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  1. Toward professional integration in the humanities: One teacher-researcher’s experience with portraiture.Lisa Marie Anderson - 2011 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 10 (1):103-119.
    This article is both an argument for and an example of portraiture, a methodology for conducting and presenting qualitative research which, though familiar to many social scientists and educational researchers, remains relatively unknown within the humanities. The author details one kind of practice within the scholarship of teaching and learning — a study of a transformational learning experience — that calls for the framework of the research portrait, and suggests further possibilities for this framework, particularly within area studies, cultural studies, (...)
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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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  • ‘wide-awake Learning’: Integrative Learning And Humanities Education.Alan Booth - 2011 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 10 (1):47-65.
    This article reviews the development of integrative learning and argues that it has an important role to play in broader conceptions of the undergraduate curriculum recently advanced in the UK. It suggests that such a focus might also provide arts and humanities educators with a hopeful prospect in difficult times: a means by which the distinctive value and potential of these subjects might be articulated and promoted. Interviews with humanities students and lecturer case-studies from a UK initiative in integrative learning (...)
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  • Toward a history of rigour: An examination of the nasty side of scholarship.Robert Nelson - 2011 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 10 (4):374-387.
    Though a cornerstone of all research and evaluation, rigour in scholarship is a relatively recent concept, which is poorly defined and never interrogated. This article traces the dark history of the idea, beginning with intolerance, harshness and punishment, and slowly rising to something admirable in the industrial period, whereupon it is immediately seen in opposition to creative method. The text argues that, in the arts and humanities, rigour is only legitimate when built around dialectical relationships with subjectivity. It calls for (...)
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