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This book explores how writers adhered to, played with, and subverted the formulaic precepts of educational transformation in the German Democratic Republic.
German literature --- Socialism in literature. --- Education and state --- History and criticism. --- History. --- Bildungsroman. --- Educational transformation. --- GDR literature. --- aesthetic appreciation. --- diverse narrative. --- intellectual engagement. --- mentor-protegé(e) rubrics. --- narrative forms. --- societal dilemmas.
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Children today face significant challenges in response to living in a globalised world and the impact of environmental threats to the planet. As such, there is an increasing need for schools to have a global perspective and to cultivate a critical sense of environmental and social responsibility in students. Environmental and Sustainability Education (ESE) in schools is frequently promoted as a route to achieving this, as it has the potential to empower learners to develop the necessary knowledge, understanding, skills, or competences to respond to the complex socio-environmental issues. However, there remains a general lack of pedagogical consensus as to how to teach either about or for ESE within school contexts.To develop effective ESE pedagogies, some educators look to transformative learning theory to encourage learners to move beyond the simple acquisition of knowledge to a change in worldview which not only affects their deeper level of understanding but, importantly for ESE, builds their capacity to think critically and plays an active role in providing a sustainable transformation of society. This book explores the pedagogy and practice of ESE, particularly focus on transformative pedagogies. Exploring themes including the attitudes of the teachers who are implementing transformative pedagogies, the tensions and emotional loads that teachers experience when seeking to develop their professional identity in the context of ESE, and how learning through ESE-informed practice involves and is intimately connected with emotions, this book will be of significant value for researchers and practitioners globally looking to develop transformative ESE practice.
Research & information: general --- education --- didactics --- teaching --- learning --- pragmatism --- sustainability commitment --- sustainability --- sustainable development --- cultural diversity --- teacher quality --- transculturalism --- educational transformation --- Environmental and Sustainability Education --- geography teacher --- teacher identity --- Environmental and Sustainability Education (ESE) --- secondary schools --- Initial Teacher Education (ITE) --- selective traditions --- teaching traditions --- teaching habits --- environmental and sustainability education --- functions of teaching --- functions of education --- ESD teaching approaches --- transformative sustainability learning --- collaborative reflection --- sport and the environment --- sport ecology --- education --- didactics --- teaching --- learning --- pragmatism --- sustainability commitment --- sustainability --- sustainable development --- cultural diversity --- teacher quality --- transculturalism --- educational transformation --- Environmental and Sustainability Education --- geography teacher --- teacher identity --- Environmental and Sustainability Education (ESE) --- secondary schools --- Initial Teacher Education (ITE) --- selective traditions --- teaching traditions --- teaching habits --- environmental and sustainability education --- functions of teaching --- functions of education --- ESD teaching approaches --- transformative sustainability learning --- collaborative reflection --- sport and the environment --- sport ecology
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"Recent scholarship has inspired growing interest in the later work of Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) and a recognition that the conventional view of an aging Emerson, distant from public matters and limited by declining mental powers, needs rethinking. Sean Meehan's book reclaims three important but critically neglected aspects of the late Emerson's "mind": first, his engagement with rhetoric, conceived as the organizing power of mind and, unconventionally, characterized by the trope "metonymy"; second, his public engagement with the ideals of liberal education and debates in higher education reform early in the period (1860-1910) that saw the emergence of the modern university; and third, his intellectual relation to significant figures from this age of educational transformation: Walt Whitman, William James, Harvard president Charles W. Eliot, and W. E. B. Du Bois, Harvard's first African American PhD. Meehan argues that the late Emerson educates through the "rhetorical liberal arts," and he thereby rethinks Emerson's influence as rhetorical lessons in the traditional pedagogy and classical curriculum of the liberal arts college. Emerson's rhetoric of mind informs and complicates these lessons since the classical ideal of a general education in the common bonds of knowledge counters the emerging American university and its specialization of thought within isolated departments"--
Educational change --- Change, Educational --- Education change --- Education reform --- Educational reform --- Reform, Education --- School reform --- Educational planning --- Educational innovations --- History --- Emerson, Ralph Waldo, --- Imarsana, Rāfa Vālḍō, --- Emerson, R. W. --- Emerson, Waldo, --- Emerson, R. Waldo --- Ėmerson, Ralʹf Uoldo, --- Ai-mo-sheng, --- Emarsan̲, --- אמרסון, רלף ולדו, --- עמערסון, ראלף וואלדא, --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Knowledge --- Education. --- Classical curriculum. --- Educational reform. --- Educational transformation. --- Intellectual engagement. --- Intellectual influence. --- Intellectual relationship. --- Liberal arts. --- Liberal education. --- Mind. --- Pedagogy. --- Ralph Waldo Emerson. --- Rhetoric.
