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Showing 16 to 30 of 2,600 results
Lea, David – Educational Theory, 2014
In this essay David Lea approaches the decline in the study and teaching of the humanities within the university context from a financial perspective. As humanities departments are either closed down or have their curriculum attenuated, it is obvious that the revenue previously available to support such programs has not been forthcoming. This…
Descriptors: Humanities Instruction, Financial Support, Resource Allocation, Commercialization
Warnick, Bryan R.; Spencer Smith, D. – Educational Theory, 2014
A controversy rages over the question of how should controversial topics be taught. Recent work has advanced the "epistemic criterion" as the resolution to this controversy. According to the epistemic criterion, a matter should be taught as controversial when contrary views can be entertained on the matter without the views being…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Criteria, Epistemology, Teacher Role
de Freitas, Elizabeth – Educational Theory, 2014
In this essay Elizabeth de Freitas follows Tim Ingold's groundbreaking anthropological work on lines and their cultural and material significance to argue that the line is the engine of theory, be it the drawn line of inscription or mathematical measure, the exclusionary line of delineation, or the undulating generative line of flight. De…
Descriptors: Perception, Theories, Human Body, Topology
Zhao, Guoping – Educational Theory, 2014
In education, art has often been perceived as entertainment and decoration and is the first subject to go when there are budget cuts or test-score pressures. Drawing on Emmanuel Lévinas's idea of the primacy of radical alterity that breaks the totality of our being, enables self-transformation and ethics, and ensures community as a totality…
Descriptors: Art, Art Education, Philosophy, Role
Kristjánsson, Kristján – Educational Theory, 2014
Kristján Kristjánsson's aim in this article is to bury the old saw that dialogue is exclusively a Socratic but not an Aristotelian method of education for moral character. Although the truncated discussion in Aristotle's "Nicomachean Ethics" of the character development of the young may indicate that it is merely the result of…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Questioning Techniques, Philosophy, Individual Development
Bailey, Adam D. – Educational Theory, 2014
On grounds of autonomy, is comprehensive education -- an approach to education that attempts to facilitate the acceptance of certain beliefs and ways of life as being correct, and refuses to sympathetically expose students to contrary beliefs and ways of life -- ethically suspect? Recently, Bryan R. Warnick has argued that it is. In this essay,…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Educational Practices, Role of Education, Personal Autonomy
Burbules, Nicholas C. – Educational Theory, 2014
In this essay Nicholas C. Burbules reviews his experiences and the lessons he learned as editor of "Educational Theory" for more than twenty years, and he explores some of the normative choices that are inevitably made by any editor in carrying out his or her role. Burbules examines the relationship of a journal to its intellectual…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Editing, Academic Discourse, Journal Articles
Tarlau, Rebecca – Educational Theory, 2014
In this article, Rebecca Tarlau attempts to build a more robust theory of the relationship between education and social change by drawing on the conceptual tools offered in the critical pedagogy and social movement literatures. Tarlau argues that while critical pedagogy has been largely disconnected from its roots in political organizing, social…
Descriptors: Social Change, Educational Practices, Social Action, Role of Education
Gilead, Tal – Educational Theory, 2014
By critically interrogating the methodological foundations of orthodox economic theory, Tal Gilead challenges the growing conviction in educational policymaking quarters that, being more scientific than other forms of educational investigation, inquiries grounded in orthodox economics should provide the basis for educational policymaking. He…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Policy Formation, Economics, Theories
Zhang, Huiwen – Educational Theory, 2014
Inspired by Friedrich Nietzsche's idea of philology and William Gass's concept of transreading, Huiwen (Helen) Zhang employs "transreader" to suggest the integration of four roles in one: reader, translator, writer, and scholar. "Transreader" recognizes that close reading, literary translation, creative writing, and…
Descriptors: Reader Text Relationship, Interpretive Skills, Translation, Creative Writing
Albakry, Mohammed – Educational Theory, 2014
In this essay, Mohammed Albakry discusses the notion of accommodating cultural differences in translation and the need to respect these differences without compromising or emphasizing them. First, Albakry reflects on translation as an act of interpretation in light of Terence's famous saying "nothing human can be foreign to me."…
Descriptors: Translation, Semitic Languages, Arabs, Theater Arts
McAlhany, Joseph – Educational Theory, 2014
Terence's famous humanistic motto, "homo sum: humani nil a me alienum puto," was transmitted from antiquity to modernity as an isolated fragment of a surviving play, and was subjected to various forms of translation and interpretation. In this essay, Joseph McAlhany argues that fragments and translation, by their nature, resist…
Descriptors: Translation, Humanism, Figurative Language, Discourse Analysis
Barrington, Candace – Educational Theory, 2014
Through the comparative study of non-Anglophone translations of Geoffrey Chaucer's "The Canterbury Tales," we can achieve the progressive goals of Emily Apter's "translational transnationalism" and Edward Said's "cosmopolitan humanism." Both translation and humanism were intrinsic to Chaucer's…
Descriptors: Translation, Classics (Literature), Humanism, Comparative Analysis
Wharram, C. C. – Educational Theory, 2014
In this essay C. C. Wharram argues that Terence's concept of translation as a form of "contamination" anticipates recent developments in philosophy, ecology, and translation studies. Placing these divergent fields of inquiry into dialogue enables us read Terence's well-known statement "I am a human being--I deem nothing…
Descriptors: Translation, Philosophy, Ecology, Humanism
Ferkany, Matt; Creed, Benjamin – Educational Theory, 2014
Since its resurgence in the 1990s, character education has been subject to a bevy of common criticisms, including that it is didactic and crudely behaviorist; premised on a faulty trait psychology; victim-blaming; culturally imperialist, racist, religious, or ideologically conservative; and many other horrible things besides. Matt Ferkany and…
Descriptors: Values Education, Intelligence, Philosophy

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