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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 all 14 results
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Stickney, Jeff A. – Ethics and Education, 2014
Drawing on experience teaching secondary philosophy students, I investigate meaningful engagement with Wittgenstein in a Grade 12 epistemology unit. The premise is that without some introduction to landmark philosophers of the early twentieth century, students are left out of many contemporary philosophical conversations: linguistic idealism or…
Descriptors: Adolescents, High School Students, Grade 12, Epistemology
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Adami, Rebecca – Ethics and Education, 2014
There is a globalization trend in teacher education, emphasizing the role of teachers to make judgments based on human rights in their teaching profession. Rather than emphasizing the epistemological dimension of acquiring knowledge "about" human rights through teacher education, an ontological dimension is emphasized in this paper of…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Educational Philosophy, Civil Rights, Justice
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Lewin, David – Ethics and Education, 2014
This article seeks to elaborate the step of epistemological affirmation that exists within every movement of learning. My epistemological method is rooted in philosophical hermeneutics in contrast to empirical or rationalist traditions. I argue that any movement of learning is based upon an entry into a hermeneutical circle: one is thrown into, or…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Hermeneutics, Educational Philosophy, Learner Engagement
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Horsthemke, Kai – Ethics and Education, 2014
Does the imperative that we ought to try to understand one another make any sense? Presumably not--"if" it is "correct" that there are indeed different truths, and that the quest for objectivity is appropriate only in certain cultural contexts. After carefully mapping out the epistemological and ethical terrain, with special…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Ethics, Criticism, Educational Attitudes
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Yun, SunInn – Ethics and Education, 2014
This paper considers the place of freedom in discussions of the aims of education. Bearing in mind remarks of R.S. Peters to the affect that the singling out of aims can "fall into the hands of rationalistically minded curriculum planners", it begins by considering the views of Roland Reichenbach regarding Bildung and his account of this…
Descriptors: Freedom, Educational Objectives, Educational Practices, Phenomenology
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Lees, Helen E. – Ethics and Education, 2012
Discussion in this article considers the unfortunate way R.S. Peters made mention of women when it was pertinent to his argumentation: portraying them, directly or indirectly, as abuse-able (murderable), deficient, aberrant, clueless and inconstant. It is argued that the high profile and esteem within which Peter's texts are held within philosophy…
Descriptors: Females, Educational Philosophy, Gender Bias, Disadvantaged
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Thayer-Bacon, Barbara J. – Ethics and Education, 2012
Thayer-Bacon uses this opportunity to further explore Ranciere's ideas concerning equality as described in "The Ignorant Schoolmaster" and their connection to democracy, as he explains in "Hatred of Democracy". For Ranciere, intelligence and equality are synonymous terms, just as reason and will are synonymous terms. Ranciere recommends the only…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Social Theories, Political Attitudes, Epistemology
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Mus, Stijn – Ethics and Education, 2012
In the wake of the crisis of representation, the qualitative approaches have gained momentum within the social sciences. This crisis has lead to a widespread awareness about the need to incorporate the subject's understanding in the research design. Yet, the validity of qualitative accounts is still regarded as a function of its representative…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Research Design, Fiction, Qualitative Research
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Papastephanou, Marianna – Ethics and Education, 2010
The aim of this article is to examine ways in which localized research runs the risk of becoming a boundary discourse in a negative sense. The exaggerated emphasis on immanent critique, contextualization and incommensurability may lead discourse and disciplines to an isolationist self-understanding that leaves unchallenged or even entrenches…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Educational Research, Inclusion, Barriers
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Ramaekers, Stefan – Ethics and Education, 2010
This article is a discussion of a dominant (and mostly taken-for-granted) discourse of multicultural education (the phrase "intercultural education" is sometimes used). My aim is, simply, to highlight two issues which, I think, are insufficiently dealt with in relation to multicultural education: the observation that differences can be…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Higher Education, Folk Culture, Epistemology
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Bailin, Sharon; Battersby, Mark – Ethics and Education, 2009
After outlining arguments for the general epistemological presumption in favour of taking into consideration alternative perspectives from other cultures, the article details several examples in which such an examination yields epistemic benefits and challenges. First, our example of alternative conceptions of art demonstrates that a western…
Descriptors: Justice, North Americans, Critical Thinking, Cultural Differences
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Blomberg, Doug – Ethics and Education, 2009
In the theory of multiple intelligences, Howard Gardner proposes a scientific justification for a more pluralistic pedagogy, while denying that science can determine educational goals. Wearing an educator's hat, however, he favors a pathway in which students come "to understand the most fundamental questions of existence ... familiarly, the true,…
Descriptors: Individual Characteristics, Multiple Intelligences, Cultural Pluralism, Values
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Papastephanou, Marianna – Ethics and Education, 2006
While the notion of risk remains under-theorised in moral philosophy, risk aversion and moralist self-protection appear as dominant cultural tendencies saturating educational orientation and practice. Philosophy of education has responded to the educational emphasis on risk management by exposing the unavoidable and positive presence of risk in…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Moral Values, Risk Management, Relevance (Education)
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Hinchliffe, Geoffrey – Ethics and Education, 2006
This paper explores the relation between love, learning and knowledge as found in three dialogues of Plato, "Symposium", "Phaedrus" and "Republic". It argues that the account of the ascent from carnal desire to the love of beauty, as set out in the "Symposium", is best seen in terms of a genealogy of love in which the object of love is transformed…
Descriptors: Intimacy, Didacticism, Epistemology, Learning