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Lee, Deborah A. – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2018
This existentially informed person-centred paper argues that current conceptualisations of 'case studies' (beloved of psychotherapy training and beyond) can reduce complex/beautiful human beings to flat/objectified characters defined by 'presenting problems'--'presenting problems' which clever therapists 'fix'. In response, the paper develops an…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Psychotherapy, Counselor Training, Power Structure
Jackson, Liz; Peters, Michael A.; Benade, Leon; Devine, Nesta; Arndt, Sonja; Forster, Daniella; Gibbons, Andrew; Grierson, Elizabeth; Jandric, Petar; Lazaroiu, George; Locke, Kirsten; Mihaila, Ramona; Stewart, Georgina; Tesar, Marek; Roberts, Peter; Ozolinš, Janis – Open Review of Educational Research, 2018
Peer review is central to academic publishing. Yet for many it is a mysterious and contentious practice, which can cause distress for both reviewers, and those whose work is reviewed. This paper, produced by the Editors' Collective, examines the past and future of peer review in academic publishing. The first sections consider how peer review has…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Faculty Publishing, Editing, Scholarship
Evans, Terry; Jakupec, Viktor – Journal of Learning for Development, 2021
This article reflects on some influential theories, concepts and institutions that have shaped the nature and substance of international development since the mid-20th century. In particular, theories of modernisation and dependency are deployed to reflect on the ways in which the International Financial Institutions, such as, the World Bank and…
Descriptors: Development, Social Change, Global Approach, International Organizations
Mengistie, Tilahun Adamu – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2021
Notwithstanding their contribution to the development of any society, women are the underclass. Their participation in social, economic, and political spheres could be limited because of illiteracy. To improve their involvement, providing adult education is incontestable. This article examines Ethiopian women's empowerment through Integrated…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adult Education, Females, Empowerment
Lundberg, Janna – Journal of Social Science Education, 2021
Purpose: This paper offers insights into the dynamic of misrecognition in an elite school. It presents new findings on micro-interactional power relations in the classroom and argues for additional ethnographies of social science education in elite schools. Methodology: This paper uses an ethnographic method. Its research employs the observational…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Social Sciences, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Advantaged
Pattin, Carla Janell – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2021
This essay considers various challenges to honors educational practice in a post-pandemic context and against the backdrop of Black Lives Matter. The City as Text™ course, Multicultural Toledo, cultivates student knowledge about intersectionality in light of public health and social justice emergencies in the United States. The author describes…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Urban Areas, Land Settlement, Racial Bias
Vincent, Cindy S.; Moore, Sara B.; Lynch, Cynthia; Lefker, Jacob; Awkward, Robert J. – Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning, 2021
This article contributes to a long-standing conversation about the implementation of service-learning by proposing an updated revision for the 21st century: critically engaged civic learning (CECL). The term service-learning is problematic as it invokes inequitable power dynamics that inherently privilege one group over another, with more…
Descriptors: Service Learning, Educational Change, Civics, Program Design
Butler, Joy; Burns, David P.; Robson, Claire – European Physical Education Review, 2021
Though students can learn a great deal about ethics as they play sport, the authors of this article ask what, exactly, they learn from playing dodgeball. As they look beyond the usual arguments offered for and against the teaching of the game, they view it through three ethical lenses: the ethic of care, the ethic of anti-oppressive education, and…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Ethics, Health Education, Team Sports
Farley, Amy N. – Education and Urban Society, 2021
States have increasingly used ballot initiatives to legislate education policy in recent years, although the consequences for educational equity and justice have been underexamined. This article investigates the extent to which ballot initiatives disproportionately affect traditionally minoritized students, with particular attention to two…
Descriptors: Democracy, Politics of Education, Equal Education, Educational Policy
Barone, Diane; Barone, Rebecca – Journal for the Education of the Gifted, 2021
This study explored understandings shared by fifth-grade gifted students as they read the book "Restart," which explores bullying. Students read, created representations, and discussed the text. Grounded by Langer's stances of envisionment, this descriptive case study analyzed student representations and conversations. Each of the…
Descriptors: Bullying, Grade 5, Elementary School Students, Academically Gifted
Bibus, Anthony A.; Koh, Bibiana D. – Journal of Social Work Education, 2021
This conceptual study draws from social work, education, psychology, and moral philosophy (i.e., virtue and Confucian ethics) to inform our conceptual definition of "intercultural" humility (ICH) with five interrelated features. Starting with cultural humility in the context of the Educational Policies and Accreditation Standards (EPAS)…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Social Work, Moral Values, Philosophy
Alvarez-Hernandez, Luis R. – Journal of Social Work Education, 2021
It is imperative to consider the significance of intersectionality in social work practice and education because of its purpose of understanding and addressing multiple forms of oppression. This article proposes a tool, the Intersectionality Analysis Cluster, which could be used across the social work curriculum and various academic degree levels…
Descriptors: Social Work, Counselor Training, Power Structure, Teaching Methods
Adami, Rebecca – Human Rights Education Review, 2021
Epistemic injustice in human rights education (HRE) can be found in a colonial historical trajectory of human rights that rests on accounts of western agency only. Such narratives overshadow the legacy of Indian and Pakistani freedom fighters and Latin American feminists who negotiated human rights against colonial, patriarchal and racist…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Teaching Methods, Racial Bias, Epistemology
Poitras Pratt, Yvonne – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2021
Speaking to the need for decolonising the oppressed, Métis scholar and activist Howard Adams once questioned why many Métis became confused, puzzled, and lived in constant denial of their unique history and culture. His reflection speaks to the ways in which a colonial form of education strategically and effectively erased, subsumed, and demonised…
Descriptors: Lifelong Learning, Power Structure, Foreign Policy, American Indian History
Stich, Amy E. – Journal of Higher Education, 2021
Although tracking is typically the subject of secondary education, this embedded case study brings attention to the comparable mechanisms at work within postsecondary institutions that produce serious consequences for racially minoritized students admitted into the "low" track. By engaging Victor Ray's newly conceptualized theory of…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Track System (Education), Racial Bias, Minority Group Students

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