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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 991 to 1,005 of 2,600 results
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Semetsky, Inna; Delpech-Ramey, Joshua A. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
This paper addresses the unconscious dimension as articulated in Carl Jung's depth psychology and in Gilles Deleuze's philosophy. Jung's theory of the archetypes and Deleuze's pedagogy of the concept are two complementary resources that posit individuation as the goal of human development and self-education in practice. The paper asserts that…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Learning Processes, Psychology, Individual Development
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Main, Shiho – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
Ideas about child education are inevitably underpinned by particular views of children, including their nature and development. The purpose of this paper is to discuss C. G. Jung's account of child education in relation to his psychological theory and view of children. However, as Jung's theory predominantly concerns the psychological development…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Personality Traits, Teacher Student Relationship, Children
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Romanyshyn, Robert – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
This essay applies the material developed in "The Wounded Researcher" to education. The core issue in that book is the necessity to make a place for the complex unconscious in research in order to lay a foundation for an ethics that is based in deep subjectivity. The therapy room has characteristically been the place where this kind of work has…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Psychology, Ethics, Therapy
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Thomas, Ruth; Whybrow, Katherine; Scharber, Cassandra – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
This article is comprised of three sections (each in subsequent regular issues of EPAT) that explore the concept of participation. Section I: Introduction and Early Perspectives grounds our exploration of participation and explores definitions and early perspectives of participation we have identified as "historically original" and…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Participation, Consciousness Raising, Education
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Hand, Michael; Levinson, Ralph – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
Discussion is widely held to be the pedagogical approach most appropriate to the exploration of controversial issues in the classroom, but surprisingly little attention has been given to the questions of why it is the preferred approach and how best to facilitate it. Here we address ourselves to both questions. We begin by clarifying the concept…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Discussion (Teaching Technique), Ethics, Science Instruction
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Stickney, Jeff A. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
Over a decade after publication of "Thinking Again: Education After Postmodernism" (1998) contention still emerges among Foucaultians over whether discursively made-up things really exist, and whether removal of the constituent subject leaves room for agency within techniques of caring for the self. That these questions are kept alive shows that…
Descriptors: Caring, Postmodernism, Educational Change, Governance
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Kim, Jeong-Hee – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
Currently, there is a resurgence of interests in phenomenology in education. This article sheds light on the importance of hermeneutical phenomenology in teaching and learning based on the lived experience of a Sioux Indian adolescent boy, elicited from an ethnographic case study conducted at an alternative high school in the US. Employing…
Descriptors: Nontraditional Students, High School Students, Phenomenology, American Indians
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Richardson, Troy – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
This essay explores some of the affinities between current theories of North American Indigenous trickster narratives and continental philosophy where they are both concerned with the question of responsibility in subject formations. Taking up the work of Judith Butler, Franz Kafka and Gerald Vizenor, the author works to show how both continental…
Descriptors: American Indians, North Americans, Social Responsibility, Social Theories
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Matereke, Kudzai Pfuwai – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
This article draws from my current research on the challenges that the concept "citizenship" brings to postcolonial Africa. The article takes Zimbabwe as a case study with the view to interrogate how the decade-long crisis has been obfuscated by the elites' manipulation of the education system which has left it redundant for envisioning both…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Democracy, Citizenship Education, Educational Change
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Higgs, Philip – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
The liberation of Africa and its peoples from centuries of racially discriminatory colonial rule and domination has far-reaching implications for educational thought and practice. The transformation of educational discourse in Africa requires a philosophical framework that respects diversity, acknowledges lived experience and challenges the…
Descriptors: Educational Development, Foreign Countries, Foreign Policy, African Culture
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Assie-Lumumba, N'Dri T. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
In this article I analyze some of the cultural factors that have determined and influenced the teaching profession and its evolution in African countries. Firstly, I use an historical approach to review conceptual issues on teachers, teaching and learning; secondly, I examine salient features of the idea and practices of teachers and teaching in…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Social Status, Reputation, Global Approach
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Peers, Chris – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
This article discusses two well-known texts that respectively describe learning and teaching, drawn from the work of Freud and Plato. These texts are considered in psychoanalytic terms using a methodology drawn from the philosophy of Luce Irigaray. In particular the article addresses Irigaray's approach to the analysis of speech and utterance as a…
Descriptors: Psychiatry, Philosophy, Learning Processes, Teaching Methods
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Giesinger, Johannes – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
While Kant's pedagogical lectures present an account of moral education, his theory of freedom and morality seems to leave no room for the possibility of an education for freedom and morality. In this paper, it is first shown that Kant's moral philosophy and his educational philosophy are developed within different theoretical paradigms: whereas…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Freedom, Educational Philosophy, Moral Values
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Boghossian, Peter – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
This article addresses and rebuts the claim that the purpose of the Socratic method is to humiliate, shame, and perplex participants. It clarifies pedagogical and exegetical confusions surrounding the Socratic method, what the Socratic method is, what its epistemological ambitions are, and how the historical Socrates likely viewed it. First, this…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Questioning Techniques, Teaching Methods, Epistemology
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Waghid, Yusef; Smeyers, Paul – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
In this article we argue that "ubuntu" (human interdependence) is not some form of essentialist notion that unfolds in exactly the same way as some critics of "ubuntu" might want to suggest. Rather, we offer a philosophical position that (re)considers the situation of the self in relation to others. The article starts from the general issues at…
Descriptors: Role of Education, Foreign Countries, Ethics, Moral Values
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