Results for 'Academy school'

991 found
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  1.  18
    Freedoms and Perils: Academy Schools in England.Ruth Heilbronn - 2016 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 50 (3):306-318.
    Can Dewey's Moral Principles in Education throw light on a contemporary policy issue in education, namely the privatisation of education through the establishment of academy schools in England? The article first considers what the policy entails, in terms of its conception of education as a market commodity. The next section suggests an alternative conception, drawing particularly on Deweyan claims for the fundamentally normative and relational nature of teaching, through his definition of democracy as ‘a form of associated living’ and (...)
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  2.  1
    Augustine’s Refutation on Theories of Sensory Perception of Academy School - With Special Reference to Contra Academicos -. 신경수 - 2018 - Journal of the New Korean Philosophical Association 92:123-142.
    아우구스티누스의 철학적 여정은 아카데미학파로 대표되는 고대의 회의주의에 대한 논박으로 시작하고 발전한다. 아카데미학파는 스토아주의가 자연적 영역에 대한 감관지각의 관계를 통해서 앎의 통일성을 소유했다고 주장하는 것에 문제를 제기하고, 이 통일성이 하나의 환영이라는 것을 입증하는 데 역량을 집중하여 다양한 논의를 양산했다. 아카데미학파는 감관지각의 불완전성을 논의함으로써 인간이 사물의 본성에 대한 앎을 가질 수 없다고 주장했다. 또한 이를 바탕으로 진리를 발견할 수는 없지만 진리를 추구할 수는 있다는 상대주의적 입장으로 나아간다. 아우구스티누스는 아카데미학파의 주장에 반박하고자 『콘트라 아카데미코스』를 중심으로 여러 저작에서 아카데미학파의 감관지각 이론에 대해 비판하면서 자신의 감관지각 (...)
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  3.  3
    Academies, Free Schools and Social Justice.Geoffrey Walford (ed.) - 2015 - Routledge.
    Academies were introduced by Labour in 2000 and first opened their doors in 2002, but during Labour’s time in power the nature of the Academies changed. At first they were designed to replace existing failing schools but, by 2004, the expectation had widened to provide for entirely new schools where there was a demand for new places. From 2010, under the coalition government, two new types of Academy were introduced. While the original Academies were based on the idea of (...)
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  4.  36
    The Development of the Academies Programme: ‘Privatising’ School-Based Education in England 1986–2013.Anne West & Elizabeth Bailey - 2013 - British Journal of Educational Studies 61 (2):137-159.
    ABSTRACT The secondary school system in England has undergone a radical transformation since 2010 with the rapid expansion of independent academies run by private companies (?academy trusts?) and funded directly by central government. This paper examines the development of academies and their predecessors, city technology colleges, and explores the extent and nature of continuity and change. It is argued that processes of layering and policy revision, together with austerity measures arising from economic recession, have resulted in a system-wide (...)
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  5.  14
    The school of thinking, nobility of philosophical spirit and civil courage (to the 75-th anniversary of H.S. Skovoroda Institute of Philosophy, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine).Mariia Kultaieva - 2022 - Filosofska Dumka (Philosophical Thought) 1:134-143.
    The article emphasizes the cultural and educational importance of H. Skovoroda Institute of Philosophy for the spiritual development of the Ukrainian society, especially in the direction of democracy and establishment of the worldview culture as a requirement for the culture of freedom. From the position of the included observer the author of the article describes some episodes of relationship in the scientist’s communities which can be defined as justice and solidary community. On the basis of the Heidegerian scheme, some dangers (...)
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  6.  16
    The schools of the Royal Academy.H. Cliff Morgan - 1973 - British Journal of Educational Studies 21 (1):88-103.
  7.  17
    Governance of Academies in England: The Return of “Command and Control”?Anne West, David Wolfe & Basma B. Yaghi - 2024 - British Journal of Educational Studies 72 (2):131-154.
    School-based education in England has undergone significant changes since 2010, with a huge expansion of academies, schools outside local authority control, funded directly by central government. Academies and local authority (LA) maintained schools are subject to different legislative and regulatory frameworks. This paper focuses on the governance of LA maintained schools, single academy trusts (SATs) and schools that are part of multi-academy trusts (MATs). The research involved analysing legislative provision, policy documents, and documents addressing the governance arrangements (...)
