DR DAVID LEWIN

Dr. David Lewin is Senior Lecturer in Education at the University of Strathclyde and co-founder of ExET.

His research focuses on the intersections between philosophy of education, philosophy of religion and philosophy of technology.

David leads the After Religious Education Project


DR SEBASTIAN ENGELMANN

Dr Sebastian Engelmann is Assistant Professor for General Educational Studies at Karlsruhe University of Education.

His research focuses on the history and theory of pedagogical thought and practice, philosophy of education (in Germany, focus on 17th and 18th century) and theories of schooling.

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Dr Karsten Kenklies

Dr Karsten Kenklies is Senior Lecturer in Education at University of Strathclyde and co-founder of ExET.

Very much rooted in the tradition of Hermeneutic Pedagogy and informed by discussions around Queer Theory and Inter- & Transculturality, his research is interested in the systematic structures of theories and practices of education and their embedment in the context of the History of Ideas, of Science, Philosophy and Art. The temporal scope hereby reaches from Antiquity to the present - along exoteric, but also esoteric lines of tradition. Being very interested in Japanese culture, a substantial part of the research is devoted to intercultural comparisons of, especially, East Asian and other approaches to education.


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Dr Paul Adams

Dr Paul Adams is Senior Lecturer in Education and co-founder of ExET.

Paul’s research interests are in the policy and politics of education all under the broad banner of social and educational inclusion. He favours a social constructionist approach to studying education and related issues. Paul's current research is primarily theoretical in orientation.. His current work centres on conceptual matters relating to becoming a teacher, education policy and the limits of truth, and Scottish education policy developments.

Dr katja Frimberger

Dr Katja Frimberger is Lecturer in Education at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, Scotland, UK. Curious to understand the relationship between theatre, film and education (in its broad sense of ‘formation’), Katja is particularly interested in the production-oriented elements of theatre/film-making and how these are theorised as education.

Most recently, she has published on German theatre maker/theorist Bertolt Brecht’s actor training and his philosophising theatre of estrangement; Latvian director Asja Lācis' educational philosophy in her proletarian children's theatre; the role of Hans-Georg Gadamer's aesthetic hermeneutics in researching intercultural encounters

Katja regularly collaborates (as actress, producer, educator) on narrative based film projects with filmmaker Simon Bishopp.