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Showing 1,651 to 1,665 of 2,600 results
Stokes, Gilian – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
Nurse educators, like many of their health care professional colleagues, frequently face moral dilemmas when they identify a student as presenting an unacceptable risk to public safety. In this situation, the statutory requirement of nurse educators to protect the public, under the Health Practitioners Competence Assurance Act (2003), competes…
Descriptors: Nursing Education, Risk, Safety, Nurses
Ryan, Janette; Louie, Kam – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
Discourses of "internationalisation" of the curriculum of Western universities often describe the philosophies and paradigms of "Western" and "Eastern" scholarship in binary terms, such as "deep/surface", "adversarial/harmonious", and "independent/dependent". In practice, such dichotomies can be misleading. They do not take account of the…
Descriptors: Confucianism, Western Civilization, Political Divisions (Geographic), Educational Philosophy
Mozere, Liane – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
This paper argues that in daycare centres in France, where children are cared for from four months to age three, the competence of female staff members is usually denied and unvalued vis a vis the expert opinions. The paper highlights empirical research on early childhood and gender, providing pragmatic access to children's languages of desire, a…
Descriptors: Young Children, Foreign Countries, Child Care, Sex
Roberts, Peter – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
In contemplating the roles and responsibilities of intellectuals in the 21st century, the notion of "difference" is significant in at least two senses. First, work on the politics of difference allows us to consider the question "For whom does the intellectual speak?" in a fresh light. Second, we can ask: "To what extent, and in what ways, might…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Politics, Teacher Role, Intellectual Disciplines
Lam, Chi-Ming – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
Based on a rather simple thesis that we can learn from our mistakes, Karl Popper developed a falsificationist epistemology in which knowledge grows through falsifying, or criticizing, our theories. According to him, knowledge, especially scientific knowledge, progresses through conjectures (i.e. tentative solutions to problems) that are controlled…
Descriptors: Heuristics, Criticism, Critical Thinking, Epistemology
Chan, Ho Mun; Yan, Hektor K. T. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
Richard Nisbett's "The Geography of Thought" is one of several recent works that have highlighted purported differences in thinking patterns between East Asians and Westerners on the basis of empirical research. This has implications for teaching and for other issues such as cultural integration. Based on a framework consisting of three distinct…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Non Western Civilization, Critical Thinking, Pattern Recognition
Peters, Michael A. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
There is no more central issue to education than thinking and reasoning. Certainly, such an emphasis chimes with the rationalist and cognitive deep structure of the Western educational tradition. The contemporary tendency reinforced by cognitive science is to treat thinking ahistorically and aculturally as though physiology, brain structure and…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Physiology, Logical Thinking, Cognitive Psychology
Solvie, Pamela A. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
Postmodern theory is used to consider literacy instruction with and without an electronic whiteboard to investigate what it means to move beyond using technology to replicate older models of classroom structure that may be historically situated but that also limit or at least, do not support engagement in ways that may be possible through use of…
Descriptors: Ideology, Educational Technology, Emergent Literacy, Postmodernism
Luntley, Michael – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
Here is a distinction that appears very simple, looks compelling and seems to be deeply rooted in our reflections on learning. The distinction is between activities of learning that involve training and those that involve reasoning. In the former, the pupil is a passive recipient of habits of mind and action. The mechanism by which they acquire…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Empowerment, Thinking Skills, Logical Thinking
Schulz, Roland M. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
Although postmodernist thought has become prominent in some educational circles, its influence on science education has until recently been rather minor. This paper examines the proposal of Michalinos Zembylas, published earlier in this journal, that Lyotardian postmodernism should be applied to science educational reform in order to achieve the…
Descriptors: Postmodernism, Educational Change, Educational Philosophy, Science Instruction
Moss, Peter – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
The problematique addressed by the article is the growth of a dominant discourse in early childhood education and care, which has a strong effect on policy and practice, paralleled by an increasing number of other discourses which problematise most of the values, assumptions and understandings of the former. Yet there is very little engagement…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Young Children, Child Care, Models
Sankey, Derek – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
If education is to make a difference it is widely acknowledged that we must aim to educate for understanding, but this means being clear about what we mean by understanding. This paper argues for a concept of personal understanding, recognising both the commonality and individuality of each pupil's understandings, and the relationship between…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Individual Differences, Educational Philosophy, Neurology
Cannatella, Howard – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
Do places matter educationally? When Edward Casey remarks: "The world is, minimally and forever, a place-world", we might take this statement as presupposing without argument that places exist as a given, that we know what a place is, a point that Aristotle would have never taken for granted and in fact neither does Casey. I find Casey's remark…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Education, Aesthetics, Philosophy
Todd, Sharon – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
This paper identifies and addresses some dilemmas to be faced in promoting educational projects concerned with human rights. Part of the difficulty that human rights education initiatives must cope with is the way in which value has been historically conferred upon particular notions such as freedom and justice. I argue here that a just education…
Descriptors: Freedom, Childrens Rights, Civil Rights, Justice
Kwak, Duck-Joo – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2007
This paper critically examines the contemporary educational discourse on critical thinking as one of the primary aims of education, its modernist defence and its postmodernist criticism, so as to explore a new way of conceptualizing critical thinking for moral education. What is at stake in this task is finding a plausible answer to the question…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Cultural Pluralism, Critical Thinking, Moral Values

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