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Barbara Wotherspoon – in education, 2011
Transformative educators such as Thomas Berry, Brian Swimme, and Edmund O'Sullivan believe that the time has come for a shift away from the dominant Western educational ideology that focuses on achievement, individualism, and material success. They propose that education must become more than a system of banking information and standardized…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Transformative Learning, Educational Change
Wesley, Sherre – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2007
Through the arts, people holistically learn, interact with greater multicultural diversity than elsewhere, and form connections with others. Participating in the arts gives adults experiences, contexts, and tools to help them reexperience, revision, and reconceptualize multicultural diversity in their lives and communities. To illustrate aspects…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Student Diversity, Adult Educators, Teaching Methods
Peer reviewedDoll, William – JCT: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1995
Introduces this issue on the Loyola Spirituality Conference, in which participants experienced the process of being educated as a consequence of encountering something strange and different. Participants journeyed into a world of understanding that was unfamiliar to them by experiencing a day of communal sharing and celebratory activities (eating,…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Conferences, Consciousness Raising, Cultural Awareness
Peer reviewedHuebner, Dwayne – JCT: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1995
Challenges educators to embrace the spiritual aspects of life in their image of education, suggesting the importance of including spirituality in one's approach to life and letting that sense of life infuse one's teaching. An alternative image of some of the basic principles of curriculum and instruction is sketched. (SM)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Conferences, Consciousness Raising, Cultural Awareness
Peer reviewedAlcazar, Al – JCT: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1995
Emphasizes the importance of helping students develop a sense of moral and spiritual value, undoing the violence that they have been taught in schools over the years and teaching them in a creative, rigorous manner about peace and the lives and works of prophets, peacemakers, feminists, and earth keepers. (SM)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Conferences, Consciousness Raising, Cultural Awareness
Peer reviewedStout, O. Hugh – JCT: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1995
Using music, story, and prayer, this conference presentation describes the African American spiritual experience with curriculum, explaining what African American spirituality is, who African Americans are, why spirituality is critical to African Americans, and where this spirituality is found, then linking it to education. (SM)
Descriptors: Blacks, College Faculty, Conferences, Consciousness Raising
Peer reviewedKinlicheeny, Jeanette – JCT: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1995
Shares the personal feelings of a Navajo woman who, as a child, had to squeeze her spirituality (which permeated all she did) into the inflexible, stifling mainstream curriculum. This education had little to do with justice, peace, and aliveness and had no connection with the spirit she brought from home. (SM)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indians, College Faculty, Conferences

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