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  1. Praxis and pedagogy as related to the arts and humanities.D. G. Mulcahy - 2010 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 9 (3):305-321.
    Based on a review of its historical evolution and the contributions of significant writers in the field, this article addresses perennial questions of purpose, content and pedagogy in education in the arts and humanities and, more broadly, liberal education. Taking cognizance of the educational significance of service-learning and practical knowledge, it calls for a revitalization of arts and humanities education by drawing on elements of feminist theory as expounded by Jane Roland Martin and the emphasis on praxis, service and pedagogy (...)
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  • ‘ Making A World That Is Worth Living In’: Humanities Teaching And The Formation Of Practical Reasoning.Melanie Walker - 2009 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 8 (3):231-246.
    This article considers humanities teaching as a vital space where students might develop their capability as ‘practical reasoners’. The importance of this for self-development, but also for society and democratic life, is considered, while the economic purposes which currently dominate higher education are critiqued. An example is taken from the teaching of history to show how lecturers teach and students learn secular intellectual practices under pedagogical arrangements of communicative reasoning and ontological becoming.
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  • Creativity and Conflict: How theory and practice shape student identities in design education.Jane Tynan & Christopher New - 2009 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 8 (3):295-308.
    By exploring the role of student identities in shaping attitudes to learning, this study asks how design students draw on experience to work across theory and practice. It explores how a specific group of design undergraduate students in a UK university perform on two distinct learning experiences on their course: work placement and dissertation. In particular, it considers the context for learning: the value placed on practice and scholarship; the role of social identity; links between art and design education. Using (...)
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