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Showing 10,576 to 10,590 of 270,435 results
Finnan, Christine – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2013
Consistent with research conducted by George Spindler 60 years ago, teachers continue to perceive groups of students, typically students that differ from the teacher, as less capable of accomplishing meaningful tasks, belonging and contributing to social groups, and engaging actively in challenging work. The bias is especially great for students…
Descriptors: Elementary Schools, Grade 5, Classroom Research, Educational History
Abu El-Haj, Thea Renda – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2013
This response focuses attention on three key issues raised by Brayboy's talk: training our analyses on the impact of neoliberal policies reshaping schools and societies, developing an engaged anthropology of education to build local capacity, and remembering the centrality of our relationships in the midst of this work. (Contains 3 notes.)
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Neoliberalism, Educational Anthropology, Civil Rights
Lomawaima, K. Tsianina – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2013
This commentary on Bryan Brayboy's 2011 Presidential address to the Council on Anthropology & Education focuses on the concepts and performance embedded in Dr. Brayboy's demonstration of "how his stories are his theories." Central concepts are academic life in a neoliberal world driven by the myth of disinterested markets, CAE's clear mission of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Faculty, Faculty Workload, Faculty College Relationship
Loh, Chin Ee – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2013
This article examines how three Singaporean boys constructed their identities as global literate citizens through their reading practices in and out of school. An invisible network of resources contributed to their construction of a global literate identity relevant for local-global markets. The acquisition of a global literate identity as a form…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Single Sex Schools, Reputation, Males
Brayboy, Bryan McKinley Jones – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2013
In this address, I ask a number of questions including: What are the tidemarks of our time? In response, I make three points. First, we live in a neoliberal world driven by the myth of disinterested markets. Second, CAE and its leadership has always been interested in issues of social justice. Third, I argue that relationships are a vital part of…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Social Justice, Educational Anthropology, Interpersonal Relationship
Zembylas, Michalinos – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2013
This article explores the ways in which a fifth-grade class of Greek Cypriot students and their teacher perceived and negotiated the meanings of empathy for the "other" in the context of ethnic conflict in Cyprus. The findings suggest that the process of engaging with empathy is full of fractures and failures, possibilities and impossibilities.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade 5, Empathy, Teacher Student Relationship
Kolowich, Steve – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
Many professors recognize that online education is changing the landscape of academe. But faculty members at several colleges are making it clear that they will not be steamrolled. Philosophy professors at San Jose State University last week wrote an open letter saying they refused to use material from an edX course, taught by a famous Harvard…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Online Courses, College Faculty, Teacher Collaboration
Konecni, Vladimir J. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2013
Empirical psycho-aesthetics is approached in this two-part article from two directions. Part I, which appeared in the Winter 2012 issue of "JAE," addressed definitional and organizational issues, including the field's origins, its relation to "sister" disciplines (experimental philosophy, cognitive neuroscience of art, and neuroaesthetics), and…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Experimental Psychology, Interdisciplinary Approach, Artists
Stoller, Aaron – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2013
This essay is an attempt to add to the argument that beauty matters in education through offering a reciprocal but interconnected point: if the dynamic harmony and deep connectedness of beauty need to be taken seriously, so must their aesthetic converse--the disharmony and estrangement of failure. While the discourse of philosophical aesthetics…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Failure, Educational Theories, Art
Freeman, Damien – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2013
This essay investigates the special way in which a spectator might engage imaginatively with one work of art when the work is experienced in light of other works by the same artist. In particular, it addresses the idea that we might imaginatively identify with an unrepresented spectator in the picture after we have experienced others in which the…
Descriptors: Art, Painting (Visual Arts), Audiences, Imagination
Wertz, S. K. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2013
What is the number of tastes or flavors we have? Is it five, as most Chinese believe? None, as the ancient Taoists asserted? Four, as Western science traditionally claims? Recently, "umami" has been added to the traditional four: sweet, sour, salty, and bitter (the Chinese added another: spicy or pungent). Aristotle and Raghavan Iyer (of India)…
Descriptors: Perception, Food, Olfactory Perception, Cultural Differences
Gielen, Pascal – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2013
Referring to the work of Richard Sennett, this article puts forth the proposition that art production is possible only when there is a correct relation between theory and artistic practice. An effective artistic praxis can only be realized by incorporating theory in artistic practices. Based on empirical research, the author elaborates on the…
Descriptors: Art, Theory Practice Relationship, Praxis, Artists
Pretorius, Jannie P. H.; Du Toit, D. Stephan; Martin, Colwyn; Daries, Glynnis – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2013
In this essay the authors provide arguments that teaching is an art and that teachers can learn much about their trade from a careful study of the performances of other artists. Artists and teachers have the same basic challenge: in order to be successful, both groups have to obtain and retain peoples' attention. This also holds for popular music…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Teachers, Females, Preschool Education
David-West, Alzo – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2013
Aesthetics is not a subject usually associated with North Korea in Western scholarship, the usual tropes being autocracy, counterfeiting, drugs, human-rights abuse, famine, nuclear weapons, party-military dictatorship, Stalinism, and totalitarianism. Where the arts are concerned, they are typically seen as crude political propaganda. One British…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Theories, Nationalism, Anthropology
Ahn, Mark J.; Ettner, Larry – Multicultural Education & Technology Journal, 2013
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to investigate the role of cultural intelligence in MBA curricula. Shaping global corporate culture that manifests itself in powerful-shared values, group behavior, and persists despite changes in-group membership is decisive to organizational performance. In turn, cultural intelligence (CQ), defined, as an…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Distance Education, Work Experience, Group Behavior

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