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  1.  23
    Out of Love for Any Thing? A Response to Vlieghe and Zamojski on Some Pedagogical Problems with an Object-Oriented ‘Educational Love’.Alexis Gibbs & Elizabeth O'brien - 2021 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 55 (1):215-225.
    In this paper we consider some of the problems inherent in the attempt to define and circumscribe an exclusively ‘educational love’, as presented by Joris Vlieghe and Piotr Zamojski in a recent paper for this journal. In seeking to move beyond the confusing interpersonal relations involved in student-centred discourses on teaching, the authors aim to articulate an ‘educational love’ that is more oriented towards subject matter than the student subject. In the process, the concept of love itself becomes increasingly abstract (...)
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    Resonance, Response, Renewal: Literary Education in Rorty and Cavell.Áine Mahon & Elizabeth O'brien - 2018 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 52 (4):695-708.
  3.  19
    How to Disagree: Negotiate Difference in a Divided World, by Adam Ferner and Darren Chetty.Elizabeth O'Brien - 2020 - Journal of Philosophy in Schools 7 (2).
    In writing 'How to Disagree', Ferner and Chetty aim to bring to light those assumptions we make about the world, its structure and the lived reality of what we assume to be real, in order to see how these assumptions affect the ways we engage with each other. It is a fascinating endeavour and very well done through this thoughtful text. 'How to Disagree' is part of the 'Build and Become' series, a community of texts adopting a particular shared approach (...)
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    The Educator and The Ordinary: A Philosophical Approach to Initial Teacher Education.Elizabeth O'Brien - 2023 - Springer Verlag.
    This book offers a novel approach to teacher education through the philosophy of education. The book is structured around the themes of Voice, Risk, and Care, wherein the author engages with the philosophy of Stanley Cavell, Gert Biesta, and Nel Noddings respectively, to develop six central capabilities of the educator: Acknowledgement and Autobiography, Imagination and Interruption, and Attention and Uncertainty. The work culminates in a final chapter proposing that the essential, unifying capability that new educators should be supported towards is (...)
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