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Korda, Andrea – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2020
Through a close reading of five nineteenth-century instructional books in the Osborne Collection of Early Children's Books, this essay examines the relationship between new print technologies, memory, teaching, and learning. The article beings with a discussion of Comenius's seventeenth-century "Orbis Pictus," considered the first…
Descriptors: Memory, Imagination, Instructional Materials, Color
O'Sullivan, Kevin M. – portal: Libraries and the Academy, 2020
First developed to support courses in humanities research methods, bibliographical teaching collections are now experiencing renewed purpose as part of information literacy pedagogy. The items comprising these assembled collections provide a wealth of historical features, which make them ideal for innovative hands-on instruction. However, since…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Information Literacy, Active Learning, Instructional Materials
Chan, Chi Wai – Global Studies of Childhood, 2020
Adolescent problems in Hong Kong have brought questions about their moral development and mental health to light. Moral education for preschool children will be strategically important to address these issues because applying early educational interventions to preschool children will effectively enhance their personal development. This article…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Foreign Countries, Kindergarten, Preschool Curriculum
Castellanos-Reyes, Daniela – TechTrends: Linking Research and Practice to Improve Learning, 2020
The Community of Inquiry framework is a collaborative-constructivist process model that describes the essential elements of a successful online higher education learning experience. This history column entry briefly describes the 20 years of progress in the framework. The column is divided into two decades, first, explaining the establishment of…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Inquiry, Models, Higher Education
Kleinau, Elke; Riettiens, Lilli – History of Education, 2020
German colonialism has long been treated as a sort of footnote in the epoch of the Empire due to its relatively short time span. The focus was mostly on the reconstruction of a story of 'white' men -- as the story of pioneers, 'discoverers', missionaries or traders. But how were children included in the colonial project? This article deals with…
Descriptors: German Literature, Foreign Policy, Children, Literary Genres
Brown, Tony – Australian Journal of Adult Learning, 2020
Adult education has the power to change lives, and in Australia has always been made up of educators and providers capable of adapting to the changing environments around them. Today, however, there is declining support for adult education at a time when there is growing public disenchantment with the political system, an uncivil public discourse,…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Political Attitudes
Schuwirth, Lambert W. T.; van der Vleuten, Cees P. M. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2020
The way quality of assessment has been perceived and assured has changed considerably in the recent 5 decades. Originally, assessment was mainly seen as a measurement problem with the aim to tell people apart, the competent from the not competent. Logically, reproducibility or reliability and construct validity were seen as necessary and…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Educational Assessment, Educational History, Evaluation Methods
Hernández-Torrano, Daniel; Kuzhabekova, Aliya – High Ability Studies, 2020
The field of gifted education emerged in 1920s. Since that time, it has evolved from an emerging research area to a relatively mature field with regular regional and international conferences and key journals publishing main theoretical developments and empirical explorations in the field. This descriptive bibliometric study examines the state and…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Development, Gifted Education, Educational History
Rasiah, Jeyaraj – International Studies in Catholic Education, 2020
This article traces the circumstances of the return and beginnings of the Jesuits to Lahore, Pakistan after centuries of absence, to the establishment of the Jesuit Schools. Given the Socio-economic condition of Christians in Pakistan, and the proliferation and status of 'Private Schools' on the one hand and the low standard of the Public Schools…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Catholic Schools, Economically Disadvantaged, Intergroup Relations
Balci, Sebahattin; Dündar, Hakan; Gürbüz, Yunus Emre – International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies, 2020
This article aims to introduce the Orhun Exchange Programme implemented by the Turkic Universities Union, and seeks to position it within the broader, historical developments, and it states that the recent trend of internationalization of education is beneficial for the renaissance of the Turkic civilization. In Middle Ages, mobility of students…
Descriptors: Global Approach, International Educational Exchange, Foreign Countries, Student Mobility
Tozer, Malcolm – Journal of Historical Research in Music Education, 2020
Music played little part in the education of British children before 1853 when Edward Thring was appointed headmaster of Uppingham Grammar School in the English Midlands. Thring created an innovative holistic curriculum for the two dozen boys of this rural boarding school and he appointed a musician as the third addition to his staff to form a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Music Education, Educational History, Educational Innovation
Björck, Ville – Studies in Continuing Education, 2020
Work-integrated Learning (WIL) seeks to bridge the gap between 'scholastic' training and work. This study explores the ironic fact that the WIL discourse remains formed by the idea of "academia" and the "real world," an idea that in decisive ways creates this gap. A genealogical discourse analysis of how this idea operates in…
Descriptors: Cooperative Education, College Students, Theory Practice Relationship, Higher Education
Thibeault, Matthew D. – Journal of Research in Music Education, 2020
This historical study explores John Dewey's ideas regarding music and music education through primary sources (his published writings, correspondence, and transcriptions of class lectures) and secondary sources (biographies and related scholarly literature). Dewey's belief that he was unmusical is presented, including via a consideration of his…
Descriptors: Music Education, Educational Philosophy, Progressive Education, Laboratory Schools
D'Amico, LuElla – Children's Literature in Education, 2020
This article examines Martha Finley's immensely popular, postbellum Elsie Dinsmore series. As a teacher, Finley was concerned with the best methodology to educate young American women, a topic much debated in the nineteenth century because of the proliferation of conduct books like the Elsie series and the simultaneous advent of common schools.…
Descriptors: Womens Education, Childrens Literature, Moral Values, Novels
Eskelson, Tyrel C. – Journal of Education and Learning, 2020
The purpose of this study is to argue that formal education had multiple, independent origins in the emergence of ancient civilizations, for universally the same reasons. It uses socio-biological literature to outline the nature of human societies; ethnographic literature to show that no systems of formal education existed in small-scale…
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Development, Ethnography, Non Western Civilization