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Directive teaching in the community of moral inquiry
Author(s) -
Philip Cam
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of philosophy in schools
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2204-2482
DOI - 10.46707/jps.v7ii.119
Subject(s) - community of inquiry , philosophy for children , teaching philosophy , socratic method , directory , sociology , directive , pedagogy , philosophy education , library science , political science , social science , psychology , computer science , law , cognition , neuroscience , programming language , operating system
Is there a place for directive teaching when it comes to moral education in the Community of Inquiry? Michael Hand think s that we should make room for it. While some common restrictions on the role of the teacher in the Community of Inquiry and the kinds of questions with which it deals appear to militate against it, he argues that they either have no force or are intellectually or educationally misguided. In evaluating what Hand has to say, I examine the justificatory framework of moral standards within which he sets out his arguments and then look at how those arguments fare in light of that examination.

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