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Zhao, Weili – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2020
"Study" is recently re-invoked as an alternative educational formation to disrupt the learning trap and trope. This paper calibrates "study" and "learning" as two hermeneutic principles and correlates them with "seeing," "hearing," and "observing" as three onto-epistemic modes that…
Descriptors: Hermeneutics, Correlation, Educational Philosophy, Christianity
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Santoro, Doris A. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2015
In this methodological reflection, I describe the multidisciplinary hermeneutic process of philosophizing about teacher dissatisfaction. I discuss how philosophy serves as a starting point for interpretive work based on interviews with former teachers and readings of qualitative and quantitative research on teacher attrition and dissatisfaction.…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Teachers, Faculty Mobility, Philosophy
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Jessop, Sharon – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2017
In recent years, culture has become significantly politicized, or conspicuously de-politicized, in different parts of the UK, making its appearance in education policy of pivotal interest and ripe for critical attention. From the vantage point of Theodor Adorno's work on the culture industry and his writings on the work of the teacher, I argue…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Culturally Relevant Education, Cultural Pluralism, Politics of Education
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Gordon, Mordechai – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2015
This essay seeks to add to a growing body of literature in philosophy of education that focuses on issues of historical consciousness and remembrance and their connections to moral education. In particular, I wish to explore the following questions: What does it mean to maintain a tension between remembering and forgetting tragic historical…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Educational Philosophy, Memory, Conflict
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Burman, Erica – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2013
This paper critically evaluates the ways we look to children to educate us and explores how we might depart from that dynamic, exploring how a range of conceptual frameworks from historical and cultural studies and psychoanalysis might contribute to understanding the problematic of childhood, its problems and its limitations. While "child as…
Descriptors: Children, Child Development, Child Psychology, Child Behavior
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Murris, Karin – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2013
Classical conceptual distinctions in philosophy of education assume an individualistic subjectivity and hide the learning that can take place in the space between child (as educator) and adult (as learner). Grounded in two examples from experience I develop the argument that adults often put metaphorical sticks in their ears in their educational…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Epistemology, Child Advocacy, Child Role
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Saevi, Tone – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2011
What is the core of pedagogical practice? Which qualities are primary to the student-teacher relationship? What is a suitable language for pedagogical practice? What might be the significance of an everyday presentational pedagogical act like for example the glance of a teacher? The pedagogical relation as lived relationality experientially…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Teacher Student Relationship, Teaching Methods, Instruction
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Uggla, Bengt Kristensson – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2008
The aim of this essay is to elaborate on the inner connection between three such diverse entities as lifelong learning, globalization and hermeneutics. After placing lifelong learning in a societal context framed by globalization, my intention is to reflect on the prerequisites for introducing a hermeneutical contribution to the understanding of…
Descriptors: Anthropology, Hermeneutics, Lifelong Learning, Global Approach
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van Goor, Roel; Heyting, Frieda – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2006
Many philosophers of education emphasise the impossibility to really "solve" philosophical--and with that, educational--problems these days. Philosophers have been trying to give philosophy a new, constructive turn in the face of this insolvability. This paper focuses on irony-based approaches that try to exploit the very uncertainty of…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Figurative Language, Problem Solving, Hermeneutics
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Jacobson, Ronald B. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2007
To date, research on bullying has largely employed empirical methodologies, including quantitative and qualitative approaches. Through this research we have come to understand bullying as both a dyadic and peer group phenomenon, primarily situated in the heads (thinking) of those involved, or in a lack of skill or expertise, or in the delinquency…
Descriptors: Bullying, Peer Groups, Experience, Perspective Taking
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Biesta, Gert J. J.; Stams, Geert Jan J. M. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2001
Provides some philosophical groundwork for contemporary debates about the idea of critical thinking. Discusses three styles of critique: critical dogmatism, transcendental critique (Karl-Otto Apel), and deconstruction (Jacques Derrida). Argues that while transcendental critique is able to solve some of the problems of the dogmatic approach to…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Criticism, Dogmatism, Educational Philosophy
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Leonardo, Zeus – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2003
Introduces the findings of Ricoeur's hermeneutics and interprets the usefulness of his philosophy in the study of domination. The role of interpretation as a constitutive part of ideology critique is understudied and it is here that Ricoeur's ideas are instructive. Uses Ricoeur's insights in order to show their potential to disrupt asymmetrical…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Critical Theory, Criticism, Hermeneutics
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Marshall, James D. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2001
Argues for a Foucauldean position on the self to extend critical theory. Discusses several philosophical accounts of the self, including the work of such philosophers as Descartes, Hume, Locke, Rousseau, Schopenhauer, Wittgenstein, and Nietzsche. Concludes that Foucault's philosophy provides a powerful critical conception of the self for critical…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Critical Theory, Critical Thinking, Discourse Analysis
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Simon, Roger I. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2003
Argues for the importance of Emmanuel Levinas's work for re-opening educational questions. Addresses the problem of remembrance as a question of and for history, as a force of inhabitation, as an inheritance we are obligated to live within, that intertwines with our sense of limits and possibilities, hopes and fears, identities and distinctions.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Community Colleges, Consciousness Raising, Educational Principles
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Hpgan, Padraig – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2003
Discusses the mutually opposed stances towards learning represented by early formulations of deconstruction and of hermeneutics. Identifies shifts in later formulations of both which provides a more inclusive context for understanding learning as a human undertaking, including the identification of tensions that are more promising than the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Communication (Thought Transfer), Community Colleges, Critical Theory
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