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Teacher as stranger

Belmont, Calif.,: Wadsworth Pub. Co. (1973)

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  1. The Medical Humanities: Toward a Renewed Praxis. [REVIEW]Delese Wear - 2009 - Journal of Medical Humanities 30 (4):209-220.
    In this essay, I explore medical humanities practice in the United States with descriptions offered by fifteen faculty members who participated in an electronic survey. The questions posed focused on the desirability of a core humanities curriculum in medical education; on the knowledge, skills, and values that are found in such a curriculum; and on who should teach medical humanities and make curriculum decisions regarding content and placement. I conclude with a call for a renewed interdisciplinarity in the medical humanities (...)
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  • The transcendental phases of learning.Donald Vandenberg - 2002 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 34 (3):321–344.
  • The Transcendental Phases of Learning.Donald Vandenberg - 2002 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 34 (3):321-344.
  • Interpretive, normative theory of education.Donald Vandenberg - 1987 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 19 (1):1–11.
  • Critical Thinking about Truth in Teaching: The epistemic ethos.Donald Vandenberg - 2009 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 41 (2):155-165.
    This paper discusses the most persistent controversial issue that occurred in Western educational philosophy ever since Socrates questioned the Sophists: the role of truth in teaching. Ways of teaching these kinds of controversy issues are briefly considered to isolate their epistemic characteristics, which will enable the interpretation of Plato and Dewey as exemplars of rationalism and empiricism regarding the role of knowledge in the curriculum and thus include their partial truths in the epistemic ethos of teaching. The consideration of pedagogy (...)
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  • The educational cost of philosophical suicide: What it means to be lucid.Simone Thornton - 2019 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 51 (6):608-618.
    The struggle to become lucid is at the heart of The Myth of Sisyphus. To understand the absurd is to understand that the fit between our conception of the world and the world itself is fraught with uncertainty; lucidity is the elucidation of the absurd. To be lucid is to revolt against the type of certainty that leads to suffering; to revolt against philosophical suicide. Camus teaches us the intellectual humility that stays hands; there is no reasoning that justifies suffering. (...)
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  • Introduction: Educative strangeness.Peter Roberts - 2013 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 45 (4):355-359.
  • Bridging Literary and Philosophical Genres: Judgement, reflection and education in Camus’The Fall.Peter Roberts - 2008 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 40 (7):873-887.
    Both literature and philosophy, as genres of writing, can enable us to address important ontological, epistemological and ethical questions. One author who makes it possible for readers to bridge these two genres is Albert Camus. Nowhere is this more evident than in Camus’ short novel, The Fall. The Fall, through the character and words of Jean‐Baptiste Clamence, prompts readers to reflect deeply on themselves, their motivations and commitments, and their relations with others. This paper discusses the origin and structure of (...)
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  • Acknowledging Despair, Qualifying Happiness: Hopeful Education. [REVIEW]Peter Roberts - 2020 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 39 (5):573-575.
  • Mapping the Terrain of a Foucauldian Ethics: A Response to the Surveillance of Schooling.Frank Pignatelli - 2002 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 21 (2):157-180.
    Educators find themselves in the midst of arising tide of urban school reform marked byevermore centrally designed and monitoredsystems of accountability. In response to thislooming high-stakes gaze of surveillance, thisessay offers an ethics of educationalleadership predicated upon taking up thechallenge of creatively and courageouslyauthoring one's ethical self. It seeks tocontribute to mapping an ethical terrain whichcan support the production of pedagogicalpractices, initiatives, and agendas asdistinctive, bold responses to theproliferation of one-dimensional,technicist-driven efforts which narrowlycalculate and assess student learning, teacherwork, school effectiveness, (...)
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  • ‘Teacher as Professional’ as Metaphor: What it Highlights and What it Hides.Bruce Maxwell - 2015 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 49 (1):86-106.
    This article is concerned with the downsides of using the language of professionalism in educational discourse. It suggests that the language of professionalization can be a powerful rhetorical device for promoting welcome and necessary changes in the field of teaching but that, in doing so, it can unintentionally misrepresent the work that teachers do. Taking as a theoretical framework Lakoff and Johnson's metaphor theory, the article argues that ‘teacher as professional’ should be seen as a metaphor of teaching on par (...)
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  • How Literature Works: Poetry and the Phenomenology of Reader Response.Patrick G. Howard - 2010 - Phenomenology and Practice 4 (1):52-67.
    Reader response literary theory dominates the study of literature in the K -12 school curriculum. Because this theory reflects the student - centered, constructivist orientation currently driving curriculum development, reader response literary theory is central to guiding the literary experiences of children in schools. Student readers creatively engage in a transaction with a text driven by their personal purposes and experiences that leads to the construction of new, alternative voices and perspectives. This study employs hermeneutic phenomenology to inquire into the (...)