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  8.  39
    Is There an Ethics of Diabolical Evil? Sex Scandals, Family Romance, and Love in the School & Academy.Jan Jagodzinski - 2006 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 25 (5-6):335-362.
    This essay attempts to examine the difficult question of sex scandals both in public school settings and in the academy. It raises issues over the way authority in the classroom is unequally exercised by both male and female teachers in terms of power and seduction. However, the Law remains explicit when it comes to judging who is at fault within a-student relationship that collapses into the bedroom. The ethics that surround such sexual affairs is raised through the psychoanalytic (...)
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  9.  74
    The putative fascism of the kyoto school and the political correctness of the modern academy.Graham Parkes - 1997 - Philosophy East and West 47 (3):305-336.
    There is a current fashion among some prominent Japanologists to brand Kyoto School philosophers as mere fascist or imperialist ideologues. This essay examines these charges, and criticizes the critics, endeavoring thereby to encourage a more responsible evaluation of the relationship between philosophical and political discourse.
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  10.  5
    Anti-academy.Alice Maude-Roxby - 2014 - Southhampton, UK: John Hansard Gallery. Edited by Joan Giroux.
    Anti-Academy examines the ideas, processes, workshops and legacies of three radical educational models in 1960s Japan, the USA and Denmark. Comprised of three sections, each relating to one of these school's programmes, Anti-Academy explores life at Bigakko, Tokyo, The Intermedia Programme at the University of Iowa, and Ex-School, Copenhagen. Anti-Academy is a comprehensive interpretation of how these three academies situated themselves on the peripheries of the art world, existing in opposition to the mainstream, and responding (...)
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  11. Greek Philosophy, Volume II, Aristotle, the Early Peripatetic School and the Early Academy.C. J. De Vogel - 1954 - Philosophy 29 (110):270-270.
  12. Timothy Childers undertook his graduate studies at the London School, of Economics, and is employed as a researcher in the Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic. His main interests center on the foundations of probability, with applications to methodology and epistemology.Carl Cranor, Helena Eilstein & Adam Grobler - 1997 - Foundations of Science 2:397-399.
     
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  13.  21
    Paris Visual Académie as First Prototype Profession.David Sciulli - 2007 - Theory, Culture and Society 24 (1):35-59.
    Visual academies were unique social formations in the ancien régime, so distinctive that they are best studied as prototype professions. Alone among academies, they were responsible for offering instruction. Alone among educational institutions, they linked liberal instruction to occupational practice. Alone among ‘learned’ occupations, they accommodated an irreducible manual component. The visual Académie in Paris in particular established literally the first ‘graduate school’ in any field of activity and admitted students on the basis of anonymously scored student competitions. Equivalent (...)
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  14. Greek Philosophy, a collection of texts with notes and explanations. Vol. II : Aristotle, the early peripatetic school and the early Academy.C. J. Dè Vogel - 1953 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 143:444-444.
     
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  15.  19
    Pupil involvement in school (re)design: Participation in policy and practice.Olga N. Nikitina-den Besten, John Horton & Peter Kraftl - unknown
    Over the last decade, an array of policy interventions relating to children, young people and education in the UK have positioned pupil participation in the (re)design of school environments as a key imperative. Indeed, pupil participation is an explicit, core ideal of major, ongoing school (re)construction and (re)design programmes in the UK such as Building Schools for the Future, Academy schools, and Primary Capital Funding. The aim of this paper is to juxtapose the ideals of participation as (...)
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  16.  46
    The Heirs of Plato: A Study of the Old Academy.John M. Dillon - 2003 - Oxford, GB: Clarendon Press.
    The Heirs of Plato is the first full study of the various directions in philosophy taken by Plato's followers in the first seventy years after his death in 347 BC - the period generally known as 'The Old Academy', unjustly neglected by historians of philosophy. Lucid and accessible, John Dillon's book provides an introductory chapter on the school itself, and a summary of Plato's philosophical heritage, before looking at each of the school heads and other chief characters, (...)
