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Do the Unexpected! Why Deweyan Educators Should Be Pluralists about Political Tactics and Strategies
Joshua Forstenzer – Educational Theory, 2025
How should Deweyan educators teach their students about engaging in efforts to bring about social change in a political context marked by polarization, power differentials, and oppression? In this article, Joshua Forstenzer argues that Deweyan educators must encourage their students to engage in pluralistic and creative experiments rather than…
Descriptors: Progressive Education, Teaching Methods, Social Change, Power Structure
Ravi Kumar – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2024
The pedagogical realm expands and goes beyond the four walls of a classroom. It becomes omnipresent. However, there are spheres where it displays overtly its political character such as in the functioning of political organisations. In these organisations the relationship of the leader and cadre or the institutional form of politics and the masses…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Political Attitudes, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries
Zembylas, Michalinos – Ethics and Education, 2021
Should educators encourage students to learn moral outrage in teaching about social (in)justice? If moral outrage is a catalyst for social change, to what extent can educators nurture this moral and political emotion in the classroom? These questions are at the heart of this essay. The aim is not to take sides for or against using moral outrage in…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Social Justice, Teaching Methods, Social Change
DeAnna L. Gore – Geography Teacher, 2025
This lesson plan will illustrate how Taiwan can be used as a case study in an undergraduate human geography, population geography, or demography course. Incorporating Taiwan within the curriculum can equip students with a deep understanding of demographic concepts, specifically as it relates to the demographic trends in Taiwan. Through in-depth…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Demography, Geography Instruction, Teaching Methods
Prefigurative Pedagogies for Working toward Peace and Justice in Changing Times: Insights from Korea
Kevin Kester; Rira Seo; Nicki Gerstner – Journal of Peace Education, 2024
This study examines the contribution of university educators toward prefiguratively creating tomorrow today in the higher education classroom. Educators often teach for peace and social justice through a variety of normative pedagogical frameworks. Yet, this linkage of pedagogy and prefigurative politics in university classrooms is frequently…
Descriptors: Peace, Teaching Methods, Educational Change, Higher Education
Latecka, Ewa – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
In this article I shall reflect on the issue of humanising pedagogy, taking a view that dehumanisation, in general, comes from two kinds of oppression. I shall argue that, apart from oppression of the political type, tertiary education is also a victim of another type of oppression which contributes to its dehumanisation, viz. the oppression…
Descriptors: Humanism, Teaching Methods, Power Structure, Political Attitudes
Kennedy, David – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2018
This paper traces the changing status of the school as a counter culture in the anthropological and historical literature, in particular from the moment when compulsory mass schooling assumed the function of ideological state apparatus in the post-revolutionary 19th century West. It then focuses attention on what may be called the New School,…
Descriptors: Educational History, Postmodernism, Social Influences, Politics of Education
Torrent Font, Albert; Feu Gelis, Jordi – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2020
This paper addresses the phenomenon of the pedagogical renewal taking place in Spain, which started around the turn of this century, from a socio-historical perspective and within the broader context of neoliberalism. It traces the evolution of these transformative educational pathways through the course of the twentieth century, focusing…
Descriptors: Educational Innovation, Educational Change, Educational History, Neoliberalism
Charteris, Jennifer; Nye, Adele; Jones, Marguerite – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2019
With researchers funnelled into lucrative research practices that value fast scholarship, we explore ethical practice as an ethico-onto-epistemological project. Through collective biography, diffractive choreography, and poetry, we map systems of entrapment that manifest power relations in the academy. We argue the posthumanist ethical practice is…
Descriptors: Humanism, Philosophy, Ethics, Power Structure
Themelis, Spyros; Hsu, Tao-Chen – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2021
This article is the first to employ a Freirean framework to discuss the Taiwanese Sunflower Student Movement and its political, pedagogical and social significance. We analyse lecturers' and students' perspectives and experiences of civic responsibility in order to explore the relationship between critical pedagogy and student participation in the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Politics of Education, Power Structure, Social Change
Smith, Spencer J. – American Educational History Journal, 2019
In a time of political turmoil in which both women (#MeToo) and black people (#BlackLivesMatter) are fighting to be heard and recognized, it is worthwhile to look at the past to perhaps uncover new narratives that can give direction. Citizenship Schools provided a way for civil rights activists to civically engage individuals who were previously…
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Philosophy, Citizenship Education, Civil Rights
Steinborn, Maya L.; Nusbaum, Emily A. – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2019
Aiming to place disability studies in conversation with other antioppressive educational frameworks, this article "crips" human rights education (HRE), a field that, by definition, teaches people about equality, dignity, and respect. A theoretical sampling of HRE journals and an online library database uncovers that human rights…
Descriptors: Reading Lists, Disabilities, Civil Rights, Undergraduate Students
Underhill, Helen – Australian Journal of Adult Learning, 2019
This article explores the implications of learning in social movements on diaspora activists' engagement with struggle. Focussing on emotions within social movement learning and the connection to activists' multiple identities, the paper examines the complex terrain of learning as embodied and rooted in emotionally situated beliefs and values. The…
Descriptors: Social Change, Emotional Response, Immigrants, Activism
Lebossé, Clémence; Érard, Carine; Vivier, Christian – Power and Education, 2021
In a society where the politics of life is geared toward maximizing the physical and psychological dimensions of human capital to ensure economic growth, France's Inspectorate for Youth and Sports played a key role in disseminating a new mode of governance of bodies and youth--a form of self-governance based on the rising neoliberal values that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Team Sports, Physical Education
Sobers, Candace – History Teacher, 2020
Due to the particular experiences of the African continent and its peoples, and the myriad of ways these experiences have been interpreted, appropriated, and reclaimed, there are a pressing series of epistemological, pedagogical, and ethical challenges, especially for those who wish to include African content in predominantly non-Africanist…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, History Instruction, Course Content