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Biesta, Gert – Educational Theory, 2010
The idea of emancipation plays a central role in modern educational theories and practices. The emancipatory impetus is particularly prominent in critical traditions and approaches where the aim of education is conceived as that of emancipating students from oppressive structures in the name of social justice and human freedom. What is needed to…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Educational Theories, Democracy, Freedom
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Schinkel, Anders – Educational Theory, 2010
Today, many liberal philosophers of education worry that certain kinds of education may frustrate the development of personal autonomy, with negative consequences for the individuals concerned, the liberal state, or both. Autonomy liberals hold not only that we should promote the development of autonomy in children, but also that this aim should…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Political Attitudes, Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories
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Stillwaggon, James – Educational Theory, 2010
Scholars from multiple disciplines have commented on the divided nature of childhood as a historical construction: a period of life to be valued in itself as well as a means to adulthood. In this essay, James Stillwaggon considers George Orwell's "Such, Such Were the Joys," an autobiographical account of his childhood education, as a site of…
Descriptors: Children, Child Development, Adults, Memory
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Pitt, Alice – Educational Theory, 2010
When hopelessness and helplessness become recurring themes in teacher education scholarship, this signals a conceptual problem with the question of autonomy in the profession. In this essay, Alice Pitt argues that breakdowns of professional life belong to what is most subjective in the profession. Pitt opens her analysis of this conundrum by…
Descriptors: Social Life, Scholarship, Role of Education, Beginning Teachers
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Harwood, Valerie – Educational Theory, 2010
Encouraging debate on inclusion and equity can meet with awkward silences, particularly across disciplinary boundaries. In disability studies, for example, it can be difficult to build dialogue with other disciplines; as a consequence, the different disciplinary groups within the field of education often end up working in their own "equity" silos.…
Descriptors: Opinions, Intellectual Disciplines, Interdisciplinary Approach, Disabilities
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Shady, Sara L. H.; Larson, Marion – Educational Theory, 2010
Given the reality of diversity, particularly religious diversity, in the contemporary world, Marion Larson and Sara Shady explore how educators can help students (and ourselves) consider the following question: How do I balance my own belief commitments with my responsibility to be genuinely open to and challenged by the other's perspective?…
Descriptors: Empathy, Altruism, Social Justice, Student Diversity
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Smeyers, Paul – Educational Theory, 2010
Due to a number of radical changes in society, the role of parents in the upbringing of their children has been redefined. In this essay, Paul Smeyers argues that "risk" thinking, and the technologization that goes with it in the context of child rearing, naturally leads to the rights discourse, but that thinking about the relation between parents…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Risk, Child Welfare, Discourse Analysis
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Vansieleghem, Nancy – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay, Nancy Vansieleghem starts from the observation that parents nowadays are addressed as individuals in need of parental expertise and advice. She maintains that the notion that we are living in a permanently changing society has created a context in which parents feel that they no longer "know" what is good or bad for their children.…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Expertise, Parent Attitudes, Social Change
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Smith, Richard – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay, Richard Smith observes that being a parent, like so much else in our late-modern world, is required to become ever more efficient and effective, and is increasingly monitored by the agencies of the state, often with good reason given the many recorded instances of child abuse and cruelty. However, Smith goes on to argue, this begins…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Government Role, Child Rearing, Novels
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Warnick, Bryan R.; Johnson, Benjamin A.; Rocha, Samuel – Educational Theory, 2010
School shootings are traumatic events that cause a community to question itself, its values, and its educational systems. In this article Bryan Warnick, Benjamin Johnson, and Samuel Rocha explore the meanings of school shootings by examining three recent books on school violence. Topics that grow out of these books include (1) how school shootings…
Descriptors: Violence, Weapons, School Safety, Schools
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Proefriedt, William – Educational Theory, 2010
In this review essay, William Proefriedt argues that it may be possible to reformulate three apparently irreconcilable stances in a manner that would allow more interaction among the elements championed within each stance. The arguments addressed are (1) the argument for the efficacy of educational reform; (2) the argument that social and economic…
Descriptors: Achievement Gap, Interaction, Educational Change, Essays
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Splitter, Laurance J. – Educational Theory, 2010
The concept of dispositions has commanded considerable attention in both philosophy and education. In this essay, Laurance Splitter draws on philosophy to take a fresh look at dispositions in education, specifically teacher education. Bypassing the pitfalls of both subjectivity and crude behaviorism, he proposes a conceptual framework in which…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Personality, Philosophy, Behaviorism
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Maxwell, Bruce – Educational Theory, 2010
Philosophers tend to assume that theoretical frameworks in psychology suffer from conceptual confusion and that any influence that philosophy might have on psychology should be positive. Going against this grain, Dan Lapsley and Darcia Narvaez attribute the Kohlbergian paradigm's current state of marginalization within psychology to Lawrence…
Descriptors: Models, Psychology, Ethics, Moral Development
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Harvey, Charles W. – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay Charles Harvey offers a worried reflection on the range, extent, depth, affects, and effects of the perpetual assessment of the person in (post)industrial nations in the contemporary world. Harvey begins his analysis by appealing to the work of Martin Heidegger, Michel Foucault, and Jean Baudrillard to provide an interpretive…
Descriptors: Public Education, Essays, Reflection, Evaluation
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Lewis, Tyson – Educational Theory, 2010
Famously, Walter Benjamin once wrote that behind historical materialism lies a disavowed theological "hunchback." More importantly, it is only through a rejuvenated relation with this theological hunchback that historical materialism can ultimately realize its own revolutionary possibilities. While the theological dimension of critical theory has…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Essays, Philosophy, Religion
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