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  17.  19
    Diversifying Schools and Leveraging School Improvement: a Comparative Analysis of The English Radical, and Singapore Conservative, Specialist Schools' Policies.Clive Dimmock - 2011 - British Journal of Educational Studies 59 (4):439-458.
    Within the context of fierce global economic competition, school diversification and specialist schools have been seen by governments as cornerstones of education policy to engineer school improvement in both England and Singapore for more than a decade. In both systems, the policy has manifested in different school types, school names and sometimes buildings-in England, specialist status schools, academies and most recently free schools; and in Singapore, specialist schools and niche schools. Diversification is promoted by each (...) emphasising distinctiveness in its curriculum-often with implications for its funding and degree of autonomy-which differentiate it from others. There is normally the intention to scale-up curricular innovations school-wide. The paper addresses three aims in respect to both countries: first, it profiles the evolution of specialist schools' policies in both states in relation to school improvement and secondly, social justice; thirdly, it undertakes a comparative policy analysis in order to draw conclusions as to how the relationship between central government and schools has re-configured in both countries-arguing that the policy in England is radical, that in Singapore, conservative. (shrink)
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  18.  14
    Plato's Academy: Its Workings and its History.Paul Kalligas, Chloe Balla, Effie Baziotopoulou-Valavani & Vassilis Karasmanis (eds.) - 2019 - Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
    The Academy was a philosophical school established by Plato that safeguarded the continuity and the evolution of Platonism over a period of about 300 years. Its contribution to the development of Hellenistic philosophical and scientific thinking was decisive, but it also had a major impact on the formation of most of the other philosophical trends emerging during this period. This volume surveys the evidence for the historical and social setting in which the Academy operated, as well as (...)
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  19. No school manifesto: a movement of creative education.Ilse Ouwens, Fabiola Camuti, Betje Stevens & Matthijs Andriessen (eds.) - 2020 - Amsterdam: Valiz.
    No School Manifesto' is a book that serves as a key reference and inspiration for people working in (creative) education, ranging from teachers and school leaders at informal, secondary and vocational education and academies to museum educators, artists (in the broadest sense of the word), policy makers, and everyone who supports education and has an interest in developing new perspectives through creativity. No School is a movement that wants to open up the meaning of learning and fundamentally (...)
     
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  20.  40
    Researching resistance: Campaigns against academies in England.Richard Hatcher & Ken Jones - 2006 - British Journal of Educational Studies 54 (3):329-351.
    This article uses social movement theory to analyse campaigns against a new type of government-sponsored school - the Academy - in four areas of England. It seeks to identify the social composition of anti-Academy campaigns, to track their encounters with proponents of the new schools and to describe the characteristic forms of their campaigning strategies. In doing so, the article aims to help place research into educational opposition and contestation closer to the centre of researchers' agendas.
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  21. On school philosophy in former Upper Hungary.O. Meszaros - 2003 - Filozofia 58 (10):717-726.
    The paper deals with the school philosophy in the former Upper Hungary. Its star_ting point is the assumption, that the question of the receptive/creative character of the so called national philosophy can be resolved only by showing the nature of the institution, where the philosophy under consideration was practised. In Upper Hungary philosophy was practised in high schools, at colleges and universities of various kinds. The author gives a definition of the so called school philosophy and examines its (...)
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  22.  11
    Medieval analyses in language and cognition: acts of the symposium, the Copenhagen school of medieval philosophy, January 10-13, 1996 organized by the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters and the Institute for Greek and Latin, University of Copenhagen.Sten Ebbesen & Russell L. Friedman (eds.) - 1999 - Copenhagen: Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters.
  23.  20
    Hand's Academy Challenge: Some Starter Questions.Peter Gardner - 2014 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 48 (4):637-645.
    Michael Hand has recently challenged certain religious organisations that run Academies in the United Kingdom to devise and pursue their own faith-based curricula in their schools. In this short article I examine some of the problems Hand's challenge might encounter, including whether religious conceptions of worthwhile activities and of human flourishing can be as devoid of religious beliefs as Hand would seem to wish and whether his challenge can be met.
