Competition and contest underpin academic life in many ways, not all of them constructive or valuable. In this paper I make a start on the task of distinguishing valuable academic competition from its opposite and suggest reforms of academic institutions that would diminish the prevalence of destructive competition and approach more nearly the egalitarian goal of treating all members of the academic community—especially, but not only, students—as equally valued and equally deserving of respect. To do this, I develop a distinction between two kinds of competition: tender competition and rank competition. I analyse the illusion of meritocracy in terms of them. My principal recommendation for university pedagogical practice is to eliminate gra...
In this essay, Johannes Giesinger comments on the current philosophical debate on educational justic...
Abstract. Friedman (1962) argued that allowing schools to compete based upon their reputation would ...
In this essay, [the author] comments on the current philosophical debate on educational justice. He ...
Competition is an integrated part of most civilizations, from sports to education. Often competition...
Higher education as a social institution operates on the border of traditional, intellectually orien...
This paper addresses the transformation of competition in higher education. Not only have competitio...
Our Universities: Competition Competition for ideas is unlike competition for anything else. If we ...
In this article, we investigate competition in education, asking if it is good or bad, and especiall...
This chapter explores critically the educational situation of today and the more destructive aspects...
Competition is evident within all aspects of life, among all types of people, and throughout the.rec...
While meritocratic ideals assume a level playing field for educational competition, those who can ma...
In this chapter we delineate how competition circulates through education. First, we show how compet...
A battle has long waged in forensics between those who would define it as an educational activity ...
There is a growing number of critics who claim that modern changes of the university, based on the m...
When there is scarcity of educational position, we need a just system of distribution that decides w...
In this essay, Johannes Giesinger comments on the current philosophical debate on educational justic...
Abstract. Friedman (1962) argued that allowing schools to compete based upon their reputation would ...
In this essay, [the author] comments on the current philosophical debate on educational justice. He ...
Competition is an integrated part of most civilizations, from sports to education. Often competition...
Higher education as a social institution operates on the border of traditional, intellectually orien...
This paper addresses the transformation of competition in higher education. Not only have competitio...
Our Universities: Competition Competition for ideas is unlike competition for anything else. If we ...
In this article, we investigate competition in education, asking if it is good or bad, and especiall...
This chapter explores critically the educational situation of today and the more destructive aspects...
Competition is evident within all aspects of life, among all types of people, and throughout the.rec...
While meritocratic ideals assume a level playing field for educational competition, those who can ma...
In this chapter we delineate how competition circulates through education. First, we show how compet...
A battle has long waged in forensics between those who would define it as an educational activity ...
There is a growing number of critics who claim that modern changes of the university, based on the m...
When there is scarcity of educational position, we need a just system of distribution that decides w...
In this essay, Johannes Giesinger comments on the current philosophical debate on educational justic...
Abstract. Friedman (1962) argued that allowing schools to compete based upon their reputation would ...
In this essay, [the author] comments on the current philosophical debate on educational justice. He ...