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A. Jonathan Eakle – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
This piece is about reading, and what reading can do. It is written from a tangled complex of arts, philosophies, and literatures as it moves across land, with sea, and into air, through the content and expressions of an art museum exhibition about migrations of human and non-human bodies. The complex is serialized, broken apart, and pierced with…
Descriptors: Reading, Art Expression, Exhibits, Creative Thinking
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Kruger, Frans – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2021
The concept of the Anthropocene signals both a growing awareness of the negative impact that humans have had on the abiotic and biotic systems of the earth, as well as reflexive opportunity to interrogate how humans might live differently. It is in relation to the reflexive opportunity that the concept of the Anthropocene offers, that I consider…
Descriptors: Justice, Education, Philosophy
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Andersson, Ingrid – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
The aim of this paper is to sketch a conception of a posthuman subject in which we can recognize a cognitive dimension. Through Hayles's widened notion of cognition, I argue that we can retain the interpreting subject within posthumanism and thereby view it as entrenched in the surrounding world. Nonconscious- and conscious cognition, which are…
Descriptors: Schemata (Cognition), Research Methodology, Philosophy, Epistemology
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Tan, Charlene – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2023
This paper elucidates a Daoist perspective of creativity by focusing on novelty and usefulness. Drawing on the thought of Zhuangzi, it is noted that he advocates original and unorthodox views by challenging social norms and traditional practices. He also questions the prevailing notions and assumptions concerning the usefulness and uselessness of…
Descriptors: Creativity, Religion, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Philosophy
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Kinchin, Ian M.; Thumser, Alfred E. – Journal of Biological Education, 2023
This paper uses an autoethnographic case study to analyse the difficulties inherent in the professional journey from bioscience researcher to research-informed, reflective bioscience teacher. This is viewed through a philosophy of becoming. The major demand placed upon the academic to achieve this transition is seen as the conscious adoption of a…
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Researchers, Science Teachers, Career Development
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Rutten, Roel – Sociological Methods & Research, 2023
Uncertainty undermines causal claims; however, the nature of causal claims decides what counts as relevant uncertainty. Empirical robustness is imperative in regularity theories of causality. Regularity theory features strongly in QCA, making its case sensitivity a weakness. Following qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) founder Charles Ragin's…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Comparative Analysis, Causal Models, Ethics
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Singh, Kanwarjeet; Southcott, Jane; Lyons, Damien – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2023
Ways of knowing in social sciences and educational research are sculpted by normative knowing of ways that are rooted in prescriptive histories of positivist and qualitative traditions. In this paper, by subscribing to what St. Pierre and Lather initiated as the "postqualitative movement", we turn from tradition to re-search research…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Social Sciences, Qualitative Research, Resistance (Psychology)
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Charlotte Haines Lyon – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2024
As we move towards an ever-increasing authoritarian, neoliberal and populist education, it is noticeable how elements of religious thought are embedded into our language and practices. This article uses the lens of political theology, drawing on Carl Schmitt's work which explores how the secular is often based on theological concepts such as…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Language, Foreign Countries, Neoliberalism
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Masamichi Ueno; Kayo Fujii; Yasunori Kashiwagi – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
This paper studies the theory and practice of Minna in Manabi, as the Japanese concept of learning from the perspective of moral education. The Japanese word Minna, which means "all" or "everyone," plays an important role in Manabi. The word "Minna" is often found in textbooks used in moral education classes, and…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Ethical Instruction, Asian Culture, Foreign Countries
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David Bright; Amanda McKay; Katherine Firth – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2024
This paper explores reflexivity in qualitative research, challenging conventional perspectives that revolve around the binary of 'insider' and 'outsider' positioning. While traditionally reflexivity has been understood through the lens of a researcher's socio-historical positionality, we argue for a more dynamic understanding, emphasizing that…
Descriptors: Reflection, Qualitative Research, Writing (Composition), Researchers
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Georgia Pike-Rowney – Journal of Historical Research in Music Education, 2024
This paper focuses on the Pelagian Debate of the late 4th Century CE between Augustine of Hippo and the British cleric Pelagius, and its little known or understood relevance to music education practice and scholarship. A transdisciplinary review of theological, historical, pedagogical, and musicological texts suggests that Augustinian notions of…
Descriptors: Music Education, Historical Interpretation, Philosophy, Religious Factors
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Arthur, James; Kristjánsson, Kristján; Vogler, Candace – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2021
Many Faculties of Education in the UK and elsewhere have 'social justice' written into their mission statements. But are they concerned by questions of social justice in education, or has the term become somewhat vacuous and devoid of substantive meaning? The present article subjects recent discourses about social justice in education to scrutiny…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Education, Philosophy
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Bai, Heesoon; Bowering, Scott; Haber, Jesse; Cohen, Avraham; Chang, David – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2021
The planet Earth has become increasingly susceptible to human-induced (anthropogenic) ecological disasters. The currently raging COVID-19 pandemic adds to the vast scale of destruction and suffering that humanity and the planet are experiencing. In this paper we explicate the meaning of 'human-induced' destruction in the terms of the damaging and…
Descriptors: Ecology, Philosophy, World Views
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Bayraktar, Olcay; Dombayci, Mehmet Ali – International Journal of Progressive Education, 2020
Ontology and epistemology are two different basic disciplines of philosophy. In the course of philosophy history, the priority given to these two different disciplines varied between antique age and middle age and modern era. For sure, this central change was realized in the basis of the connection made by philosophers with metaphysics. The change…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Philosophy, Metacognition, Educational Philosophy
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Gipps, Richard G. T. – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2022
Anxiety is today increasingly talked about as if it were a condition or illness from which one suffers. This obscures the sense in which it may be said to have a meaning, that meaning being that the self is currently ill-equipped to handle its predicaments. It also obscures the sense in which anxiety's apt 'prevention' and 'treatment' most often…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Philosophy, Clinical Psychology, Prevention
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