Overview
- Authors:
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Yusef Waghid
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Education Policy Studies, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa
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Faiq Waghid
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Centre for Innovative Learning Technology, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Cape Town, South Africa
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Zayd Waghid
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Faculty of Education, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Cape Town, South Africa
- Explores African philosophy of education and ubuntu justice through the lens of a massive open online course
- Maintains that interactions like this can potentially stimulate and encourage just, democratic human relations
- Examines arguments that could help cultivate a more imaginative and politically responsible African university
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Other ways to access
Table of contents (9 chapters)
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- Yusef Waghid, Faiq Waghid, Zayd Waghid
Pages 1-26
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- Yusef Waghid, Faiq Waghid, Zayd Waghid
Pages 27-37
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- Yusef Waghid, Faiq Waghid, Zayd Waghid
Pages 39-50
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- Yusef Waghid, Faiq Waghid, Zayd Waghid
Pages 51-74
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- Yusef Waghid, Faiq Waghid, Zayd Waghid
Pages 75-82
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- Yusef Waghid, Faiq Waghid, Zayd Waghid
Pages 83-112
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- Yusef Waghid, Faiq Waghid, Zayd Waghid
Pages 113-125
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- Yusef Waghid, Faiq Waghid, Zayd Waghid
Pages 127-145
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- Yusef Waghid, Faiq Waghid, Zayd Waghid
Pages 147-164
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Back Matter
Pages 165-199
About this book
This book examines African philosophy of education and the enactment of ubuntu justice through a massive open online course on Teaching for Change. The authors argue that such pedagogic encounters have the potential to stimulate just and democratic human relations: encounters that are critical, deliberate, reflective and compassionate could enable just and democratic human relations to flourish, thus inducing decolonisation and decoloniality. Exploring arguments for imaginative and tolerant pedagogic encounters that could help cultivate an African university where educators and students can engender morally and politically responsible pedagogical actions, the authors offer pathways for thinking more imaginatively about higher education in a globalised African context. This work will be of value for researchers and students of philosophy of education, higher education and democratic citizenship education.
Reviews
“Against a global and South African background of increasing calls for the decolonisation of knowledge, this book provides a refreshing account of a pedagogic rupturing as a decolonising exertion. Instead of ridding itself of all that might be ‘colonialist’, this book – through adopting an African philosophical lens – argues for deliberative inquiry and reflexive openness, not only in relation to pedagogical encounters, but as enactments of just humaneness.” (Nuraan Davids, Associate Professor of Philosophy of Education, Stellenbosch University, South Africa)
Authors and Affiliations
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Education Policy Studies, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa
Yusef Waghid
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Centre for Innovative Learning Technology, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Cape Town, South Africa
Faiq Waghid
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Faculty of Education, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Cape Town, South Africa
Zayd Waghid
About the authors
Yusef Waghid is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy of Education at Stellenbosch University, South Africa.
Faiq Waghid is Lecturer in Educational Technology at the Centre for Innovative Educational Technology (CIET) at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa.
Zayd Waghid is Lecturer in Business Management and Entrepreneurship in the Faculty of Education at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa.