptors: Catholics, Secondary School Students, Educational Benefits, Catholic Schools
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Franken, Leni; Vermeer, Paul – British Journal of Religious Education, 2019
This article reflects on the place of RE in a pillarised education context, taking into account the fact of religious diversity and pluralisation among the school population on the one hand, and the freedom of religion and education of faith-based schools on the other. Particular attention will be given to Belgium and the Netherlands, which do not…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Cross Cultural Studies, Foreign Countries, Cultural Pluralism
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Daniel Moulin – British Journal of Religious Education, 2024
Pedagogue's fallacy occurs when epistemological principles are applied by educators that in fact do not tell of, or explain, or help understand, the subject at hand. It is identified and introduced in this article to raise an important issue in the construction of pedagogical models of religious education: knowledge is reduced and/or distorted to…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Teaching Methods, Criticism, Religion Studies
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Laffage-Cosnier, Sébastien; Hugedet, Willy; Vivier, Christian – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2020
In 1950 in France, Dr Max Fourestier introduced the concept of dividing the school day into two parts. In the morning, students followed activities that were intellectual and classroom-oriented, and in the afternoon, they had physical education classes. This programme was implemented in Gambetta Elementary School in Vanves, a city on the outskirts…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Outdoor Education, School Schedules, Educational Change
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Legg, Brian C. – Christian Higher Education, 2020
Education in the nineteenth century witnessed a revival of classical Scholasticism brought to use by many educational institutions within Europe and North America. These institutions felt a burgeoning tension among contemporary church teaching, enlightenment thinking, and the new philosophical thoughts emerging from Europe. Although…
Descriptors: Christianity, Churches, Religious Education, Criticism
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Teughels, Nelleke – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2022
In the early nineteenth century, the ideas of reform pedagogues gave rise to a didactic turn towards the visual that criticised an exclusive textual mediation of knowledge through books and lectures. To raise educational effectualness, teachers came under increasing pressure to incorporate high-profile media technologies into their lessons. Yet,…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Teaching Methods, Catholic Schools, Educational History
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Levy, Natalie; Monterescu, Daniel – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2022
The French Saint-Joseph school in Jaffa is one of the few educational institutions in Israel that have survived, since 1882, three political regimes without relinquishing pedagogical or managerial autonomy. This article examines the emergence of "circumstantial multiculturalism" in the midst of radical political changes in a…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Jews, Foreign Countries, Political Attitudes
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