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Heshi, Kamal Nosrati; Nasrabadi, Hassanali Bakhtiyar – International Education Studies, 2016
The present paper attempts to recognize principles and methods of education based on Wittgenstein's picture theory of language. This qualitative research utilized inferential analytical approach to review the related literature and extracted a set of principles and methods from his theory on picture language. Findings revealed that Wittgenstein…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Educational Principles, Educational Methods, Qualitative Research
Seo, Yong-Seok – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2014
The current age is characterised by many as secular, and a source of such a characterisation can be found in the Nietzschean claim that thoughts about there being some ultimate reality have to be jettisoned, and human existence and the world need to be embraced as they are. That claim is renewed by some secular thinkers who insist that education…
Descriptors: Religion, Religious Factors, Social Influences, Educational Philosophy
Ipek, Ismail; Ziatdinov, Rushan – European Journal of Contemporary Education, 2017
The purpose of this study is to discuss instructional design and technology (IDT) model strategies for developing learning and teaching environments, based on philosophical approaches to educational technology theory. The study begins with a discussion of IDT models to define the history of educational technology or instructional technology…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Educational Philosophy, Trend Analysis, Teaching Methods
Laverty, Megan J. – Ethics and Education, 2014
Throughout history, philosophers have reflected on educational questions. Some of their ideas emerged in defense of, or opposition to, skepticism about the possibility of formal teaching and learning. These philosophers include Plato, Augustine, St Thomas Aquinas, Søren Kierkegaard, Martin Heidegger, and Ludwig Wittgenstein. Together, they…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Methods, Public Opinion, Educational History
Rømer, Thomas Aastrup – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2013
In this essay it is argued that the educational philosophy of John Dewey gains in depth and importance by being related to his philosophy of nature, his metaphysics. The result is that any experiental process is situated inside an event, an existence, a thing, and I try to interpret this "thing" as schools or major cultural events such…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Philosophy, Experience, Educational Methods
Peterson, Thomas Erling – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2014
Agamben's philosophy of education can be arrived at by focusing on the nexus of philology, philosophy and poetry that is prominent in his work. By exploring the functional and semantic reciprocity between these fields, one can identify diverse pedagogies: of language and the poetic voice, of infancy and history, of history redeemed (in the…
Descriptors: Spiritual Development, Affective Behavior, Educational Philosophy, Profiles
Davis, Andrew – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2013
In this response, I agree with much of what Schrag says about the principled limits of neuroscience to inform educators' decisions about approaches to learning. However, I also raise questions about the extent to which discoveries about "deficits" in brain function could possibly help teachers. I dispute Schrag's view that externalism/internalism…
Descriptors: Neurology, Neurosciences, Brain, Educational Methods
Lindsay, Gai – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2015
This paper articulates John Dewey's socio-political and historical influence upon the foundation and evolution of the world-renowned Reggio Emilia approach to early childhood education. It proposes that the pedagogical depth, influence and endurance of the Italian project are grounded in Dewey's philosophies of education, aesthetics and democracy.…
Descriptors: Reggio Emilia Approach, Early Childhood Education, Educational History, Educational Philosophy
Gough, Martin – Studies in Higher Education, 2014
The experience of academic practice is significantly fragmentary. This is a problem for, amongst others, early career academics trying to step up into what they might expect to be a unitary and coherent role and for academic developers. There have been recent historical developments which have highlighted this. However, I propose that the ground…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Higher Education, Professional Identity, Teaching (Occupation)
Schrag, Francis – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2013
Neuro-education, a new frontier for educational researchers, has its passionate advocates and equally passionate detractors. Some philosophers, including Noel Purdy and Hugh Morrison, Andrew Davis, and Ralph Schumacher, have argued that the entire enterprise is misguided. I evaluate and challenge their arguments. This permits me to articulate my…
Descriptors: Neurology, Neurosciences, Educational Philosophy, Educational Research
McNally, Shelley A.; Slutsky, Ruslan – Early Child Development and Care, 2017
Reggio Emilia is a small city in Italy that has emerged as an exemplary model of early childhood education. The first schools were started and run by parents who wanted their children to experience an education that was different from their own. From that humble desire rose a system of infant/toddler preschools and now early elementary classes…
Descriptors: Reggio Emilia Approach, Early Childhood Education, Educational Methods, Educational Philosophy
Davies, Richard – Oxford Review of Education, 2015
Elective Home Education is a legal, minority approach to the compulsory education of children. I review the potential contribution of the historical analysis of "domestic pedagogies", presented in this Special Issue, for home education practice in the UK. By drawing on narratives of a period at the cusp of the perceived normalcy of…
Descriptors: Home Schooling, Educational History, Educational Development, Educational Practices
Roemischer, John – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2013
The process of enculturation, initially a mimetic matter, was raised to the level of 'the art of teaching' when methodology made its first appearance. As R. G. Collingwood noted in his 1933 "An Essay on Philosophical Method," it was Aristotle who first proclaimed that "Socrates was essentially the inventor of method." Socrates'…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy, Educational Quality, Imagination
Johnson, Margaret Hess – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2012
When Albert Barnes established an art education program at the Barnes Foundation in 1924, he asked John Dewey to become the first president and director of education. Barnes and Dewey enjoyed a sustained and fruitful relationship with regard to aesthetic experience and scientific theory as applied to education. Barnes and Dewey shared a serious…
Descriptors: Art Education, Educational Philosophy, Museums, Scientific Methodology
Kaplan, Andy – Schools: Studies in Education, 2013
The work of Colonel Francis W. Parker, the man whom Dewey called "the father of progressive education," provides a starting point for reconstructing the loose ambiguities of progressive education into a coherent social and educational philosophy. Although progressives have claimed their approach is more humane and sensitive to children, we need…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Progressive Education, Educational Practices, Educational Theories