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te Riele, Kitty – Journal of Youth Studies, 2010
This article explores the contribution that can be made by philosophy of hope as a theoretical tool for youth studies. The language of hope is powerful--not only in people's everyday discourses but also in education, counselling and youth work. When working with youth who are marginalized or disadvantaged, hope can be a crucial resource. For…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Youth, Educational Theories, Social Theories, Emotional Intelligence
Papastephanou, Marianna – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2011
Cosmopolitan concern for the whole world is often treated as oppositional to particular collectivities, to corresponding sensibilities and to the obligations that follow from them. Tensions revolve around demands made upon the self (depending on the emphasis on the local or the global) and infuse educational discourse accordingly. Culturalism…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Educational Theories, Self Concept, Discourse Modes
Hirschfeld, Uwe – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2009
The article focuses on Gramsci's elaboration of the concept of hegemony to analyze the function of Social Work during the periods of Fordism and post-Fordism. It discusses the limits and opportunities for a democratic development in the theory and praxis of Social Work.
Descriptors: Social Work, Politics, Democratic Values, Educational Philosophy
Tremmel, Robert – English Education, 2010
English teacher educators' commitment to Deweyan progressivism has cost them in recent years. It has contributed to their being pushed to the margins when it comes to serious, top-level discussions about the direction of American education. This essay reexamines the case for progressivism and its relevance as an element of CEE's ongoing effort to…
Descriptors: English Teacher Education, English Teachers, Teacher Educators, Educational Philosophy
van Eijck, Michiel; Roth, Wolff-Michael – Educational Research Review, 2010
The purpose of this review paper is to contribute to the effort of rethinking scientific literacy in a form that is appropriate for describing and theorizing its occurrence "in the wild," that is, in the everyday world that we share with others (as opposed to testing situations in classrooms and laboratories). Consistent with our commitment to…
Descriptors: Scientific Literacy, Case Studies, Literature Reviews, Educational Development
Hostetler, Karl – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2010
There is renewed interest in what can be called an "experimentist" approach to education research. The claim is that if researchers would focus on experiments and "evidence-based" policies and practices, irreversible progress in education can be achieved. This experimentist approach cannot provide the understanding of knowledge and human beings…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Theory Practice Relationship, Educational Research, Research Methodology
McInerney, Dennis M., Ed.; Walker, Richard A., Ed.; Liem, Gregory Arief D., Ed. – IAP - Information Age Publishing, Inc., 2011
It is now nearly thirty years since sociocultural theories of learning created great excitement and debate amongst those concerned with learning in diverse contexts. Since that time significant advances have been made in sociocultural theory and research. Various sociocultural approaches to the understanding of learning (for example, sociocultural…
Descriptors: Social Theories, Learning Theories, Motivation, Social Influences
Gorur, Radhika – European Educational Research Journal, 2011
In this article, the author tells the story of her search for appropriate tools to conceptualise policy work. She had set out to explore the relationship between the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and Australia's education policy, but early interview data…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Policy Analysis, Policy Formation
Mueller, Michael P.; Tippins, Deborah; Bryan, Lynn A. – Democracy & Education, 2012
There is an emerging trend of democratizing science and schooling within science education that can be characterized as citizen science. We explore the roots of this movement and some current projects to underscore the meaning of citizen science in science and schooling. We show that citizen science, as it is currently conceptualized, does not go…
Descriptors: Holistic Approach, Science and Society, Science Education, Science Education History
Ryan, Richard M.; Niemiec, Christopher P. – Theory and Research in Education, 2009
In many graduate schools of education there is strong resistance to formal theories, especially those that are supported through quantitative empirical methods. In this article we describe how self-determination theory (SDT), a formal and empirically focused framework, shares sensibilities with critical theorists concerning the importance of…
Descriptors: Schools of Education, Self Determination, Social Theories, Graduate Study
Kemmis, Stephen – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2010
Educational action is a species of praxis in both an Aristotelian sense and a post-Marxian sense: in the first, it involves the morally informed and committed action of the individual practitioners who practise education; in the second, it helps to shape social formations and conditions for collectivities of people. In this paper, it is argued…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Research, Research Utilization, Theory Practice Relationship
Closson, Rosemary B. – Adult Education Quarterly: A Journal of Research and Theory, 2010
Critical race theory (CRT) was developed to examine the persistence of racism. This literature review attempts to understand CRT as it has been applied in related fields such as higher education and possible reasons for its limited application in adult education theorizing about race and racism. This analysis of CRT is framed against a backdrop of…
Descriptors: Race, Adult Education, Literature Reviews, Critical Theory
Hecht, Michael L.; Miller-Day, Michelle A. – Journal of Applied Communication Research, 2010
This paper discusses the applied aspects of our Drug Resistance Strategies Project. We argue that a new definitional distinction is needed to expand the notion of "applied" from the traditional notion of utilizing theory, which we call "applied.1," in order to consider theory-grounded, theory testing and theory developing applied research. We…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Cultural Pluralism, Norms, Effect Size
Collin, Ross; Apple, Michael W. – Educational Policy, 2010
In the elections of 2006 and 2008, progressive and liberal groups in the United States broke through key bulwarks of the Right to capture some of the highest hills on the political landscape. Although progressives and liberals now control key positions, the Right still holds wide swaths of terrain and still exercises considerable power in shaping…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Educational Change, Political Attitudes, Progressive Education
Englund, Tomas; Quennerstedt, Ann – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2008
The linguistic turn has helped to create new methods within social and educational theory. This study draws attention to the constitutive force of political language and the performative dynamics of one essentially contested concept--equivalence--in Swedish educational policy at both the national and the local level. It illustrates the way in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Educational Theories, Linguistics