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  24.  10
    Women in the Legal Academy: A Brief History of Feminist Legal Theory.Robin West - unknown
    Women’s entry into the legal academy in significant numbers—first as students, then as faculty—was a 1970s and 1980s phenomenon. During those decades, women in law schools struggled: first, for admission and inclusion as individual students on a formally equal footing with male students; then for parity in their numbers in classes and on faculties; and, eventually, for some measure of substantive equality across various parameters, including their performance and evaluation both in and in front of the classroom, as well (...)
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  25.  51
    Greek Philosophy, Volume II, Aristotle, the early Peripatetic School and the early Academy. By C. J. De Vogel, Ph.D. (Leiden: E. J. Brill. 1953. Pp. viii + 337.). [REVIEW]Frederick C. Copleston - 1954 - Philosophy 29 (110):270-.
  26. List of ContributorsPrefaceAbbreviations of Kant's WorksIntroductionPart I: Key Writings1. Key Works The Only Possible Argument in Support of a Demonstration of the Existence of God / The 'Inaugural Dissertation' / Critique of Pure Reason / Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics That Will Be Able to Come Forward as Science / Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals / Metaphysical Foundations of Natural Science / Critique of Practical Reason / Critique of Judgment / Religion Within the Boundaries of Mere Reason / Toward Perpetual Peace / Metaphysics of MoralsPart II: Kant's Contexts2. Philosophical and Historical Context Academy prize essay / Aristotelianism / J. A. Eberhard / Empiricism / Frederick the Great / French Revolution / Garve-Feder review / Herder / Francis Hutcheson / Königsberg / J. H. Lambert / Moses Mendelssohn / Physical influx / Pietism / Prussia / School Metaphysics / Adam Smith / Spinoza3. Sources and Influences Aristotle / Francis Bacon / A. Baumgarten / Cicero / C. [REVIEW]Kantian Normativity in Rawls, Korsgaard & Continental Practical PhilosophyPart V.: Bibliography6Kant BibliographyNotesIndex - 2015 - In Gary Banham, Nigel Hems & Dennis Schulting (eds.), The Bloomsbury Companion to Kant. London: Bloomsbury Academic.
     
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  27.  22
    Koenraad Van cleempoel, a catalogue raisonné of scientific instruments from the louvain school, 1530 to 1600. De diversis artibus: Collection of studies from the international academy of the history of science, 65. Turnhout: Brepols, 2002. Pp. XII+284. Isbn 2-503-51218-6. 75.00. [REVIEW]Hester Higton - 2005 - British Journal for the History of Science 38 (2):225-226.
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  28.  26
    The Summer Ethics Academy.Renée Smith & Julinna Oxley - 2011 - Questions 11:1-5.
    An overview of how the Summer Ethics Academy, at the Jackson Family Center for Ethics and Values at Coastal Carolina University—part of its outreachProgram—encourages children to develop desirable characteristics for middle school children to emulate. The article includes applicable project goals and activities.
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  29.  45
    Greek Philosophy C. J. De Vogel : Greek Philosophy. A collection of texts with notes and explanations. Vol. II : Aristotle, the Early Peripatetic School and the Early Academy. Pp. x+337. Leiden: Brill, 1953. Cloth, 12.50 g. [REVIEW]G. B. Kerferd - 1954 - The Classical Review 4 (3-4):240-242.
  30.  31
    The Diction of Roman Comedy John Wright: Dancing in Chains: The Stylistic Unity of the Comoedia Palliata. (Papers and Monographs of the American School at Rome, 25.) Pp. viii + 230. Rome: American Academy, 1974. Cloth. [REVIEW]A. S. Gratwick - 1978 - The Classical Review 28 (01):73-76.
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  31.  27
    History of Rome for High Schools and Academies. By G. W. Botsford. Pp. 14 + 396. Numerous Plates and Engravings. Macmillan: New York. 6 s. net. [REVIEW]Ronald M. Burrows - 1903 - The Classical Review 17 (08):401-.
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  32. Plato and the Freedom of the New Academy.Charles E. Snyder - 2017 - In Harold Tarrant, Danielle A. Layne, Dirk Baltzly & François Renaud (eds.), Brill’s Companion to the Reception of Plato in Antiquity. Leiden: Brill. pp. 58–71.
