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Showing 1 to 15 of 40 results Save | Export
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Franck, Olof – Journal of Religious Education, 2023
This article discusses whether there is a contradiction in prescribing a religious, more specifically a Christian, tradition as the ethical basis for a teaching that is prescribed to be non-denominational. In the Swedish curriculum, the ethics borne by a Christian tradition and Western humanism are used as a platform for the school's teaching at…
Descriptors: Christianity, Religious Education, Ethics, Foreign Countries
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Zinaida Andreevna Lurie – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
The article analyses the theatre of Sixt Birck, an evangelical teacher of the Reformation era, within educational and practical pedagogical background of the period. It is proved that in Basel, when school reform was in process, Birck, having studied Melanchthon's commentaries on Terence and Quintilian's theory of imitation and become familiar…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Teaching Methods, Educational Change, Theater Arts
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Robert A. Bowie; Rosanne Aantjes; Mary Woolley; Sabina Hulbert; Lynn Revell; Caroline Thomas; John-Paul Riordan – Journal of Religious Education, 2024
This paper provides theorisation about a novel concept for education: an integrative philosophy of knowledge (IPK). This is proposed for school curricula to relate multiple subjects to big questions of personal and existential importance. Critical contemporary issues such as climate change education require multiple subject contributions but there…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Beginning Teachers, Science Instruction, Religious Education
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Rijal, Akmal; Sauri, Sofyan; Kosasih, Aceng – Journal of College and Character, 2023
The design framework of the value education model integrates natural sciences (NS), social sciences (SS), Islamic religious education (IRE), and extracurricular activities. This model is an effort to lay the foundations of the correct educational philosophy in a curriculum that contains the values, morals, and ethics that students should possess…
Descriptors: Values Education, Curriculum Development, Islam, Learning Processes
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Shahida – Ethics and Education, 2024
In the 21st century, discussions on the environment actively intersect with religious discourse, purposefully incorporating religious texts and spiritual perspectives to propose effective solutions for addressing the pressing global environmental crisis. Within this context, this study employs a narrative analysis approach, conducting fifteen…
Descriptors: Ethics, Educational Philosophy, Religious Factors, Undergraduate Students
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Peterson, Heather W. – International Journal of Christianity & Education, 2022
In "To Young Men," Basil of Caesarea asserted that pagan literature could be read discerningly for the pursuit of virtue. As a professor of English, I recognize Basil as an exemplar pedagogue in my own insistence that Christian students read secular texts. Not a scholar of Greek, I rely on patristic scholarship to understand Basil's…
Descriptors: Churches, Religious Education, Christianity, Teaching Methods
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Tröhler, Daniel – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2021
This article argues that crucial elements of the three most important theoretical models of twentieth-century education can be traced back to three Protestant denominations that were developed in Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. First, rather than to look in depth at the Protestant Reformers' own educational ideas, the paper…
Descriptors: Religious Factors, Protestants, Governance, Educational Theories
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Radenovic, Ljiljana – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2021
According to Petrarch, the main goal of the liberal arts is to help us live a good life and become wise, virtuous, and serene. This is also something achieved via true Christian faith. In this paper, my goal is twofold. First, I review Petrarch's general attitude to the good life and the ways to live it, along with his advice on how to remain…
Descriptors: Well Being, Christianity, Religious Education, Liberal Arts
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Cohen, Alix – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2016
In line with familiar portrayals of Kant's ethics, interpreters of his philosophy of education focus essentially on its intellectual dimension: the notions of moral catechism, ethical gymnastics and ethical ascetics, to name but a few. By doing so, they usually emphasise Kant's negative stance towards the role of feelings in moral education. Yet…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Educational Philosophy, Ethics, Religious Education
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Taufikin – Dinamika Ilmu, 2021
The pros and cons of the full-day school system in Indonesia have occurred for a long time. However, the pesantren (boarding school), which uses more than a full day school system, is in fact more and more attractive to parents because it can educate their children more thoroughly. It turns out that the Ki Hadjar Dewantara (KHD) education concept…
Descriptors: Boarding Schools, School Schedules, Educational Philosophy, Cultural Maintenance
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Farbishel, David; Staples, Robert; Pellish, Jennifer – Journal of Instructional Research, 2020
Effectively integrating faith into a Christian university classroom presents a difficulty for many instructors. Doing so in a manner that is natural and authentic for the course being studied is even more of a challenge. This article first presents an historical background to provide a perspective on the issue and to illustrate the need to be…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Religious Factors, Christianity, Religious Colleges
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Bezalel, Glenn Y. – Theory and Research in Education, 2020
There has been a growing literature among philosophers of education on how to frame questions of moral controversy in the classroom. Through the application of hard moral cases that may be said to leave one 'morally dumbfounded', I take up Michael Hand's influential epistemic criterion and attempt to show why its monistic approach is too limited…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Educational Philosophy, Moral Development, Epistemology
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Ango, Samuel Peni – International Journal of Christianity & Education, 2018
Nigerian society is bedeviled by corruption and injustice, whose prevalence may be partly explained by the dominant educational systems in the country. Paulo Freire has suggested that unjust systems are sustained by educational systems that condition learners to accept injustice. He also indicts the church for supporting such educational systems.…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Teaching Methods, Power Structure, Biblical Literature
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Fraser-Burgess, Sheron Andrea; Warren-Gordon, Kiesha; Humphrey, Jr., David L.; Lowery, Kendra – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
The article draws on critiques in political theory and morality to argue that womanism, a worldview rooted in Black women's lives and history, provides an alternative conceptual framework to prevailing Eurocentric thinking, for promoting socially just institutions of higher education. Presupposing a positioned, encultured, and embodied account of…
Descriptors: Criticism, Moral Values, Social Justice, Females
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Strhan, Anna – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2016
This article explores the influence of Émile Durkheim on the philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas in order both to open up the political significance of Levinas's thought and to develop more expansive meanings of moral and political community within education. Education was a central preoccupation for both thinkers: Durkheim saw secular education as the…
Descriptors: Ethics, Educational Philosophy, Moral Values, Judaism
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