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Showing 16 to 30 of 85 results Save | Export
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Manidis, Marie; Scheeres, Hermine – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
This article presents a meta-disciplinary and institutional framework of practices used by nurses and doctors to manage the indeterminacy of knowing in emergency departments (EDs) in Australia. We draw on Schatzkian perspectives of how practices prevail and reflect particular site ontologies. We posit that nurses and doctors draw on a repertoire…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nurses, Physicians, Methods
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Harlan-Haughey, Sarah – Honors in Practice, 2014
Chronologically presented courses that span centuries often catalyze unwitting buy-in to unexamined narratives of progress. While useful for helping students make connections between the human past, present, and future, Great Books honors curricula like the one used at the University of Maine have a few inherent problems that require careful…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Classics (Literature), Sequential Approach, Curriculum Development
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Halls, Jonathan Grant; Ainsworth, Shaaron Elizabeth; Oliver, Mary Collette – International Journal of Science Education, 2018
There is a significant body of research on children's preconceptions concerning scientific concepts and the impact this has upon their science education. One active issue concerns the extent to which young children's explanations for the existence of natural kinds rely on a teleological rationale: for example, rain is for watering the grass, or…
Descriptors: Young Children, Scientific Concepts, Concept Teaching, Early Childhood Education
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Kim, Joon K.; Basile, Vincent; Jaime-Diaz, Jesus; Black, Ray – Multicultural Education Review, 2018
This essay examines how the projects seeking to promote "damunhwa," literally translated as multi-culture, in South Korea inadvertently reinforce cultural stereotypes and reproduce cultural hierarchies. Unlike many studies that focus on discrimination against racial or ethnic minority populations, this paper argues that the seemingly…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Ethnic Groups, Minority Groups, Foreign Countries
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Taylor, Carol A.; Gannon, Susanne – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2018
This article offers a diffractive methodological intervention into workplace studies of academic life. In its engagement of a playful, performative research and writing practice, the article speaks back to technocratic organisational and sociological workplace 'time and motion' studies which centre on the human and rational, and presume a linear…
Descriptors: Teaching Experience, Educational Research, Humanism, Feminism
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Kampourakis, Kostas; Minelli, Alessandro – American Biology Teacher, 2014
We highlight some important conceptual issues that biologists should take into account when teaching evolutionary biology or communicating it to the public. We first present conclusions from conceptual development research on how particular human intuitions, namely design teleology and psychological essentialism, influence the understanding of…
Descriptors: Evolution, Biology, Science Instruction, Intuition
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Dolbear, Sam; Proctor, Hannah – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2016
The French utopian socialist Charles Fourier is a key figure in Walter Benjamin's "Arcades Project". For Benjamin, one of the most significant aspects of Fourier's utopian vision was its conceptualisation of work as a form of play. According to Fourier it would be possible to build a world around people's inherent desires. In such a…
Descriptors: Children, Scientific Principles, Science Instruction, Astronomy
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Badua, Frank – Journal of Education for Business, 2015
The author discusses the role of the liberal arts in a business curriculum for an increasingly science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM)-centered world. The author introduces the rhetoric, orthography, ontology, and teleology (ROOT) disciplines, and links them to the traditional liberal arts foundation of higher education. The…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Business Administration Education, Liberal Arts, Role of Education
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Stern, Florian; Kampourakis, Kostas; Huneault, Catherine; Silveira, Patricia; Müller, Andreas – Education Sciences, 2018
Research in developmental psychology has shown that deeply-rooted, intuitive ways of thinking, such as design teleology and psychological essentialism, impact children's scientific explanations about natural phenomena. Similarly, biology education researchers have found that students often hold inaccurate conceptions about natural phenomena, which…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Biology, Misconceptions, Scientific Concepts
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Johansson, Viktor – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2018
This article explores how different philosophical models and pictures of learning can become dogmatic and disguise other conceptions of learning. With reference to a passage from St. Paul, I give a sense of the dogmatic teleology that underpins philosophical assumptions about learning. The Pauline assumption is exemplified through a variety of…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Buddhism, Ethical Instruction, Moral Development
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Spring, Charlotte; Adams, Mags; Hardman, Michael – Policy Futures in Education, 2019
Drawing on ethnographic research with organisations redistributing wasted food, this paper explores potentials for political and ethical learning by comparing different approaches to food handling and teaching. Food acts as instigator and tool for learning about ecological impacts, wellbeing, provenance, health and pleasure. Re-learning wasted…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Food, Ethics, Ecology
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Gouvea, Julia S.; Simon, Matt R. – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2018
In biology education research, it has been common to model cognition in terms of relatively stable knowledge structures (e.g., mental models, alternative frameworks, deeply held misconceptions). For example, John D. Coley and Kimberley D. Tanner recently proposed that many student difficulties in biology stem from underlying cognitive frameworks…
Descriptors: Biology, Science Education, Educational Research, Misconceptions
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Kandiah, Shrikarunaakaran – Journal on English Language Teaching, 2017
The objective of this paper is to pinpoint and elucidate major conceptual contributions of Aristotle to art and literature at large. Aristotle's propositions offer enduring legacies both to literary philosophy and moral philosophy. Aristotle is basically a teleological thinker which sets him apart from his predecessors such as Plato. A historical…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Aesthetics, Ethics, Teaching Methods
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Cooper, Robert A. – Journal of Biological Education, 2017
Student reasoning about cases of natural selection is often plagued by errors that stem from miscategorising selection as a direct, causal process, misunderstanding the role of randomness, and from the intuitive ideas of intentionality, teleology and essentialism. The common thread throughout many of these reasoning errors is a failure to apply…
Descriptors: Science Process Skills, Misconceptions, Ecology, Evolution
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Trommler, Friederike; Gresch, Helge; Hammann, Marcus – International Journal of Science Education, 2018
The teleological bias, a major learning obstacle, involves explaining biological phenomena in terms of purposes and goals. To probe the teleological bias, researchers have used acceptance judgement tasks and preference judgement tasks. In the present study, such tasks were used with German high school students (N = 353) for 10 phenomena from human…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Etiology, Preferences, High School Students
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