    Scholars of Greek and Roman antiquity advance a variety of reasons to explain why the study of Hellenistic philosophy remains dependent on fragments and testimonies. Mansfeld observes such dependence in his use of the premise that philosophers of late antiquity based philosophical instruction and school curricula on a core set of writings from the classical period. On this basis, Mansfeld infers that schools of late antiquity continually transcribed and preserved writings of instructional significance. The schools routinely excluded other classical (...)
     
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  33.  19
    The Neo-Performative Teacher: School Reform, Entrepreneurialism and the Pursuit of Educational Equity.Chris Wilkins, Brad Gobby & Amanda Keddie - 2021 - British Journal of Educational Studies 69 (1):27-45.
    The impact of neoliberal reforms of education systems on the work of teachers and school leaders, particularly in relation to high-stakes accountability frameworks, has been extensively studied in recent decades. One significant aspect of neoliberal schooling is the emergence of quasi-autonomous public schools (such as Academies in England, Charter Schools in the USA and Independent Public Schools in Australia), characterised by heterarchical governance models, the promotion of entrepreneurial leadership cultures, and the promotion of a discourse of pursuing educational equity (...)
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  34.  35
    Compliant Rebellion: The Vanguard in American Art: Essay ReviewThe Painted WordSocial Realism: Art as a WeaponThe New York School: A Cultural ReckoningMarxism and ArtTopics in Recent American Art since 1945Good Old ModernFrench Painting 1774-1830: The Age of RevolutionAesthetics and the Theory of CriticismThe Academy and French Painting in the Nineteenth Century. [REVIEW]John Adkins Richardson, Tom Wolfe, David Shapiro, Dore Ashton, Berel Lang, Forrest Williams, Lawrence Alloway, Russell Lynes, Pierre Rosenberg, Frederick Cummings, Anoine Schnapper, Robert Rosenblum, Arnold Isenberg, Albert Boime, Renato Poggioli, John Jacobus, Sam Hunter & Barbara Rose - 1976 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 10 (3/4):225.
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  35.  12
    Scepticism or Platonism?: The Philosophy of the Fourth Academy.Harold Tarrant - 1985 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In the first half of the first century BC the Academy of Athens broke up in disarray. From the wreckage of the semi-sceptical school there arose the new dogmatic philosophy of Antiochus, synthesized from Stoicism and Platonism, and the hardline Pyrrhonist scepticism of Aenesidemus. With his extensive knowledge of the ways in which Plato was read and invoked as an authority in late antiquity Dr Tarrant builds a most impressive reconstruction of Philo of Larissa's brand of Platonism and (...)
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  36.  4
    Religious Structure as a Madrasah and Academy.Mustafa Agâh - 2024 - Fırat Üniversitesi İlahiyat Fakültesi Dergisi 28 (2):1-15.
    Madrasas and academy can be defined as educational institutions known as schools that were established for different purposes in different periods. Madrasas are non-formal educational institutions where Islamic religious knowledge is taught. Madrasas, which hold an important place in Islamic civilization, are generally built in connection with mosques or prayer rooms. Education in madrasas is provided in areas related to the Islamic religion, such as fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence), hadith (sayings and actions of the Prophet Muhammad), tafsir (interpretation of the (...)
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  37.  19
    Imagining powerful co-operative schools: Theorising dynamic co-operation with Spinoza.Joanna Dennis - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (9):849-857.
    The recent expansion of the English academies programme has initiated a period of significant change within the state education system. As established administration has been disrupted, new providers from business and philanthropy have entered the sector with a range of approaches to transform schools. This paper examines the development of co-operative schools, which are positioned as an ‘ethical alternative’ within the system and have proved popular with teachers and parents. Using a theory of co-operative power drawn from the philosophy of (...)
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  38. The Empirical Interpretation of French Cartesianism: the Académie des Sciences, the Journal des Sçavans and the Relationship with the Royal Society.Nausicaa Elena Milani - 2014 - Noctua 1 (2):312-480.
