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Showing 1 to 15 of 39 results Save | Export
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Rumayor, Miguel; Rodríguez-Pazos, Gabriel; Fernández-Castiella, José – Religious Education, 2023
This paper takes up concepts from John Henry Newman's work to support contemporary educational personalism. Newman's ideas are developed in light of his sharp critique of the pragmatic educational model. This essay focuses on the transcendence assigned to the theological and philosophical foundations of Newman's pedagogical ideas, as well as on…
Descriptors: Christianity, Religious Education, Teaching Methods, Criticism
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Cruz, Laura – To Improve the Academy, 2018
This essay examines the idea of educational development, inspired both in content and approach by John Henry Newman's influential 19th century work on the idea of a university.
Descriptors: Educational Development, Educational History, Universities
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Martín-Sánchez, Miguel; Cáceres-Muñoz, Jorge – International Studies in Catholic Education, 2016
John Henry Newman was one of the most outstanding figures of the social and religious panorama in the nineteenth century in Great Britain. His educational approaches framed in the movement of Catholic education and his influence on the Oxford Movement, his intellectualism and reflections on faith, reason and education, and participation and…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Clergy, Change Agents, Intellectual History
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Manning, Patrick R. – Religious Education, 2018
Cultivating a disposition of critical thinking among students and faculty can provide a means of addressing troubling cultural trends like breakdowns in public discourse, academic siloing, and disengagement from religion. This article expands the concept of critical thinking by engaging the work of John Henry Newman and Bernard Lonergan. The…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Integrated Curriculum, Faculty Development, College Curriculum
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Muldoon, Timothy P. – Journal of Catholic Higher Education, 2017
Catholic universities in the United States have developed complexity reflective of the larger development of modern universities and "multiversities." This complexity, together with the decline in the numbers of sponsoring religious orders and diocesan priests, presents new challenges for the sustaining of a theologically rooted,…
Descriptors: Church Related Colleges, Catholics, Educational Objectives, Theological Education
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McFarlane, Donovan A. – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2014
This essay examines the current state of the University in terms of lost meaning and value, especially from the perspective of scholarship. The author specifically points to three works of literature and writers on the subject, and how these works have significantly contributed to our understanding of what is taking place within the modern…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Universities, Educational Philosophy, College Administration
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Chen, Wang – Higher Education Forum, 2017
This article retraces the infamous controversies between the "Edinburgh Review" and Oxford in the early 19th century. It seeks to broaden the understanding of the origins and background of John Henry Newman's idea of a university by analyzing the connections and differences on both sides of the controversies, drawing from writers such as…
Descriptors: Criticism, Educational History, Universities, Foreign Countries
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Harris, Suzy – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2015
The article explores some of the congruencies of thought and resonances in phrasing in the work of Janet Erskine Stuart, John Henry Newman and Ludwig Wittgenstein. These three writers have in common their resistance to philosophers of religion who are preoccupied with proposing arguments for the existence of God and grounds for believing in God.…
Descriptors: Correlation, Religious Factors, Beliefs, Relevance (Education)
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Tierney, William G. – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 2016
Higher education is going through as significant a change as at any time in the last century. Recommendations about how to resolve these issues have been offered by numerous government commissions, think tanks and foundations. A seldom used approach is to look back to consider what others have said and suggested in previous eras. The author…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Change, Educational History, Educational Philosophy
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Higton, Mike – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2013
Recent debate about the public benefit of university scholarship, especially in the humanities, has sometimes been caught in a sterile tension between the promotion of engagement and the preservation of detachment, or between learning for public benefit and learning for learning's sake. The article traces this tension back to the work of John…
Descriptors: Humanities, Scholarship, Universities, Higher Education
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Harris, Suzy – Ethics and Education, 2015
John Henry Newman is probably known best for "The Idea of a University." In his most philosophical work, "An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent," however, he undertakes a detailed investigation of different ways of knowing and understanding in a manner that is of clear pertinence for philosophical enquiry into education. He…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Universities, Educational Philosophy, Educational History
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Martinez, Xavier Martinez – Journal of Catholic Higher Education, 2020
Online education, when done well, combines the use of technology to provide feedback to a degree and intensity that replicates the tutorial system that Newman preferred. Well-moderated discussion boards, adaptive learning technology, rapid grading with resubmission, and collaborative documents can mimic a measure of the Oxbridge…
Descriptors: Catholics, Religious Education, Religious Colleges, Online Courses
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Miller, Edward Jeremy – Journal of Catholic Higher Education, 2012
This article builds on an essay the author published twenty years ago in "Current Issues in Catholic Higher Education" that examined the viability of John Henry Newman's "Idea of a University" against Catholic campus life and the just-released "Ex corde Ecclesiae". The current essay briefly notes those earlier key…
Descriptors: Church Related Colleges, Catholic Schools, Catholics, Time Perspective
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Anthony, Cara – Journal of Catholic Higher Education, 2012
Catholic universities need to develop strong Catholic identities. Yet, equally pressing is the need to welcome and value non-Catholic scholars, including their contributions to the university's Catholic mission and their critical assessments of the Catholic tradition. Blessed John Henry Newman embodies both Catholic faithfulness and exemplary…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Church Related Colleges, Catholic Schools, Catholics
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Reynolds, Douglas B. – Contemporary Issues in Education Research, 2016
During and after the Financial Crisis of 2008, many institutions of higher learning have had revenue and budgetary reductions, forcing them to make severe university budget cuts and university reductions in force. Often the university cuts are preceded by a process of evaluation of academic programs where institutions determine what they stand for…
Descriptors: Budgets, Retrenchment, Universities, Costs
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