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Showing 1 to 15 of 76 results Save | Export
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Jacobsen, Douglas; Jacobsen, Rhonda Hustedt – Christian Higher Education, 2014
The educational theories and policies promoted by Ernest L. Boyer (1928-1995), who served as chancellor of the SUNY system, U.S. Commissioner (Secretary) of Education, and president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, were significantly influenced by his affiliations with the Brethren in Christ Church and the Society of…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Educational Policy, Christianity, Biographies
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White, Thomas A. J.; Mua, Makereta – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2022
For the last 15 years and across Fiji's three universities, over 40,000 students have completed mandatory courses in Ethics and Governance. Emerging from growing perceptions of graduate misconduct, Fiji's 2006 'clean-up' military coup and corporate scandals from Enron to the Fiji National Bank, these courses explore personal, political and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Required Courses, Ethical Instruction, Governance
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Lutz, Lori A.; Nichols, Susannah – Roeper Review, 2016
This article traces the evolution of a moral philosophy curriculum originally taught by George A. Roeper in the earliest years of The Roeper School. The first author, a student at The Roeper School in the 1960s and 1970s, describes the impact of the class George Roeper called "Human Relations" on her life. Returning to the School as a…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Ethical Instruction, Educational Philosophy, Educational History
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Gledhill, Kris – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2019
One question arising in the context of universities as corporate entities is the reason why being an 'entity' is important. One relevant consideration is whether it is necessary or sensible that a 'community of scholars' has the status of a 'corporation of scholars' because that ensures that the community abides by various obligations, including…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Universities, Corporations, Moral Values
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Quay, John – Policy Futures in Education, 2021
Education faces a dilemma: policy and practice are primarily humanist in orientation, and yet the environmental challenges education hopes to confront require moving beyond humanist perspectives -- to posthumanist awareness. Recent policy advances in Victoria, Australia, highlight the empowerment of students. Yet widening the scope of education…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational Policy, Educational Practices, Student Empowerment
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Nwanaju, Isidore U. – Journal of Education and Practice, 2016
The major aim and leitmotif of this paper is to highlight the Nigerian society and its diverse, multi-cultural and pluralist composition--a society which has experienced in the last fifty years, and is still experiencing fantastic and tremendous signs of growth in democracy, but which is also almost unsure of the right path and the correct…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Pluralism, Religion, Religious Education
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Laverty, Megan Jane – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2014
In this essay, I demonstrate the value of the Bildungsroman for philosophy of education on the grounds that these narratives raise and explore educational questions. I focus on a short story in the Bildungsroman tradition, Thomas Hardy's "A Mere Interlude". This story describes the maturation of its heroine by narrating a series of…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Values Education, Educational Philosophy, Literature
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Munzel, G. Felicitas – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2019
To perfect human beings with an innate propensity for radical evil is a formidable task. Kant explicitly says that the propensity for evil is not eradicable; it is rooted in human nature, specifically in the human power of choice-making. The task is to reorient the natural order of choice-making (which derives its maxim from an object of the…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Antisocial Behavior, Aesthetics, Self Esteem
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Pavlyshyn, Liudmyla; Voronkova, Olga; Yakutina, Marina; Tesleva, Elena – Journal of Social Studies Education Research, 2019
The idea of regarding consistency in the nature and society originated in ancient philosophy in the form of a general concept of livability and integrity of being. The problem of consistency of social life was the focus of such thinkers of XIX-XX centuries, as Auguste Comte, Herbert Spencer, Karl Marx, Emile Durkheim, Max Weber, Pitirim Sorokin,…
Descriptors: Ethics, Moral Values, Philosophy, Social Life
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Wood, Allen – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2019
Kant held that the moral vocation of the human species was to strive toward moral perfection. But in Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason, he at least entertained as part of the human condition a rationalist version of the Christian doctrine of original sin: that human beings have a universal, innate and inextirpable propensity to evil.…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Christianity, Values Education, Religion
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Dineen, Katy – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2020
This journal recently published a special issue on Kant, evil, moral perfection and education. The essays included in the special issue discussed the vulnerably and imperfection of human beings and the role of education as facilitating such beings in their pursuit of moral perfection. The contribution of this article is to put forward a Kantian…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Social Change, Role Models, Moral Values
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Cheng, Chung-ying – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2016
In this article, I present a model of four dimensions for the idea of learning in the classical Confucian perspective. This model is intended to capture the most essential four aspects of learning which explain why self-cultivation of a human person toward an end of self-fulfillment and social transformation of humanity is possible. I shall also…
Descriptors: Confucianism, Educational Philosophy, Models, Individual Development
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Gonzalez, Ana Marta – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2011
The purpose of this paper is to view Kant's approach to education in the broader context of Kant's philosophy of culture and history as a process whose direction should be reflectively assumed by human freedom, in the light of man's moral vocation. In this context, some characteristic tensions of his enlightened approach to education appear. Thus,…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Freedom, Educational Philosophy, Role of Education
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de Waal, Frans; Sherblom, Stephen A. – Journal of Moral Education, 2018
This is an interview with Frans de Waal who gave the Kohlberg Memorial Lecture at the AME Conference in St. Louis in November 2017. Frans de Waal's research with non-human primates documents that primates share our tendencies towards fairness, reciprocity, loyalty, self-sacrifice, caring for others, strategies for conflict avoidance and for…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Moral Development, Primatology, Attachment Behavior
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Giesinger, Johannes – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2012
While Kant's pedagogical lectures present an account of moral education, his theory of freedom and morality seems to leave no room for the possibility of an education for freedom and morality. In this paper, it is first shown that Kant's moral philosophy and his educational philosophy are developed within different theoretical paradigms: whereas…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Freedom, Educational Philosophy, Moral Values
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