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Children today face significant challenges in response to living in a globalised world and the impact of environmental threats to the planet. As such, there is an increasing need for schools to have a global perspective and to cultivate a critical sense of environmental and social responsibility in students. Environmental and Sustainability Education (ESE) in schools is frequently promoted as a route to achieving this, as it has the potential to empower learners to develop the necessary knowledge, understanding, skills, or competences to respond to the complex socio-environmental issues. However, there remains a general lack of pedagogical consensus as to how to teach either about or for ESE within school contexts.To develop effective ESE pedagogies, some educators look to transformative learning theory to encourage learners to move beyond the simple acquisition of knowledge to a change in worldview which not only affects their deeper level of understanding but, importantly for ESE, builds their capacity to think critically and plays an active role in providing a sustainable transformation of society. This book explores the pedagogy and practice of ESE, particularly focus on transformative pedagogies. Exploring themes including the attitudes of the teachers who are implementing transformative pedagogies, the tensions and emotional loads that teachers experience when seeking to develop their professional identity in the context of ESE, and how learning through ESE-informed practice involves and is intimately connected with emotions, this book will be of significant value for researchers and practitioners globally looking to develop transformative ESE practice.
Research & information: general --- education --- didactics --- teaching --- learning --- pragmatism --- sustainability commitment --- sustainability --- sustainable development --- cultural diversity --- teacher quality --- transculturalism --- educational transformation --- Environmental and Sustainability Education --- geography teacher --- teacher identity --- Environmental and Sustainability Education (ESE) --- secondary schools --- Initial Teacher Education (ITE) --- selective traditions --- teaching traditions --- teaching habits --- environmental and sustainability education --- functions of teaching --- functions of education --- ESD teaching approaches --- transformative sustainability learning --- collaborative reflection --- sport and the environment --- sport ecology --- n/a
Choose an application
Children today face significant challenges in response to living in a globalised world and the impact of environmental threats to the planet. As such, there is an increasing need for schools to have a global perspective and to cultivate a critical sense of environmental and social responsibility in students. Environmental and Sustainability Education (ESE) in schools is frequently promoted as a route to achieving this, as it has the potential to empower learners to develop the necessary knowledge, understanding, skills, or competences to respond to the complex socio-environmental issues. However, there remains a general lack of pedagogical consensus as to how to teach either about or for ESE within school contexts.To develop effective ESE pedagogies, some educators look to transformative learning theory to encourage learners to move beyond the simple acquisition of knowledge to a change in worldview which not only affects their deeper level of understanding but, importantly for ESE, builds their capacity to think critically and plays an active role in providing a sustainable transformation of society. This book explores the pedagogy and practice of ESE, particularly focus on transformative pedagogies. Exploring themes including the attitudes of the teachers who are implementing transformative pedagogies, the tensions and emotional loads that teachers experience when seeking to develop their professional identity in the context of ESE, and how learning through ESE-informed practice involves and is intimately connected with emotions, this book will be of significant value for researchers and practitioners globally looking to develop transformative ESE practice.
education --- didactics --- teaching --- learning --- pragmatism --- sustainability commitment --- sustainability --- sustainable development --- cultural diversity --- teacher quality --- transculturalism --- educational transformation --- Environmental and Sustainability Education --- geography teacher --- teacher identity --- Environmental and Sustainability Education (ESE) --- secondary schools --- Initial Teacher Education (ITE) --- selective traditions --- teaching traditions --- teaching habits --- environmental and sustainability education --- functions of teaching --- functions of education --- ESD teaching approaches --- transformative sustainability learning --- collaborative reflection --- sport and the environment --- sport ecology --- n/a
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