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  • Camus, habitat and the art of seeing.Aidan Hobson - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (13):1249-1258.
    The early essays of Camus have been underexplored as educational texts. The discussion here introduces these texts for educational consideration. The analysis uncovers themes which link to existing educational research on Camus. As these are autobiographical texts they also provide new insight on the genesis of Camus’ thinking on subjects of interest to education, and Camus’ own educational journey into the absurd. The discussion here suggests the lyrical essays explore the connections between learning and the natural landscape, and as a (...)
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  • Practising Silence in Teaching.Michelle Forrest - 2013 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 47 (4):605-622.
    The concept ‘silence’ has diametrically opposed meanings; it connotes peace and contemplation as well as death and oblivion. Silence can also be considered a practice. There is keeping the rule of silence to still the mind and find inner truth, as well as forcibly silencing in the sense of subjugating another to one's own purposes. The concept of teaching runs the gamut between these extremes, from respectfully leading students to search and discover, to relentlessly bending them to one's own will. (...)
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  • Extending the Contribution of Albert Camus to Educational Thought: An analysis of The Rebel.Aidan Curzon-Hobson - 2014 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 46 (10):1098-1110.
    The purpose of this article is to make a case for The Rebel as an important educational text. Discussing The Rebel in this way for the first time, the goal is to try and demonstrate that the work could have a unique contribution; in particular there might be a number of similarities between Camus and educational thinkers relating to the goals, pedagogy and the meaning of education. The Rebel has been noted as Camus’s most underexplored text so by investigating these (...)
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  • From Waiting for the Bus to Storming the Bastille: From Sartrean seriality to the relationships that form classroom communities.Sean Blenkinsop - 2012 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 44 (2):183-195.
    One of the tasks of Jean-Paul Sartre's later work was to consider how an individual could live freely within a free community. This paper examines how Sartre describes the process of group formation and the implications of this discussion for education. The paper begins with his metaphor of a bus queue in order to describe a series. Then, by means of Sartre's analysis of the storming of the Bastille, the discussion expands to show how a series becomes a genuine group. (...)
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  • The fundamental commitments of educators.Nimrod Aloni - 2008 - Ethics and Education 3 (2):149-159.
    This article seeks to examine central aspects of the relationship between ethics and education in the beginning of the twenty-first century. Since both ethics and education are practical disciplines that are bound to deal with and are challenged by human predicaments, cultural ills and social evils, it seems that in examining the relations between the two, one is required to go beyond analytic elucidation into a more normative, prescriptive and political discourse. It is in light of this understanding and in (...)
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  • Empowering Dialogues in Humanistic Education.Nimrod Aloni - 2013 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 45 (10):1067-1081.
    In this article I propose a conception of empowering educational dialogue within the framework of humanistic education. It is based on the notions of Humanistic Education and Empowerment, and draws on a large and diverse repertoire of dialogues—from the classical Socratic, Confucian and Talmudic dialogues, to the modern ones associated with the works of Nietzsche, Buber, Korczak, Rogers, Gadamer, Habermas, Freire, Noddings and Levinas. These forms of dialogue—differing in their treatment of and emphasis on the cognitive, affective, moral and existentialist (...)
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  • The student-teacher dialogue : an autobiographical discussion of choice, possibility and the teaching-self in the process of becoming.Jean Walsh - unknown
    This thesis is an investigation of the relationship between education, freedom and the teaching self. Adopting the paradigm of qualitative research, it integrates an autobiographical perspective in which, drawing on the author's experience and perceptions of the shortcomings of traditional teaching attitudes and practices, the thesis aims to explore concepts and approaches which identify possible educational alternatives. The writings of educational philosopher, Maxine Greene, provide the theoretical framework for this study. Based on central themes identified in her work, a theoretical (...)
     
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  • The otherness of I : narrative, pedagogical being and fulfillment.Bryan Lorin Parachoniak - unknown
    This thesis proposes that Charles Taylor's notion of the 'dialogical human life'---or what I call 'dialogical being in the world'---can be expanded to include pedagogical and democratical aspects. Furthermore, given the collapse of foundational epistemologies, I propose that teacher fulfillment may be negotiated through 'hermeneutical understanding', which recognizes the participation of the knower in the known. Such hermeneutical understanding is achieved through acknowledging my 'dialogical, democratical and pedagogical being in the world' as an unfolding story, which connects present acts of (...)
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  • Marlene Ruck Simmonds 79.Marlene Ruck Simmonds - forthcoming - Journal of Thought.
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