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Shi, Wanchen – Journal of Education and Learning, 2022
The COVID-19 crisis made spaces for people to immerse themselves in moments of reflection. The suspension of time, sites, and body mobility, the collapse of the past principles; as the macro learning environment has undergone unprecedented changes, how could people read and react to those changes? Learning at the university, almost all the…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Human Body, Online Courses
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McDaniel, Katherine G.; Brown, Taylor; Radford, Caitlin C.; McDermott, Cynthia H.; Houten, Trudy; Katz, Martha E.; Stearns, Dana A.; Hildebrandt, Sabine – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2021
Anatomy education provides students with opportunities to learn structure and function of the human body, to acquire professional competencies such as teamwork, interpersonal skills, self-awareness, and to reflect on and practice medical ethics. The fulfillment of this wide potential can present challenges in courses that are part of an integrated…
Descriptors: Medical Schools, Anatomy, Job Skills, Medical Education
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Lloyd, Margaret – Journal of Learning Design, 2010
There is a "reality" to being online which we know to be false. We are simultaneously "there" but "not there" as we talk, work and play with others in online spaces. We move between physical and virtual spaces in ways that realise the predictions made for computers in the mid-20th Century and enact scenarios from science fiction. We are left…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Social Change, Social Environment, Electronic Learning
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Lillard, Angeline S.; McHugh, Virginia – Journal of Montessori Research, 2019
Part II of this two-part article continues the discussion of what Maria Montessori viewed to be the important components of her educational system. Because she developed the system over her lifetime, we prioritized later accounts when contradictory accounts were found. Whereas Part I focused on the environment, Part II examines the second and…
Descriptors: Montessori Method, Preservice Teacher Education, Developmental Stages, Child Development
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Bynum, Gregory Lewis – Educational Theory, 2012
In this essay Gregory Bynum seeks to show that Immanuel Kant's thought, which was conceived in an eighteenth-century context of new, and newly widespread, pressures for nationally institutionalized human rights-based regimes (the American and French revolutions being the most prominent examples), can help us think in new and appreciative ways…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Cognitive Processes, College Faculty, International Law
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Vandenberg, Donald – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2009
Ever since eighth grade the author was deeply interested in his own education at a self-conscious level, wondering how he could find out educationally what human life was all about and how he should live his life. In this article, the author provides a self-portrait of his intellectual life. He contends that philosophy of education, as educational…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Schools of Education, Foreign Countries, Professional Associations
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Kaldis, Byron – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2009
This paper puts forward the model of "microcosm-macrocosm" isomorphism encapsulated in certain philosophical views on the form of university education. The human being as a "microcosm" should reflect internally the external "macrocosm". Higher Education is a socially instituted attempt to guide human beings into forming themselves as microcosms of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Transformative Learning, Educational History, Models
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Mabille, Martina L. – Transformation in Higher Education, 2019
Background: The need for transforming South African education can ultimately be traced to a form of Western subjectivity which dominated Europe since the classical age (1600-1750). The notions of 'discipline' and 'subjectivity' suggest distinct associations with repressive regimes like apartheid, and the present article will argue that the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Educational History, Racial Segregation
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Neubert, Stefan – Educational Theory, 2009
In this essay Stefan Neubert argues that John Dewey was a philosopher of reconstruction and that the best use we can make of him today is to reconstruct his work in and for our own contexts. Neubert distinguishes three necessary and equally important components of the overall project of reconstructing Deweyan pragmatism: first, to make strong and…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories, Educational Environment, Educational History
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Rousell, David – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2016
Over the last three decades, scientists have uncovered the extent of human impacts on the earth's operating systems with increasing clarity and precision. These findings have prompted scientific claims that we have transitioned out of the Holocene and into the Anthropocene epoch in the earth's geological history (Crutzen & Stoermer, 2000). At…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Geology, Climate, Humanism
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Edwards, Richard – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2011
Drawing upon concepts from actor-network theory (ANT), this article explores how the principle of symmetry can provide alternative readings of the translations of the prescribed into the enacted curriculum, without reducing understanding to explanation. The paper explores the contrasting ways in which the prescribed curriculum is translated into…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Curriculum Implementation, Network Analysis, Educational Principles
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Hayes, Dennis – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2009
Discussions about freedom of speech and academic freedom today are about the limits to those freedoms. However, these discussions take place mostly in the higher education trade press and do not receive any serious attention from academics and educationalists. In this paper several key arguments for limiting academic freedom are identified,…
Descriptors: Freedom of Speech, Academic Freedom, Educational History, Social Environment
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Vodde, Rich; White, S. Dale; Meacham, Mike – Technology, Pedagogy and Education, 2010
Social work, like other professions, finds itself influenced by postmodernism and hypertechnology. Social work educators are striving to adapt in the face of rapidity of knowledge expansion and of technological advancement, which impact the nature of pedagogy. Recent emphases on effectiveness and efficiency of technological innovations are…
Descriptors: Postmodernism, Social Work, Self Concept, Values
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van Manen, Max; Adams, Catherine – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2009
In this paper we explore the phenomenon of writing online. We ask, "Is writing by means of online technologies affected in a manner that differs significantly from the older technologies of pen on paper, typewriter, or even the word processor in an off-line environment?" In writing online, the author is engaged in a spatial complexity of physical,…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Phenomenology, Internet, Writing Processes
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Burwood, Stephen – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2009
Karl Jaspers argued that academics must be prepared to accept, perhaps even to welcome, the fact that most students "will learn next to nothing" from a university education. In this paper I shall argue that, while Jaspers' model is unpersuasive as an ideal and inaccurate as a description, there is an uncomfortable truth lurking behind his…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Role of Education, Educational Environment, Politics of Education
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