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  1. Postdigital science and education.Petar Jandrić, Jeremy Knox, Tina Besley, Thomas Ryberg, Juha Suoranta & Sarah Hayes - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (10):893-899.
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  • Philosophies of Digital Pedagogy.David Lewin & David Lundie - 2016 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 35 (3):235-240.
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  • Illuminating proximate ambivalence: Affect, body, and space in COVID-19 digitally-mediated teaching and learning.Paul E. Bylsma & Riyad A. Shahjahan - 2024 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 56 (6):568-579.
    In early 2020, many instructors and students in a university setting experienced an abrupt shift to digitally-mediated teaching and learning replacing in-person seminars due to the COVID-19 pandemi...
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  • The Birth of a New Paradigm: Rethinking Education and School Leadership with a Metamodern ‘Lens’.Gokhan Kilicoglu & Derya Kilicoglu - 2019 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 39 (5):493-514.
    Metamodernism, which is used synonymous with post-postmodernism or neo-modernism, has come forward in response to postmodernism and the emerged crises, instabilities, and uncertainties in all areas of this epoch. Metamodernism is a perspective situated epistemologically with modernism, ontologically between modernism and historically beyond modernism. It seeks an oscillation between modernism and postmodernism with mediating between them and responding to existing cultural modes. Thus, metamodernism is a paradigm beyond modernism and postmodernism, trying to explain today’s cultural and intellectual developments which are (...)
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  • Virtual Training, Virtual Teachers: On Capacities and Being-at-Work.Kenneth Driggers - 2023 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 42 (6):585-597.
    While virtual simulations are a familiar professional training tool, they have only recently been implemented in teacher education programs. These simulations are used to complement traditional student teacher placement. In this paper, the author critically examines one teacher training simulation, TeachLivE, specifically in terms of its implicit conceptions of what it means to teach and to learn. The analysis utilizes Aristotle’s explanation of the Greek concepts energeia and dunamis, as well as Heidegger’s interpretation of Aristotle’s Metaphysics. The author argues that (...)
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