    The Système de philosophie by Pierre Sylvain Régis can be considered as the achievement both of the scientific liveliness of the Académie des Sciences in the 17th century and of its fruitful relationship with the Royal Society. Since it aims to shape the new conception of the universe in terms of a system, the Système represents one of the most mature achievements of Cartesian philosophy and it is characterized by an empirical interpretation of Descartes’ thought. The Système therefore reflects two (...)
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  39.  6
    Partnership of Philosophical Schools of Belarus and Russia and Its Contribution to Development of the Scientific Potential of the Eastern European Region.Михаил Борисович Завадский - 2022 - Russian Journal of Philosophical Sciences 65 (3):153-159.
    The summary reveals various areas of Belarusian-Russian collaboration in philosophy: problems of the methodology of scientific knowledge, transdisciplinary synthesis of philosophy and science, philosophical foundations of physics, scientific realism, theory of harmony and self-organization of complex systems, modern epistemological theories, the sociocultural foundations, risks, and prospects of the digital society, human problems in the context of convergent technologies, anthropological foundations of intercultural communication, the world heritage of philosophical thought, the reception of Russian philosophy in the Belarusian intellectual tradition. Special attential (...)
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  40.  41
    Ethics beyond the Academy: Service-Learning as Professional Development.Matthew C. Altman - 2010 - Teaching Philosophy 33 (2):149-171.
    In addition to preparing students for graduate school or emphasizing transferable skills that are useful in any career, philosophy departments ought to give majors the education and work experience that will train them to become ethics officers outside of academia. This is a growing field that allows students to engage non-philosophers in setting corporate policies and addressing morally significant social issues. Using a course in medical ethics as an example, I show how incorporating service-learning into philosophy classes benefits students (...)
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  41.  12
    Pro-Ukrainian Students at the Kyiv Theological Academy From the 1890s to 1907.Leonid Mohylnyi - 2019 - Kyiv-Mohyla Humanities Journal 6:25-41.
    The article analyzes the main preconditions for the formation of pro-Ukrainian views among students of the Kyiv Theological Academy and determines their percentages among the graduates from the 1890s to 1907. When in the late 1850s and the early 1860s the Ukrainian intelligentsia carried out semi-legal cultural and educational work within Ukrainophile communities, few students of the Academy took part in their activities, with only 4 participants being active members in the Kyiv Hromada. Later, when students from the (...)
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  42.  3
    From Medicus Philosophus to Medicus Religiosus, Or Why Wasn’t Medical Education Installed at the Vilnius Jesuit Academy.Dainora Pociūtė - 2020 - Problemos 2020:120-129.
    The article deals with the absence of medical studies at the Vilnius Jesuit Academy. The question in the historiography is linked rather with the local peculiarities than the Jesuit attitude toward medicine in particular. Some attempts to establish medical studies in Vilnius during the 16th and 17th centuries are discussed in the context of Early-modern Jesuit universities that forbade Jesuits to involve themselves in academic medicine. The exclusion of medicine from Jesuit schools is analyzed as an intentional dissociation from (...)
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  43.  41
    24th European Summer School on Logic, Language and Information.Janusz Czelakowski, Urszula Wybraniec-Skardowska & Jacek Waldmajer - 2013 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 19 (4):519-522.
    The European Summer Schools in Logic, Language and Information (ESSLLI) have been organised every year since 1989 under the auspices of the Association for Logic, Language and Information (FoLLI) in different cities around Europe. The 24th European Summer School in Logic, Language and Information (ESSLLI 2012) took place at the University of Opole, Poland, during August 6-17, 2012. The organisation committee was chaired by Janusz Czelakowski and Urszula Wybraniec-Skardowska (Institute of Mathematics and Informatics, University of Opole) and the programme (...)
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  44. Proceedings of the British Academy Volume 125, 2003 Lectures.P. Marshall (ed.) - 2004 - British Academy.
    Fergus Kelly: Thinking in Threes: The Triad in Early Irish Literature Brian Pullan: Charity and Usury: Jewish and Christian Lending in Renaissance and Early Modern Italy Noel Malcolm: The Crescent and the City of the Sun: Islam and the Renaissance Utopia of Tommaso Campanella H. R. Woudhuysen: The Foundations of Shakespeare's Text J. G. A. Pocock: The Re-Description of Enlightenment Andrew Hadfield: Michael Drayton and the Burden of History Eric Foner: Abraham Lincoln: The Great Emancipator? Gillian Beer: Revenants and Migrants: (...)
