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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 1,306 to 1,320 of 2,600 results
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Yaman, Havva – Educational Sciences: Theory and Practice, 2010
The purpose of this study is to determine the effect of teaching by utilizing cartoons on student success in the Turkish language courses in primary school secondary level students. Working group of the study consists of 54 students studying in primary state school in Sakarya province Hendek district. In the study, the "Rule and Concept Test on…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Content Analysis, Test Construction, Teaching Methods
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Balint, Peter A. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
The building and maintaining of a tolerant society requires both a general policy of toleration on the behalf of the state, as well as a minimal number of acts of intolerance by individual citizens towards their fellow citizens. It is this second area of citizen-citizen relations that is of most interest for education policy. There are those who…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Public Policy, Educational Policy, Educational Philosophy
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Neufeld, Blain; Davis, Gordon – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
We formulate a distinctly "political liberal" conception of mutual respect, which we call "civic respect", appropriate for governing the public political relations of citizens in pluralist democratic societies. A political liberal account of education should aim at ensuring that students, as future citizens, learn to interact with other citizens…
Descriptors: Civics, Religious Factors, Citizenship Education, Political Attitudes
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Shorten, Andrew – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
According to the "fragmentation objection" to multiculturalism, practices of cultural recognition undermine political stability, and this counts as a reason to be sceptical about the public recognition of minority cultures, as well as about multiculturalism construed more broadly as a public policy. Civic education programmes, designed to promote…
Descriptors: Social Integration, Cultural Pluralism, Public Policy, Minority Groups
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Swaine, Lucas – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
In this article, I distinguish personal autonomy from heteronomy, and consider whether autonomy provides a suitable basis for liberalism. I argue that liberal government should not promote autonomy in all its citizens, on the grounds that not all members of liberal democracies require autonomy for a good life. I then outline an alternative option…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Political Attitudes, Citizenship Education, Personal Autonomy
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Bird, Colin – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
Contemporary theories of civic education frequently appeal to an ideal of mutual respect in the context of ethical, ethical and religious disagreement. This paper critically examines two recently popular criticisms of this ideal. The first, coming from a postmodern direction, charges that the ideal is hypocritical in its effort to be maximally…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Ethics, Ethical Instruction, Postmodernism
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Laegaard, Sune – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
Recognition and toleration are ways of relating to the diversity characteristic of multicultural societies. The article concerns the possible meanings of toleration and recognition, and the conflict that is often claimed to exist between these two approaches to diversity. Different forms or interpretations of recognition and toleration are…
Descriptors: Definitions, Civil Rights, Public Policy, Educational Policy
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Jones, Peter Nigel – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
Generally we think it good to tolerate and to accord recognition. Yet both are complex phenomena and our teaching must acknowledge and cope with that complexity. We tolerate only what we object to, so our message to students cannot be simply, "promote the good and prevent the bad". Much advocacy of toleration is not what it pretends to be. Nor is…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Educational Policy, Educational Philosophy, Educational Principles
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Macleod, Colin – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
The paper explores challenges for the interpretation of the ideal toleration that arise in educational contexts involving children. It offers an account of how a respect-based conception of toleration can help to resolve controversies about the accommodation and response to diversity that arise in schools.
Descriptors: Children, Educational Policy, Educational Philosophy, Educational Principles
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Biesta, Gert – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
One way to characterise pragmatism is to see it as a philosophy that placed communication at the heart of philosophical, educational and political thinking. Whereas the shift from consciousness to communication can be seen as a major innovation in modern philosophy, it is not without problems. This article highlights some of these problems and…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Communication (Thought Transfer), Differences, Ethics
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Ambrosio, John – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
The author examines the relation between Michel Foucault's corpus and Freudian psychoanalysis. He argues that Foucault had a complex and changing relationship to psychoanalysis for two primary reasons: his own psychopathology, personal experience, and expressed desire, and due to an ineluctable contradiction at the heart of psychoanalysis itself.…
Descriptors: Psychiatry, Psychopathology, Self Concept, Cultural Influences
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Stables, Andrew – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
In "The Song of the Earth," Jonathan Bate promotes "ecopoesis", contrasting it with "ecopolitical" poetry (and by implication, other forms of writing and expression). Like others recently, including Simon James and Michael Bonnett, he appropriates the notion of "dwelling" from Heidegger to add force to this distinction. Bate's argument is…
Descriptors: Sustainable Development, Poetry, Role of Education, Educational Principles
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Ozolins, Janis Talivaldis – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
If we accept Popper's idea that the human habitat is described in terms of three worlds, and that there are overlaps between these three worlds, our moral actions and values will also be subject to the same kinds of consideration as a repertoire of behaviours exhibited in a physical environment. We will develop moral habits in a moral habitat and…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Physical Environment, Moral Development, Educational Philosophy
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Yilmaz, Kaya – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
There is a confusion over and inchoate understanding of how the past is made understandable through postmodernist historical orientation. The purpose of the article is to outline the characteristic features of the postmodernist movement in social sciences, to explain its confrontation with history, to document its critique of the conventional…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disciplines, Social Sciences, Postmodernism, History Instruction
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Tocci, Charles – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2010
At some point the mechanics of schooling begin running of their own accord. Such has become the case with grades (A's, B's, C's, etc.). This article reconsiders the history of grades through the concepts of immanence and abstract machines from the oeuvre of Deleuze and Guattari. In the first section, the history of grades as presently written…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Grading, Student Evaluation, Educational Philosophy
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