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Showing 151 to 165 of 2,600 results
Waddington, David I. – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay, David Waddington provides a basic outline of John Dewey's often-overlooked views on technology education and explores how these ideas could be updated productively for use in contemporary contexts. Some of the shortcomings of Dewey's ideas are also examined--his faith in the scientific method may have been excessive, and some…
Descriptors: Technology Education, Science Education, Time Perspective, Scientific Methodology
Waks, Leonard J. – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay, Leonard Waks reconsiders the issue of the public character of charter schools, that is, schools funded through public taxation but operated by non-state organizations such as nonprofit and for-profit educational corporations and nongovernmental public interest organizations. Using John Dewey's conception of a democratic public as a…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Institutional Characteristics, Public Education, Democratic Values
Abowitz, Kathleen Knight – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay, Kathleen Knight Abowitz makes the case that charter schooling can enable multiple publics to develop and create educational visions. Charter schooling policies can enable these publics to pursue these visions and agendas on behalf of both public and common educational goals as well as goals associated with particular identities and…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Educational Objectives, Agenda Setting, Goal Orientation
Brass, Jory – Educational Theory, 2010
In this historical study of English teaching, Jory Brass adopts a governmentality perspective to highlight the contingency and limits of pedagogical arguments that construct an oppositional relation between power and freedom. In the first part of the essay, Brass historicizes contemporary critiques of transmission pedagogies by comparing them with…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Sociocultural Patterns, Power Structure, Freedom
Gordon, Mordechai – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay Mordechai Gordon begins to address the neglect of humor among philosophers of education by focusing on some interesting connections between humor, self-transcendence, and the development of moral virtues. More specifically, he explores the kind of humor that makes fun of oneself and how it can affect educational encounters. Gordon…
Descriptors: Humor, Role, Moral Development, Self Concept
Vlieghe, Joris; Simons, Maarten; Masschelein, Jan – Educational Theory, 2010
In this article Joris Vlieghe, Maarten Simons, and Jan Masschelein attempt to articulate a new way of dealing with the public character of education. Instead of discussing laughter as an instrument that one could use to facilitate established educational goals, the authors provide an extensive analysis of the phenomenon of laughter as a specific…
Descriptors: Humor, Responses, Human Body, Behavior
Wilson, Terri S. – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay, Terri Wilson puts the argument developed by Kathleen Knight Abowitz that charter schools could be considered as counterpublic spaces into interaction with empirical research that explores patterns of voluntary self-segregation in charter schools. Wilson returns to the theoretical tension between Jurgen Habermas and Nancy Fraser over…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Persuasive Discourse, Inclusion, Public Sector
Saeverot, Herner – Educational Theory, 2010
Herner Saeverot begins this article with an example: how Soren Kierkegaard used deceit as a means to educate. In one of his biographical texts, it turns out that Kierkegaard's objective was to deceive his readers into a totalized and universal truth. According to Saeverot, Kierkegaard's approach shows that he was a "demystifier," someone who wants…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Deception, Phenomenology, Novels
Eldridge, Michael – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay Michael Eldridge maintains that Frank Margonis has in a recent article ill-advisedly speculated about John Dewey's pedagogy, suggesting that his "racialized visions" of students and classroom communities involve a "false universalism" that is problematic for our multicultural society. Based on this understanding, Margonis concludes…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational History, Progressive Education, Educational Theories
Fulford, Amanda – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay Amanda Fulford examines the subject of inter-cultural understanding from two perspectives: first, through considering Naoko Saito's exploration of translation and inter-/intra-cultural understanding, and second, through a discussion of work from the field of literacy studies, in particular the New London Group's "pedagogy of…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Literacy Education, Cultural Awareness, Adult Literacy
Smeyers, Paul; Waghid, Yusef – Educational Theory, 2010
Educators, not to mention philosophers of education, find themselves in a difficult position nowadays. They are confronted with problems such as which kind of values one would want citizens to embrace, or to what extent social practices of a particular group may differ from what is generally held. In this essay, Paul Smeyers and Yusef Waghid focus…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Postmodernism, Global Approach, Self Concept
Saito, Naoko; Standish, Paul – Educational Theory, 2010
The matter of crossing borders in the creation of democratic communities arises in ways that are pressing, both within the nation-state and on a global scale. Tensions between tendencies toward nationalism and the cosmopolitan call for global understanding touch the heart of ideas of democracy as beginning at home--at political, psychological, and…
Descriptors: Democracy, Democratic Values, Nationalism, Global Approach
Neubert, Stefan – Educational Theory, 2010
Why is John Dewey still such an important philosopher today? Writing from the perspective of the Cologne Program of Interactive Constructivism, Stefan Neubert tries in what follows to give one possible answer to this question. Neubert notes that Cologne constructivism considers Dewey in many respects as one of the most important predecessors of…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Educational Philosophy, Democracy, Progressive Education
Johansson, Viktor – Educational Theory, 2010
Education is often understood as a process whereby children come to conform to the norms teachers believe should govern our practices. This picture problematically presumes that educators know in advance what it means for children to go on the way that is expected of them. In this essay Viktor Johansson suggests a revision of education, through…
Descriptors: Role of Education, Teacher Student Relationship, Epistemology, Conflict
Kwak, Duck-Joo – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay Duck-Joo Kwak explores a moral perfectionist approach to citizenship education, which is distinct from liberal and communitarian models. One of educational challenges to this approach is how to cultivate our students' sense of membership, which is shaped by a thick sense of the good life, while being not merely compatible with but…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Educational Philosophy, Community, Moral Values

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