     
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  45.  7
    Modern Ukrainian Philosophical Sinology at the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine: Classic and Innovative Ways to the Origins.Heorhii Vdovychenko - 2023 - Bulletin of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv Philosophy 2 (9):5-12.
    B a c k g r o u n d. According to the genre characteristics, the article is a form of publicizing analytical conclusions from the experience of research in the field of the philosophical Chinese studies at the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine from 1991 to the present day. The material for understanding was supplied from the environment of scientific professional activity of prominent figures of Ukrainian philosophical Sinology from the H. Skovoroda Institute of Philosophy of the (...)
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  46.  35
    Musical Spirituality: Reflections on Identity and the Ethics of Embodied Aesthetic Experience in/and the Academy.Deanne Bogdan - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 37 (2):80.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 37.2 (2003) 80-98 [Access article in PDF] Musical Spirituality:Reflections on Identity and the Ethics of Embodied Aesthetic Experience in/and the Academy Deanne Bogdan Music in/and My Life Several years ago, I attended a Pontifical High Mass at St. Stephen's Cathedral in Vienna. It was the feast of the Epiphany, a public holiday in the predominantly Roman Catholic country of Austria. 1 A "lapsed" (...)
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  47.  21
    The world’s first secular autonomous nursing school against the power of the churches.Michel Nadot - 2010 - Nursing Inquiry 17 (2):118-127.
    NADOT M. Nursing Inquiry 2010; 17: 118–127The world’s first secular autonomous nursing school against the power of the churchesSecular healthcare practices were standardized well before the churches’ established their influence over the nursing profession. Indeed, such practices, resting on the tripartite axiom of domus, familia, hominem, were already established in hospitals during the middle ages. It was not until the last third of the eighteenth century that the Catholic Church imposed its culture on secular health institutions; the Protestant church (...)
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  48.  32
    Beyond the Curriculum: Integrating Sustainability into Business Schools.Mollie Painter-Morland, Ehsan Sabet, Petra Molthan-Hill, Helen Goworek & Sander de Leeuw - 2016 - Journal of Business Ethics 139 (4):737-754.
    This paper evaluates the ways in which European business schools are implementing sustainability and ethics into their curricula. Drawing on data gathered by a recent large study that the Academy of Business in Society conducted in cooperation with EFMD, we map the approaches that schools are currently employing by drawing on and expanding Rusinko’s :507–519 2010) and Godemann et al.’s matrice of integrating sustainability in business and management schools. We show that most schools adopt one or more of the (...)
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  49.  31
    From negro academy to black land grant college: The Maryland experience 1886–1910. [REVIEW]Ruth Ellen Wennersten & John R. Wennersten - 1992 - Agriculture and Human Values 9 (1):15-21.
    As an institution serving “the youth of Maryland of the colored race,” the evolution of Princess Anne Academy as a land grant school depicts the problems and successes of the early black land grant schools of the South. It responded to the prevailing economic and social forces of its time. Despite the rhetoric of the federal 1890 Land Grant Act, Princess Anne Academy, like other 1890 schools, did not enjoy the equal financial support accorded the 1862 schools. (...)
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  50.  9
    Memorandum. On the discussion of the journal Voprosy filosofii at the Academy of Social Sciences of the Central Committee of the CPSU.G. Glezerman & K. Momdzhian - 1998 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 36 (4):82-89.
    On 17-18 June of this year [1974] a discussion of the journal Voprosy filosofii in the past few years took place at the Academy of Social Sciences of the CPSU Central Committee at a session of the Special Scientific Council on Philosophical Sciences and readers of the journal. This event attracted considerable attention from philosophers working in the Academy of Social Sciences of the CPSU Central Committee as well as in other institutions, for example, the Higher Party (...), the Institute of Social Sciences of the CPSU Central Committee, the institutes of the USSR Academy of Sciences, and a number of higher educational establishments in the capital. (shrink)
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