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Eleonora Papaleontiou-Louca – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2025
Traditionally, children have generally been considered as developmentally immature and unable to experience spirituality. However, more recent studies seem to indicate the opposite. This article aims to: (1) explore how religiosity and spirituality evolve in the developing person; (2) describe the perceptions of children about God; (3) explore how…
Descriptors: Spiritual Development, Religious Factors, Beliefs, Child Development
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Fatima Khaled; Jim Anderson – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2024
Informed by a postmodern perspective on language, culture and visual art education this article examines what a creative, visual art focus can bring to the experience of language-and-culture learning for secondary-age students of Arabic as a heritage language (HL). It builds on our previous research focussing on student interactions with works by…
Descriptors: Arabic, Heritage Education, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Bruna, Katherine Richardson; Farley, Jennifer; Bartholomay, Lyric – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2023
This article uses key concepts of Anzaldúan philosophy to describe the Mosquitoes & Me summer camp as "ciencia zurda" or "left-handed science." It details a day-in-the-life portrait of Elena, a first-generation Latina middle schooler, as she experiences the opportunities that Mosquitoes & Me provided for self-other…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Educational Philosophy, Summer Programs, Science Education
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Samta P. Pandya – High Ability Studies, 2024
This article reports a study on the impact of online spiritual lessons in improving self-regulation, emotion regulation, affect balance, peer relations, and well-being of high-ability college students of liberal arts disciplines. Compared to an online workshop on affect management, the online spiritual lessons were effective. Moderate effects were…
Descriptors: College Students, High Achievement, Academic Ability, Liberal Arts
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Jenkins, Toby S.; Boutte, Gloria; Wynter-Hoyte, Kamania – Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
In this essay, we center hip-hop culture and Black cultural legacies. We envision and offer a two-fold framework which illuminates the intersection between the two. We explore ways that the Black cultural experience (or better yet Black cultural praxis) has always brilliantly and organically demonstrated the shape and form of a scholarship of…
Descriptors: African American Culture, Popular Culture, Freedom, African Culture
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Cortazzi, Martin; Jin, Lixian – International Journal of Education and Literacy Studies, 2021
This paper employs the innovative method of Elicited Metaphor Analysis to present original research in Malaysia into students' metaphors for 'language'. We summarize reasons why language and first/ second language learning are centrally important in education, and show patterned features of language metaphors in proverbs and in teacher talk about…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Language Usage, Native Language, Second Language Learning
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Hyland, Terry – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2015
Interest in the Buddhist concept of mindfulness has burgeoned over the last few decades as a result of its application as a therapeutic strategy in mind-body medicine, psychotherapy, psychiatry, education, leadership and management, and a wide range of other theoretical and practical domains. Although many commentators welcome this extension of…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Buddhism, Educational Philosophy, Ethics
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Ross, Alistair – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2016
Spirituality has replaced religion in popular culture and its presence is being felt in the therapeutic world. Using a questionnaire completed by 104 people utilising six descriptive definitions of spirituality and 36 categories of spiritual experience, three meta-themes of forms of spirituality emerged through a thematic analysis. These are…
Descriptors: Allied Health Personnel, Religious Factors, Spiritual Development, Questionnaires
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Peterson, Thomas Erling – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2014
Agamben's philosophy of education can be arrived at by focusing on the nexus of philology, philosophy and poetry that is prominent in his work. By exploring the functional and semantic reciprocity between these fields, one can identify diverse pedagogies: of language and the poetic voice, of infancy and history, of history redeemed (in the…
Descriptors: Spiritual Development, Affective Behavior, Educational Philosophy, Profiles
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LaFever, Marcella – Intercultural Education, 2016
Based on a review of works by Indigenous educators, this paper suggests a four-domain framework for developing course outcome statements that will serve all students, with a focus on better supporting the educational empowerment of Indigenous students. The framework expands the three domains of learning, pioneered by Bloom to a four-domain…
Descriptors: American Indians, Canada Natives, Psychomotor Skills, Spiritual Development
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Mudge, Peter; Fleming, Daniel; Lovat, Terence – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2014
This article will argue that neuroscientific insights can inform religious and spiritual education's capacity for strengthening student understanding, promoting transformation and ultimately wisdom. Among other findings, it will show that current neuroscientific research supports a holistic approach to pedagogy which emphasises the cognitive,…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Values Education, Teaching Methods, Moral Values
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Graham, Sandra E.; Diez, Mary E. – Journal of Character Education, 2015
Character development in higher education is a complex process. This process has often been delegated to a single course on ethics or courses on religion. The authors of this article pose an alternative higher educational process whereby character development is rooted in a series of abilities that are contextualized throughout the entire…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Values Education, Undergraduate Students, Guidelines
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Firmin, Michael W.; Tse, Luke M.; Johnson, Courtney; Vorobyov, Yelena; McKeon, Jacklyn – Christian Higher Education, 2014
An increasing number of universities have initiated activities and assignments to foster empathic and altruistic behavior in students. This study is a report of an outcomes assessment of a poverty immersion experience in a Christian urban ministries course. Following Firmin's (2006) protocol, we used a qualitative methodology that included three…
Descriptors: Religious Factors, Immersion Programs, Christianity, Qualitative Research
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Vicini, Fabio – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2013
Based on a fieldwork experience of cohabitation within Gülen community's housing system, the article analyzes the way older students act as both role models and sympathetic guides for younger students' spiritual maturation process. In contrast to some recent learning theories that emphasize the active role of apprentices, the focus here is on…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Affective Behavior, Foreign Countries, Learning Processes
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Blomberg, Doug – Journal of Education & Christian Belief, 2013
Western (and Christian) education is an intellectualised, dualistic tradition which downplays the role of the body and emotions and thus the importance of practice in learning. Insights from neuroscience and James K. A. Smith's reflections on Christian college pedagogy introduce a consideration of the role of affectivity in learning, which…
Descriptors: Christianity, Church Related Colleges, Biblical Literature, Emotional Response
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