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Featured researches published by Andrea R. English.


Journal of Philosophy of Education | 2016

Dialogic Teaching and Moral Learning: Self-Critique, Narrativity, Community and "Blind Spots".

Andrea R. English

In the current climate of high-stakes testing and performance-based accountability measures, there is a pressing need to reconsider the nature of teaching and what capacities one must develop to be a good teacher. Educational policy experts around the world have pointed out that policies focused disproportionately on student test outcomes can promote teaching practices that are reified and mechanical, and which lead to students developing mere memorisation skills, rather than critical thinking and conceptual understanding. Philosophers of dialogue and dialogic teaching offer a different view of teaching, one that counters mechanical, transmissive or ‘monologic’ teaching. In this paper, I seek to extend the notion of dialogic teaching as a method of supporting social and moral learning processes. Specifically, my focus is on answering the question: What capacities must a teacher have to engage students dialogically? Drawing on Paulo Freire and other contemporary philosophers, I examine dialogic interaction as involving a way of ‘being with learners’ and put forth three teacher capacities necessary for dialogic teaching: self-critique, narrativity and building community. I then examine further what is concretely entailed in the practice of dialogic teaching using research in educational psychology. I aim to highlight how dialogic teaching, unlike monologic teaching, involves the teachers active ability to support learners’ identification and exploration of their own blind spots—that is, the limits of knowledge and ability—and those of others. Following this, I consider implications of my discussion for international policy on teacher assessment. I close the paper with considerations for future research on teacher capacity and teacher evaluation. This paper contributes to our understanding of teacher capacity and the nature and aims of good teaching.


Educational Philosophy and Theory | 2016

John Dewey’s Democracy and Education in an Era of Globalization

Mordechai Gordon; Andrea R. English

This year marks the hundred-year anniversary of John Dewey’s seminal work Democracy and Education. The centennial anniversary of Dewey’s influential book presents philosophers and educators an oppo...


Educational Philosophy and Theory | 2016

John Dewey and the Role of the Teacher in a Globalized World: Imagination, Empathy, and "Third Voice".

Andrea R. English

Abstract Reforms surrounding the teacher’s role in fostering students’ social competences, especially those associated with empathy, have moved to the forefront of global higher education policy discourse. In this context, reform in higher education teaching has been focused on shifting teachers’ practices away from traditional lecture-style teaching—historically associated with higher education teaching—towards student-centred pedagogical approaches, largely because of how the latter facilitate students’ social learning, including the development of students’ abilities connected to empathy, such as intercultural understanding. These developments towards learner-oriented higher education teaching may offer promising opportunities; however, a central problem within these current policy recommendations is that the connection between cultivating empathy and cultivating imagination is not explicitly foregrounded. Against this background, I turn to Dewey’s notion of imagination to show how imagination is indispensable to all learning, and therefore has a role to play in teaching. In this article, I show how imagination is not only deeply connected to empathy, but also critical for gaining intercultural understanding and is a condition for the possibility that, as human beings, we can learn with and from others. On this basis, I argue that Dewey’s notion of imagination provides significant insight on how to rethink what is needed to create inclusive classrooms in higher education, especially under conditions of cultural, linguistic and religious diversity. First, I consider Dewey’s concept of learning and the indispensable role of imagination in learning. Second, drawing on the work of Martha Nussbaum, I examine how teaching through the narrative arts in higher education cultivates the imagination and helps us engage the lives of others. I use an example from my own teaching to illustrate how the narrative arts can foster dialogue across difference through the development of what I call ‘third voice’—a different or other ‘position’ that productively mediates reflective interaction between participants, including teacher and learners. In closing, I consider the implications of my discussion for present and future higher education policy on the evaluation of ‘quality teaching’.


Archive | 2017

What Is the Purpose of Education?: Dewey's Challenge to His Contemporaries On Chapter 9: Natural Development and Social Efficiency as Aims

Avi I Mintz; Leonard J. Waks; Andrea R. English

When Dewey articulated his “democratic conception of education” in Chapter Seven, he applied the standards it entailed to the educational philosophies of Plato, Rousseau, Fichte and Hegel. In his positive account of democratic education, coupled with his critique of these influential educational philosophies, Dewey had consciously staked a position in a conversation about the purpose of education that has spanned millennia. Then, after identifying the flaws in those historical accounts, Dewey outlined criteria for good educational aims in Chapter Eight.


Archive | 2013

Discontinuity in Learning: Dewey, Herbart, and Education as Transformation

Andrea R. English


Journal of Philosophy of Education | 2004

Critique and Negativity: Towards the Pluralisation of Critique in Educational Practice, Theory and Research

Dietrich Benner; Andrea R. English


Archive | 2017

John Dewey and the Analytic Paradigm in Philosophy of Education: Conceptual Analysis as a Social Aim?

Christopher Martin; Leonard J. Waks; Andrea R. English


Democracy education | 2018

Actualizing the Rights of the Learner: The Role of Pedagogical Listening

Allison Hintz; Kersti Tyson; Andrea R. English


Archive | 2017

Experience and thinking: Transforming our perspective on learning

Andrea R. English


Archive | 2017

Learning and Its Environments On Chapter 2: Education as a Social Function

Loren Goldman; Leonard J. Waks; Andrea R. English

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Dietrich Benner

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Allison Hintz

University of Washington

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Aline Nardo

University of Edinburgh

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Kersti Tyson

University of New Mexico

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Kerti Tyson

University of New Mexico

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