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Showing 1 to 15 of 90 results Save | Export
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Christopher Hass – Reading Teacher, 2025
By implementing carefully selected children's literature into the current reading curriculum, teachers can help students develop into civic-minded citizens who are willing and able to take meaningful action. Much has been written about the need to link learning and culture in our literacy classrooms (Banks, 1995; Gay, 2010; Ladson-Billings, 1995,…
Descriptors: Literacy Education, Teaching Methods, Activism, Citizen Participation
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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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Krista Senatore – Reading Teacher, 2024
The author, a fifth-grade teacher, describes how she reimagined the literary essay curriculum to amplify student identity, agency, and voice by creating a class podcast. Because of their similar structure and organization, teaching students literary analysis and interpretation through podcast writing offered entry into literary essays. The author…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Essays, Self Concept, Personal Autonomy
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Pulkki, Jani; Varpanen, Jan; Mullen, John – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2021
While human beings generally act prosocially towards one another -- contra a Hobbesian "war of all against all" -- this basic social courtesy tends not to be extended to our relations with the more-than-human world. Educational philosophy is largely grounded in a worldview that privileges human-centered conceptions of the self, valuing…
Descriptors: Prosocial Behavior, Educational Philosophy, World Views, Climate
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Jennifer Y. Abbott; Jordin Clark; James Proszek – Basic Communication Course Annual, 2024
With increasing threats to democracy, we call for communication educators to renew and re-examine their commitment to advancing civic engagement in the basic course. Given recent scholarly criticism that civic engagement pedagogies falsely present democratic practice as neutral or apolitical and reinforce the status quo, we set an agenda for basic…
Descriptors: Communications, Teaching Methods, Citizen Participation, Assignments
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Ambrosio, John – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
The study examines how truth-tellers and truth-telling can be cultivated in the context of post-truth politics in the U.S. Following Foucault, it is not concerned with examining the problem of truth, with the philosophical question of how truth is determined, but with the problem of truth-tellers or truth-telling as a practical activity of…
Descriptors: Ethics, Educational Philosophy, Individual Development, Information Sources
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Rudolph, Nathanael – TESOL Quarterly: A Journal for Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages and of Standard English as a Second Dialect, 2023
Inspired by the call to question (critical) assumptions underpinning frameworks for "seeing" (Lather, 1993) and ground criticality in alternative forms of knowing (Pennycook, 2018), this paper examines critical frameworks for approaching identity, experience, and (in)equity in "English" language teaching (ELT), with a focus on…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, English (Second Language)
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Powell, Michelle – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2020
Voice has become a common goal of educational research and pedagogical practices aimed at equity and social justice. That is, bringing marginalized groups "to" voice, allowing diverse students to "have" a voice, and setting up classrooms that privilege silenced voices are frequent goals in educational research and practice. In…
Descriptors: Ethics, Educational Philosophy, Criticism, Teaching Methods
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Buethe, John – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2019
John Buethe draws upon the Netflix series "Stranger Things" and develops this paper's ideas by using it as an allegory for and education towards subjectivity along lines suggested by Gert Biesta in "The Beautiful Risk of Education", and Jaeggi in her work, "Alienation." Buethe observes that the show places a wager on…
Descriptors: Criticism, Television, Programming (Broadcast), Alienation
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Braun, Guilherme Junior; Potgieter, Ferdinand Jacobus – Christian Higher Education, 2019
In this article, we attempt to justify and present the basic presuppositions of a (Christian) confessional and narrative vision for philosophy of education in a postmodern context. We argue that although the nihilistic strand of postmodernity challenges the viability of religious discourse, postmodernity also re-opens the world toward its…
Descriptors: Christianity, Educational Philosophy, Postmodernism, Religious Factors
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McKinney, Emry; Hoggan, Chad – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2022
For educators committed to promoting social equity, the question of how to address dialect hegemony is increasingly important. While linguists have long accepted the concept of dialect equality, educators have struggled with the issue, sparking a history of controversy and debate underscoring larger social issues of diversity and equity. For…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Nonstandard Dialects, Standard Spoken Usage, Teaching Methods
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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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Priggs, Catherine – Teaching History, 2020
Catherine Priggs and her history department colleagues were increasingly concerned that their curriculum was too narrow. They feared that major areas of history were being left out and that many of their own pupils were not seeing themselves, in their various ethnic, cultural and world identities, in the past. Priggs and colleagues decided that a…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Self Concept, Cultural Background, Ethnicity
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Wu, Lin; Hsiung, Hui-Chen; Bogucharova, Tina – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2022
Since the mainstream U.S. history curriculum often excludes Asian Americans' struggles and resilience, many educators in the United States struggle to teach this subject. In particular, few studies explore how elementary social studies teachers use culturally relevant pedagogy to help Asian American students analyze and critique anti-Asian…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Elementary School Teachers, Culturally Relevant Education, Asian American Students
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Sloane, Heather; Petra, Megan – Journal of Social Work Education, 2021
To foster development of cultural humility in social work students, educators must listen carefully to students to uncover and disrupt implicit biases about other groups. This study was a narrative analysis of undergraduate social work student papers about identity and intersectionality where most students wrote about religion/spirituality and how…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Counselor Training, Empathy, Advocacy
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