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Showing 1 to 15 of 33 results Save | Export
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Zembylas, Michalinos – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2023
How should educators deal with conspiracy theories in the classroom, if at all? Do the epistemic deficiencies of some conspiracy theories make them easy prey for debunking? Can the moral and political dangers that certain conspiracy theories pose to democratic societies justify educators avoiding addressing conspiracy theories in the classroom?…
Descriptors: Deception, Criticism, Epistemology, Ethics
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Steven A. Stolz; Ali Lucas Winterburn; Edward Palmer – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
The recent proliferation of Large Language Models (LLMs) raises questions as to the role of such tools both within an educational learning environment and their epistemic capacity. If, as Alfred North Whitehead remarked, western philosophy indeed 'consists of a series of footnotes to Plato', it would be of doubtless importance to evaluate the…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Natural Language Processing, Philosophy
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Russell Butson; Rachel Spronken-Smith – Higher Education Research and Development, 2024
This article weighs in on the developing discourse on AI's role in higher education research through a structured dialogue between two diametrically opposed academics. Utilising a dialectical framework, the discourse transcends surface-level debates to grapple with ethical, methodological, and epistemological questions that are often overlooked,…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Educational Research, Higher Education, Technology Uses in Education
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Frimberger, Katja – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2023
This article explores intercultural education research about intercultural encounters as aesthetic phenomena. I will argue that Gadamer's notion of "hermeneutical identity" when encountering an artwork can enrich intercultural education studies' (IES) conceptualisations of an event-based research and pedagogy, conceived as a mode of…
Descriptors: Intercultural Communication, Aesthetics, Ethics, Teaching Methods
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Keto, Sami; Foster, Raisa – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2021
This paper describes a conceptual extension of the socialization process and its implications for education. The motivation to the coining of ecosocialization comes from a recent turn in different branches of science, which forces us to problematize the anthropocentric view of life. The theoretical analysis combines the frameworks of phenomenology…
Descriptors: Socialization, Environmental Education, Ecology, Phenomenology
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Pratt, Nick; Alderton, Julie – Curriculum Journal, 2023
This paper explores how the twin processes of neoliberalism and neoconservatism work together on, and through, curricula and their associated pedagogies. It bridges the gap between policy and classroom practice, focusing on the particular example of the school subject of mathematics and the notion of mastery, operationalised in the English…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Criticism, Mastery Learning, Teaching Methods
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Foley, William J., Jr. – Current Issues in Comparative Education, 2021
Human Rights Education exists as an implementing entity of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Scholars such as Andre Keet and others have criticized the dissemination of universal rights through education because it covets Western ideology over local ethical and epistemological constructs. Using Tibbitts' revised typologies of Human Rights…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Educational Change, Critical Theory, Teaching Methods
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Bindewald, Benjamin; Hawkins, Joshua – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
How should those who value reasonable pluralism navigate ethical and epistemological challenges related to speech and inquiry in higher education? We propose the ethical pursuit of public knowledge as a guiding vision for public colleges and universities with the understanding that other institutions will serve different purposes. The ethical…
Descriptors: Freedom of Speech, Epistemology, Higher Education, Ethics
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Hinchliffe, Geoffrey – Ethics and Education, 2018
First of all, I define the concept of epistemic freedom in the light of the changing nature of educational practice that prioritise over-prescriptive conceptions of learning. I defend the 'reality' of this freedom against possible determinist-related criticisms. I do this by stressing the concept of agency as characterised by 'becoming'. I also…
Descriptors: Freedom, Ethics, Criticism, Beliefs
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Bakhurst, David – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
This essay explores the nature of teaching, the relationship between teacher and student, and the scope and limits of new learning technologies. Teaching, whatever else it might be, involves the imparting of knowledge. To illuminate this, I turn to the epistemology of testimony and consider Anscombe's idea of trusting another for the truth, a…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Correlation, Educational Philosophy, Educational Technology
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Michelson, Elana – Adult Education Quarterly: A Journal of Research and Theory, 2021
In this commentary, Elana Michelson responds to Chad Hoggan and Tetyana Kloubert's critique of Michelson's "The Ethical Knower: Rethinking Our Pedagogy in the Age of Trump" (2019). Michelson concludes that Hoggan and Kloubert are right to call attention to the reemergence of fascist discourse and action across much of the globe and to…
Descriptors: Ethics, Educational Change, Teaching Methods, Progressive Education
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Svalastog, Anna Lydia; Wilson, Shawn; Hansen, Ketil Lenert – Education Sciences, 2021
This article highlights the perceptions and expectations of knowledge that many people, including educators and policy makers, take for granted. Our focus of understanding is Indigenous studies and gender studies. Our aim is to show how modern education undermines these fields of studies. We use an autoethnographic method, reflecting more than 75…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Indigenous Knowledge, Educational Practices, Criticism
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Hung, Ruyu – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2016
In Confucianism, the subject of learning is one of the most important concerns. For centuries, Confucian thinkers have been devoted to seeking answers to questions such as, how to be a morally noble and decent human being? (??), how to be a true and moral human being--a noble man? (junzi, ??) and how to learn to be a junzi? A "junzi" can…
Descriptors: Confucianism, Criticism, Epistemology, Classification
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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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Kuntz, Aaron M. – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2017
In this paper I overlay Foucault's lectures on biopower, governmentality, and truth-telling with Braiddoti's affirmative ethical claims on the posthuman and Lazzarato's recognition of refusal as an ethical act. I do so in specific response to the ubiquity of negative critique within contemporary research that claims the critical mantle. Yet, this…
Descriptors: Ethics, Educational Philosophy, Criticism, Neoliberalism
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