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Showing 1 to 15 of 84 results Save | Export
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Kristinsson, Sigurður – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2023
Universities can sharpen their commitment to democracy through institutional change. This might be resisted by a traditional understanding of universities. The question arises whether universities have defining purposes that demarcate possible university policy, strategic planning, and priority setting. These are significant questions because…
Descriptors: Universities, Educational Development, Democracy, Educational Change
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Pedro Vincent Dias Bergheim – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2024
This article argues that curriculum work can benefit from signifiers of Bildung to promote democracy in public education. The argument is built on the premise that cultural and intellectual traditions that value Bildung presume a link between the inner cultivation of the individual and the development of better societies (Horlacher 2017). I start…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Democratic Values, Public Education, Curriculum Development
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Villacañas de Castro, Luis Sebastián – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2020
This article aims to establish a line of continuity between John Dewey's democratic and educational ideals and the practice of action research, to justify that the latter affords an adequate means to enact Dewey's ideals against the destructive challenges that neoliberalism poses to democracy today. This aim involves three ideas that will be…
Descriptors: Democracy, Neoliberalism, Action Research, Educational Philosophy
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Wahl, Rachel – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2019
The press and scholars alike often bemoan the failure of civil public deliberation. Yet this insistence on civility excludes people who engage in adversarial tactics, limiting the ideas that are heard within deliberation. Drawing on a deliberative dialogue that occurred in Charlottesville, Virginia, in the aftermath of the deadly White Supremacist…
Descriptors: Democracy, Activism, Educational Philosophy, Political Attitudes
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Feu, Jordi; Serra, Carles; Canimas, Joan; Làzaro, Laura; Simó-Gil, Núria – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2017
In the educational sphere, the concept of "democracy" is used in many and varied ways, though the hegemonic school culture often starts from a concept of democracy that is taken for granted, and it is understood that the entire educational community shares a similar concept. As a result of the research project "Democracy,…
Descriptors: Democracy, Educational Practices, Educational Philosophy, Governance
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Sidorkin, Alexander M. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2023
This paper advocates for a shift from insular paternalism to developmental paternalism in education, contending that students' engagement with erroneous ideas is crucial for building the ability to resist harmful notions and support democracy. The proposed inoculative approach exposes students to problematic ideas, guiding them through the process…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Learner Engagement, Democratic Values, Bias
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Zembylas, Michalinos – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2020
This paper argues that it is important for educators in democratic education to understand how the rise of right-wing populism in Europe, the United States and around the world can never be viewed apart from the affective investments of populist leaders and their supporters to essentialist ideological visions of nationalism, racism, sexism and…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Democracy, Educational Philosophy, Nationalism
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Frank, Jeff – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2018
This paper has two interrelated goals. The first is to introduce a framework: oppositional democracy. The second is to use this framework to address what I see as a central problem that occurs when learning to teach: the moment when someone with power tells an aspiring teacher that something she hopes to accomplish is "unrealistic". The…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Student Teaching, Guidelines, Democracy
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Straume, Ingerid S. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2016
Even though the interrelationship between education and democratic politics is as old as democracy itself, it is seldom explicitly formulated in the literature. Most of the time, the political system is taken as a given, and education conceptualized as an instrument for stability and social integration. Many contemporary discussions about…
Descriptors: Democratic Values, Political Attitudes, Educational Trends, Trend Analysis
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Snir, Itay; Eylon, Yuval – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2017
The republican political tradition, which originated in Ancient Rome and picked up by several early-modern thinkers, has been revived in the last couple of decades following the seminal works of historian Quentin Skinner and political theorist Philip Pettit. Although educational questions do not normally occupy the center stage in republican…
Descriptors: Civics, Citizenship, Democracy, Social Justice
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Orit Schwarz-Franco – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2024
Should education serve external goals, or should it be non-instrumental? In this paper, I recognize a tension between these two views with respect to the question of the end and the means in education, and I suggest conceptual and practical ways to handle this tension. The paper comprises two parts: the first part discusses the problem, and the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices, Professional Autonomy, Educational Objectives
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Morita, Kazunao – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2022
This paper explores Erich Fromm's contribution to Deweyan democratic education by referring to his psychoanalytic interpretation of John Dewey's pragmatic theory. First, it employs the work by Gert Biesta to secure a space between critical pedagogy and Deweyan democratic education, from which Fromm's theory can be discussed. Furthermore, it argues…
Descriptors: Psychiatry, Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories, Comparative Analysis
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DesRoches, Sarah J. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2016
In this paper I explore how citizenship education might position students as always/everywhere political to diminish the pervasive belief that one either is or is not a "political person." By focusing on how liberal and radical democracy are both necessary frameworks for engaging with issues of power, I address how we might reframe…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Democracy, Power Structure, Political Issues
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Eastman, Nicholas J.; Anderson, Morgan; Boyles, Deron – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2017
Simply put, charter schools have not lived up to their advocates' promise of equity. Using examples of tangible civil rights gains of the twentieth century (e.g. "Brown v. Board," "Lau v. Nichols") and extending feminist theories of invisible labor to include the labor of democracy, the authors argue that the charter movement…
Descriptors: School Choice, Charter Schools, Politics of Education, Educational Change
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Graff, Joris – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2022
In recent decades, deliberation about public issues has become a central theme in citizenship education. In line with an increasing philosophical and political appreciation of the importance of deliberation within democracy, schools, as training grounds for democratic citizenship, should foster high-level deliberative skills. However, when this…
Descriptors: Debate, Teaching Methods, Citizenship Education, Educational Philosophy
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