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Abdellatif Atif; Noel Fitzpatrick – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
Education theory has been exhibiting a renewed rejection of education's instrumentality to political and economic influences against a policy trend that implicitly considers education a mere pragmatic tool. This paper suggests an ontological investigation that goes beyond normatively supporting or rejecting the instrumentality of education. It…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Economic Factors, Political Influences, Ethics
Stephanie Anne Shelton; Kelly W. Guyotte – Gender and Education, 2024
We are feminist scholars who research and teach at a university in the United States situated within histories of sociopolitical conservativism and oppressions. In the present, looming over our classrooms, are mandates to eliminate 'divisive concepts' such as race and gender. These political monsters gnash their teeth and foam at the mouth as they…
Descriptors: Feminism, Political Attitudes, Social Justice, Educational Policy
Muirhead, Russell; Rosenblum, Nancy L. – American Educator, 2022
The authors' 2019 book, "A Lot of People Are Saying: The New Conspiracism and the Assault on Democracy," is their effort to make sense of the startling appearance of conspiracy charges enveloping American politics. In this article, they expand on that discussion of the ways conspiracy allegations threaten democracy, and describe the…
Descriptors: Democracy, Misinformation, Misconceptions, Theories
Wenneborg, Emily G. – Educational Theory, 2023
Nearly everyone recognizes the fact of deep pluralism: it is hard to deny that contemporary America is characterized by widespread diversity of beliefs, practices, and values. We disagree, not on this reality, but on the way we should respond to the pluralism around us. In this paper, Emily G. Wenneborg discusses one of the most common responses…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Criticism, Educational Philosophy, Political Attitudes
Tyson E. Lewis – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
Given the rise in extremist radicalization using digital media, antifascist education must develop its own philosophy of digital technologies. The first half of this paper turns to Leo Löwenthal and Norbert Guterman's theory of the American agitator as well as Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno's notion of fascist projection and paranoia to provide…
Descriptors: Youth, Authoritarianism, Recruitment, Computer Mediated Communication
Yong Kim; Tae-Hee Choi – Policy Futures in Education, 2025
The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) has instigated educational changes and reforms globally, in particular, introducing and intensifying neoliberal logic and governance in test-taking countries and beyond. PISA outcome impacted upon the educational governance of South Korea as well, however, the changes deviated from what…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Achievement Tests, International Assessment, Secondary School Students
Liu, Xiang – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
Jean Baudrillard took the 'object' of everyday experience and developed it into the 'Object' that escapes the subject-object relationship, and in this way formulated a unique version of the theory of materialism. Taken in its extreme form, the later Baudrillard termed it the 'fatal strategy', that is, the strategy for eliminating the…
Descriptors: Relationship, Political Attitudes, Social Systems, Philosophy
Rolf A. Zwaan – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2024
In this article, I outline the evolution of my research in the domain of narrative comprehension. I cover three phases: (1) the event-indexing model, which explores connecting events in narratives; (2) the immersed experiencer framework, which focuses on event representations and mental simulations; and (3) a preliminary exploration of conspiracy…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Intellectual Development, Experiential Learning, Political Attitudes
Karpman, Hannah E.; Crath, Rory – Journal of Social Work Education, 2023
The election of Donald Trump was an astounding moment in the history of the United States. As academics across disciplines and social work as a profession struggled to understand the election and its effects, several syllabi were crowd sourced to explain the phenomenon known as Trumpism. This article describes a social work social policy course…
Descriptors: Presidents, Social Work, Elections, Political Attitudes
Baily, Supriya – Comparative Education Review, 2023
For activists, scholars, and thinkers, the current state of our hyperpolitical global landscape can be daunting, especially as we consider engaging and responding to the growing political vitriol and hyperbole of our times. Over the past few years, I have wondered a great deal about how to sustain idealism during troubled times in a field such as…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Comparative Education, Activism, College Faculty
Zembylas, Michalinos – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2022
This paper draws on the concept of affective atmospheres to theorize how democracy and democratic education take hold and circulate in classrooms and schools. The paper asks under which circumstances affective atmospheres are experienced or even 'engineered', encompassing affective and material features that (de)legitimate democracy, democratic…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Democracy, Teaching Methods, Classroom Environment
Shirley Hewitt – Support for Learning, 2025
This article summarises a storytelling process used to obtain data from five anonymised teachers as part of a doctoral thesis. The small story and story completion approach was used to gain insight into how teachers reconciled refugee/asylum seeker policies with inclusive practice. The process proved a useful way of enabling teachers to consider a…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Refugees, Inclusion, Reflective Teaching
Garion Frankel – Journal of School Choice, 2024
In the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as the ensuring culture wars, the American school choice coalition has almost completely unraveled, but many school choice advocates assert that the coalition can be rebuilt. In this essay, I argue that the school choice coalition dissolved not because of politics or circumstance, but because the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, School Choice, Educational Change, Politics of Education
Populist Challenges to Truth and Democracy Met with Pragmatist Alternatives in Citizenship Education
Sarah M. Stitzlein – Educational Theory, 2024
Populists employ truth as a tool for aligning the people against the elite. Citizenship education rarely takes up critiques of liberal democracy, discussions of populism, or conversations about what truth is. This paper provides an alternative pragmatist vision of truth that builds on the populist call for democracy to better reflect the will of…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Democracy, Pragmatics, Political Attitudes
Lorén Cox; Karen Nussle – Aspen Institute, 2024
While education has historically enjoyed widespread bipartisan support, the aftermath of the pandemic, among other factors, has dramatically reshaped the field's political climate. This transformation, marked by increasing political tensions that impact students, schools and teachers, signifies a shift away from traditional educational policy…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Politics of Education, COVID-19, Pandemics