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West, Amanda – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2014
When educators label as "emotional" the girl crying in the bathroom or the boy who just slammed his locker shut, they risk assuming that only overt displays qualify as emotional and therefore necessitate attention. The fact is that whether a student outwardly displays emotion or not, he or she is emotional, and the teacher has a…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Emotional Adjustment, Emotional Problems, Caring
Loving, Gregory D. – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2011
The discussion participants follow Aristotle in deciding that friends are concerned with each other's welfare for their own sake and cannot be reduced to utility or pleasure, adding that the contemporary notion of friends involves the notion of equal overall power. They find three difficulties with teachers and students being friends. First,…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Intimacy, Friendship, Teaching Methods
Gunzenhauser, Michael G. – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2007
This essay looks to varied conceptions of resistance with the aim of explaining how resistance might be incorporated into a notion of educator professionalism in the most effective way. The author contends that high-stakes accountability policy poses a complicated set of power relations for professional educators. Both students and educators are…
Descriptors: Professional Identity, High Stakes Tests, Accountability, Resistance to Change
Thornton, Sharon G.; Romano, Rosalie M. – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2007
As a post-9/11 society in the United States, people live in a complex and pluralistic world that pushes to rethink how to approach education. People want to know what is right and good, but how to discern this in a world where consensual understandings of meaning are missing, even within the nation's borders? Those in the northern, and…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Western Civilization, Social Isolation, Social Bias