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Showing 1 to 15 of 87 results Save | Export
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Katie Sluiter – English Journal, 2024
The author's eighth-grade ELA curriculum is rich with opportunities for students to bear witness to a variety of experiences. Besides the Holocaust unit, they read "Ghost Boys" by Jewell Parker Rhodes (2018) while exploring police brutality and segregation; "The Giver" by Lois Lowry (1993) while investigating government…
Descriptors: Jews, Death, War, European History
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Rachel K. Turner; Ryan T. Knowles; Joe Cochran – Social Studies, 2024
The marginalization of social studies has led to many questions about how elementary teachers include social studies in their curriculum. Using a survey distributed to Texas teachers, this study explores the instructional strategies, integration emphasis, and content area instructional time utilized in the elementary classroom. Through a…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Educational Strategies, Teaching Methods, Differences
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Velda McCune; Jenny Scoles; Sharon Boyd; Andy Cross; Pete Higgins; Rebekah Tauritz – Higher Education Research and Development, 2024
Policy makers increasingly call on higher education to prepare learners for challenges such as global health emergencies or ecological crises. These can be understood as 'wicked problems', which are unbounded, complex and resist simplistic definition. Wicked problems involve stakeholders with incompatible value positions and attempted solutions…
Descriptors: Professional Identity, College Faculty, Undergraduate Study, Humanities
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Serkan Deniz; Eyüp Izci – SAGE Open, 2023
The present study aimed to determine the views of classroom teachers on the inclusion or exclusion of current issues in classroom instruction, to investigate these views based on the definition of current issues, the methods and techniques employed in the instruction of current issues, the analysis of the instruction, and the positive and negative…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Current Events
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Mark Anthony Conlon – Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis, 2023
Conversations about controversial political issues within the public-school classroom are necessary for the whole development of students as they prepare to participate fully in democracy, part of their role as conscious social reproducers of the American political regime. Effective educators train students to critically understand and analyze…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Teaching Methods, Classroom Techniques, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
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Lintner, Timothy – SRATE Journal, 2018
Social studies is by virtue opaque, unwieldly, and rarely neutral. It challenges convention and conventional thought and action. Embedding controversy into social studies instruction allows students to think deeply, critically, and passionately. Yet controversy is fraught with philosophical and pedagogical hurdles that often limit its use. Thus,…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Classroom Techniques, Teaching Methods
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Jochim, Ashley; Diliberti, Melissa Kay; Schwartz, Heather; Destler, Katharine; Hill, Paul – Center on Reinventing Public Education, 2023
Public schooling has always been politically fraught, but current disagreements over issues related to race, sexuality, gender, and COVID-19 have reached a tipping point. According to this report from the Center on Reinventing Public Education and RAND, half of school system leaders say that these disagreements are disrupting schooling. Almost one…
Descriptors: Public Schools, School Districts, Political Attitudes, Administrator Attitudes
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Kang, Hye-Kyung; O'Neill, Peggy – Journal of Social Work Education, 2018
Discussions of power and privilege, oppression, and structural inequities in classrooms can produce complex understanding and critical analysis when facilitated effectively. In this article we present the critical conversations model for facilitating conversations that open up space for discussing such issues and encourage the development of…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Classroom Communication, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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Misson, Ray – English in Australia, 2016
Much of English teaching, whether it be mounting an argument on a social issue, analysing media, or developing a critical reading of a novel or film, implies an ethical stance. This article considers the relationship between ethics, belief and ideology. After looking, within a Lacanian framework, at the ways in which particular beliefs are made…
Descriptors: Ethics, English Instruction, Beliefs, Ideology
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Smith, Grinell; Rabin, Colette – Schools: Studies in Education, 2018
This article details a four-faceted approach we developed to help structure discourse about topics in partisan arenas, many of which intersect with issues of equity and social justice. The article's narrative centers on challenging and emotionally charged discussions that unfolded in a classroom management class in our teacher preparation program…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Teaching Methods
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Black, Paul – International Studies in Catholic Education, 2017
Teachers, both of science and of religion, have to help pupils to learn about the links between these subjects. An effective way to support this learning should start from the beliefs and ideas that pupils already have, ideas which might well be influenced by public debates, often characterised by controversy, between those holding strong beliefs…
Descriptors: Christianity, Beliefs, Social Values, Religious Education
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Hobbs, Renee – Knowledge Quest, 2017
It's indisputable: disinformation, hoaxes, propaganda, and hyper-partisanship are increasingly global phenomena. Educators, librarians, policymakers, and community leaders are wondering about the implications of the changing information landscape. Anyone can publish and promote anything, and increasing political polarization is being combined with…
Descriptors: Information Literacy, Media Literacy, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Misconceptions
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Morgan, Verity – Teaching History, 2017
Verity Morgan took an unusual approach to the challenge of teaching the Holocaust, coming to it through the lens of environmental history. She shares here the practical means and resources she used to engage pupils with this current trend in historiography, and its associated concepts. Reflecting on her pupils' responses, Morgan makes a case for…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, History Instruction, Death, Victims of Crime
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Short, Fay; Lloyd, Tracey – Psychology Teaching Review, 2017
Field trips can provide an opportunity to take the student to the world, as an alternative to presenting the world to the student in the classroom. Such trips can create a forum for exploring controversial and distressing topics by exposing the students to first-hand experience, rather than second-hand accounts: witnessing the effects of blind…
Descriptors: Field Trips, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Teaching Methods, Psychology
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Hawley, Todd S.; Crowe, Alicia R.; Mooney, Evan – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2016
In this article, we promote the use of controversial images to enhance the discussion of social justice issues in schools. Controversial images provide rich opportunities for students to question what is occurring currently in society as well as what has occurred in the past. We provide an example set of activities to be used in teacher education…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Visual Aids, Visualization, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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