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  1. O que significa ser eticamente crítico? Algumas reflexões sobre a Filosofia para Crianças.Magda Costa Carvalho - 2014 - In Rui Marques Vieira, Celina Tenreiro-Vieira, Idália Sá-Chaves & Celeste Maria Machado (eds.), Pensamento Crítico na Educação: Perspetivas Atuais no Panorama Internacional. Universidade de Aveiro. pp. 71-81.
    A nossa reflexão aborda o projeto de Filosofia para Crianças iniciado nos Estados Unidos da América por Matthew Lipman e Ann Sharp. Procuraremos refletir acerca das linhas de articulação entre as dimensões cognitiva e ética deste projeto, escolhendo como fio condutor a interrogação o que significa ser eticamente crítico? Pretendemos, assim, sistematizar algumas das ideias de Lipman e Sharp em torno do pensamento crítico, sobretudo nas suas implicações éticas.
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  • A Plea for Wild Philosophy.Menno van Calcar - 2023 - Teaching Philosophy 46 (3):341-366.
    Teaching philosophy online in secondary schools differs from offline teaching. The explanations usually offered for this difference show the cognitivist assumptions of mainstream pre-university philosophy education, meaning that philosophy education assumes that the aim of its practice is the enhancement of internal mental abilities. This paper argues that this view of the goal of education is unwarranted and unnecessarily restrictive, and that it implies an undesirable dichotomy between learning to be competent and being competent. An alternative, based on ecological and (...)
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  • An Evaluation of the ‘Philosophy for Children’ programme: The impact on Cognitive and Non-Cognitive Skills.Ourania Ventista - 2019 - Dissertation, Durham University
    Philosophy for Children is a school-based intervention currently implemented in more than 60 countries. This thesis examines the evidence regarding the effectiveness of Philosophy for Children for developing pupils’ cognitive and non-cognitive skills. Three different approaches were used. A systematic literature review was conducted of the evidence published in the last 40 years. A new comparative evaluation study was conducted with Year 5 pupils in 17 primary schools in England. The intervention lasted for an academic year, and a pre-test and (...)
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  • The Case for Philosophy For Children In The English Primary Curriculum.Rhiannon Love - 2016 - Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 36 (1):8-25.
    The introduction of the new National Curriculum in England, was initially viewed with suspicion by practitioners, uneasy about the radical departure from the previous National Curriculum, in both breadth and scope of the content. However, this paper will suggest that upon further reflection the brevity of the content could lend itself to a total re-evaluation of the approach to curriculum planning in individual schools. This paper will explore how, far from creating a burden of extra curriculum content, Philosophy for Children (...)
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  • Ḥikmah pedagogy and students’ thinking and reasoning abilities.Rosnani Hashim, Suhailah Hussien & Adesile M. Imran - 2014 - Intellectual Discourse 22 (2).
    This research drew on the authors’ long experience in the implementation of the “_Hikmah_ Pedagogy” which is based on the Philosophy for Children’s teaching method. Specifically, the study examined the influence of the pedagogy on the participants’ perceptions of and feelings about their thinking and reasoning skills. The sample comprised 188 Malaysian and international students from an international secondary school in Malaysia. This consisted of students in four Grade levels, ranging from Grades 7 to 10. An instrument named “_Hikmah_ Feedback (...)
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  • Art & Dialogue: An Experiment in Pre-k Philosophy.Erik Kenyon & Diane Terorde-Doyle - 2017 - Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 37 (2):26-35.
    Early educators are in a bind. Teacher education programs are calling on them more and more to help students practice critical thinking and develop intellectual character ; yet school funding depends on meeting Common Core standards, which do not explicitly assess critical thinking until the high-school level. Add to that an over-engineered content curriculum, and thinking becomes a luxury that is quickly lost amid more immediate concerns. As a result, we are raising a generation of “excellent sheep” who flourish amid (...)
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  • The Philosophical Classroom:balancing educational purposes.R. Välitalo - 2018 - Dissertation, University of Oulu
    The practice of teaching links long-standing philosophical questions about the building blocks of a good life to daily judgments in the classroom; in the journey to becoming a person who teaches, we must seek different ways of understanding what “good” means in the context of different social practices and communities. This doctoral thesis examines the educational innovation known as Philosophy for Children as a platform for teachers and students to address such questions within a community of philosophical inquiry. Advocates of (...)
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  • Exploring the connections between Philosophy for Children and character education: Some implications for moral education?Andrew Peterson & Brendan Bentley - 2015 - Journal of Philosophy in Schools 2 (2):48-70.
    In this paper we are interested in the connections between Philosophy for Children and character education. In sketching these connections we suggest some areas where the relationship is potentially fruitful, particularly in light of research which suggests that in practice schools and teachers often adopt and mix different approaches to values education. We outline some implications of drawing connections between the two fields for moral education. The arguments made in this article are done so in the hope of encouraging further (...)
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  • Engaging in Critical Dialogue about Mathematics.Marie-France Daniel - 2013 - Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 34 (1):58-68.
    The goal of this paper is to highlight the fact that the Philosophy for Children Approach can be used to stimulate pupil’s reflection within the framework of school subjects such as mathematics. First we situate P4C within the field of socio-constructivist epistemology. Then, P4C as adapted to mathematics is introduced. Finally, we describe an experiment linked to five types of exchanges, manifested between the beginning and the end of a school year while the pupils were learning to philosophize about mathematics. (...)
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  • Developing Democratic Dispositions and Enabling Crap Detection: Claims for classroom philosophy with special reference to Western Australia and New Zealand.Leon Benade - 2014 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 46 (11):1243-1257.
    The prominence given in national or state-wide curriculum policy to thinking, the development of democratic dispositions and preparation for the ‘good life’, usually articulated in terms of lifelong learning and fulfilment of personal life goals, gives rise to the current spate of interest in the role that could be played by philosophy in schools. Theorists and practitioners working in the area of philosophy for schools advocate the inclusion of philosophy in school curricula to meet these policy objectives. This article tests (...)
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  • Can Deweyan Pragmatist Aesthetics Provide a Robust Framework for the Philosophy for Children Programme?Sevket Benhur Oral - 2012 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 32 (4):361-377.
    In this paper, I argue that Dewey’s pragmatist aesthetics, and in particular, his concept of consummatory experience, should be engaged anew to rethink the merits of the Philosophy for Children programme, which arose in the 1970s in the US as an innovative educational programme that aims to use philosophy to help school children improve their ability to become more conscious of and make judgments about the aspects of their experience that have ethical, aesthetic, political, logical, or even metaphysical meaning. Although (...)
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