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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Coppersmith, Sarah A.; Hurt, Douglas A. – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2022
The purpose of the research was to examine perceived moral agency beliefs, attitudes, and prosocial actions of 226 undergraduate World Regional Geography students and eight instructors at two Midwestern U.S. universities. The context of the research is positioned within the study of world regional geography courses in order to better understand…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, World Problems, Undergraduate Students, College Faculty
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Zembylas, Michalinos – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2019
This paper explores how pedagogically productive the idea of invoking feelings of collective guilt in classrooms might be. It attempts to explore not only the persistence of 'collective guilt' in students' responses, but also new possibilities that are opened when 'collective guilt' is reframed as 'shared responsibility'. The analysis addresses…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Student Responsibility, Teacher Responsibility, Psychological Patterns
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Hess, Juliet – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2023
In this paper, I consider pedagogical moments when the project of pedagogy is to "not understand," as understanding would entail complicity with dehumanization. I explore the slipperiness of understanding and parse when understanding is helpful and when it reinscribes structures of dehumanization. I examine when it might be important in…
Descriptors: Music Education, Teaching Methods, Educational Practices, Humanization
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Maudlin, Julie Garlen – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2014
In this article, I suggest that an ideology of hope, even "educated" (Giroux, 2003) and "radical" (Farley, 2009) conceptualizations, might be problematic for curriculum theory because it operates to reinscribe White privilege and perpetuate the assumption that Whites can transcend the critique of Whiteness (Applebaum, 2010).…
Descriptors: Ideology, Educational Theories, Curriculum, Psychological Patterns
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Buon, Marine; Dupoux, Emmanuel; Jacob, Pierre; Chaste, Pauline; Leboyer, Marion; Zalla, Tiziana – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2013
In the present study, we investigated the ability to assign moral responsibility and punishment in adults with high functioning autism or Asperger Syndrome (HFA/AS), using non-verbal cartoons depicting an aggression, an accidental harm or a mere coincidence. Participants were asked to evaluate the agent's causal and intentional roles, his…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Autism, Asperger Syndrome, Punishment
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Deppermann, Arnulf – Applied Linguistics, 2020
This article deals with narratives of traumatic experiences of parental violence in childhood, told by adult narrators in the context of clinical adult attachment interviews. The study rests on a corpus of interviews with 20 patients suffering from fibromyalgia, who were interviewed in the context of psychodynamic psychotherapy. Nine of the…
Descriptors: Trauma, Family Violence, Parent Child Relationship, Adults
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Holtman, Tasha – History Teacher, 2014
The success of Britain's "Kindertransport," the British child rescue scheme, required legal negotiations, multifaceted organizational efforts, hands-on, spontaneous work of individuals and fierce determination of desperate parents. While moral responsibility motivated some of these actors, a sense of religious, cultural or familial duty…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Moral Values, Social Responsibility, European History
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Hong Chen, Rosa – Journal of Moral Education, 2011
To conceptualise moral education as "living and learning to bear suffering" offers a humanistic vision for choices people make in the face of drastic threats to their existence. This essay proposes that bearing and transcending suffering--part of the human narrative--helps human beings to realise their ethical potential. Grounded in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ethical Instruction, Humanism, Quality of Life
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Martusewicz, Rebecca – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2014
In this paper I argue that education must be defined by our willingness to experience compassion in the face of others' suffering and thus by an ethical imperative, and seek to expose psycho-social processes of shame as dark matters that inferiorize and subjugate those expressing such compassion for the more-than-human world. Beginning with…
Descriptors: Fiction, Racial Bias, Social Influences, Social Responsibility
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Raj Urs, S. N. Vikram; Harsha, T. S.; Raju, Vijay B. P. – Turkish Online Journal of Distance Education, 2013
Education is intimately connected with ethics, because holistically speaking education is more than simply passing examinations and acquiring degrees. Education is character building and life long learning. Savants and philosophers throughout the history of humankind have borne testimony to this aspect of education. Today, there is a great deal of…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Ethics, Open Education, Expectation
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Gur-Ze'ev, Ilan – Policy Futures in Education, 2010
Counter-education that addresses seriously the challenge of loss, exile, and the deceiving "home-returning" projects accepts that no positive Utopia awaits us as "truth", "genuine life", "worthy struggle", "pleasure" or worthy self-annihilation. Loss is not to be recovered or compensated; not for the individual nor for any kind of "we". And yet,…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Patriotism, Creativity, Philosophy
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Giroux, Henry A. – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2005
This article is a commencement speech delivered by the author on May 26 at Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada. In his speech, the author focused on affirming public discourse, civic morality, and what it might mean to conduct your lives as engaged citizens attentive to the suffering of others and the fragility of democracy itself. He said…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Youth, Justice, Democracy
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Young, Andrew – Black Scholar, 1979
The challenge is still before Black people to give the kind of moral leadership that would help this nation to see what it is that the poor are struggling with. Black people who become successful must not forget the sufferings of those who made it possible for them to get where they are today. (Author/WI)
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Black Leadership, Blacks, Change Strategies
Kazemek, Francis E. – 1985
Literature can be used in an elementary school curriculum to provide sound moral models for children. Through the exploration of moral problems and the adoption of the perspectives of others, children may begin to develop and refine their own morality. A male and a female morality may be identified in literature. The male morality--based on the…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Ethics, Females
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Science, 1973
Discusses some of the bioethical and legal questions related to in vitro fertilization of human eggs as a means of alleviating the suffering of infertile couples. (JR)
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Embryology, Ethics, Legal Responsibility
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