Topics

Topics of interest for submission include any topics related to:

1. Independent Core Disciplines

These fields represent the distinct, foundational bodies of knowledge within each broader area before they cross paths with one another.

Education

  • Pedagogy and Instructional Design: The study of how teachers deliver content, structure lessons, and facilitate learning.

  • Curriculum Theory: The development, philosophy, and evaluation of educational syllabi and academic standards.

  • Educational Psychology: The study of human learning processes, cognitive development, motivation, and memory retention.

  • Assessment and Metrics: The design of testing mechanisms, grading rubrics, and diagnostic tools to evaluate student progress.

Humanities

  • Philosophy: The study of ethics, metaphysics, logic, and epistemology, exploring fundamental questions of existence and knowledge.

  • History: The chronological study, documentation, and critical analysis of past human events, cultures, and civilizations.

  • Literature and Philology: The critical analysis of written works, poetry, drama, and the historical development of languages.

  • Art History and Criticisms: The study of visual arts, architecture, and music across different eras and cultural movements.

Social Sciences

  • Sociology: The study of social institutions, group behavior, social stratification, and the dynamics of human societies.

  • Anthropology: The study of human origins, biological evolution, and the comparative analysis of diverse cultural practices.

  • Political Science: The study of governance systems, political behavior, state structures, and public policy.

  • Human Geography: The study of how human populations interact with spatial environments, migration patterns, and urbanization.

2. Interrelated Fields

These areas exist at the intersections where these disciplines overlap, merge, and depend on each other to explain human behavior and learning.

Education + Social Sciences

  • Sociology of Education: Examining how social institutions, socioeconomic status, race, and gender impact school access and student outcomes.

  • Educational Anthropology: The study of how cultural values, community traditions, and language socialization shape the way children learn.

  • Politics of Education: The study of government legislation, school board dynamics, funding allocation, and ideological battles over public schooling.

Education + Humanities

  • Philosophy of Education: Exploring the fundamental purpose of schooling—whether it exists to produce workers, cultivate good citizens, or foster individual enlightenment.

  • History of Education: Analyzing how schooling systems, literacy rates, and educational access have evolved from ancient academies to modern public schools.

  • Literature in Pedagogy: The study of narrative storytelling as a primary tool for moral development, language acquisition, and cultural literacy.

Humanities + Social Sciences

  • Social History: Shifting the focus of history away from kings and wars toward the daily lives, struggles, and movements of ordinary people.

  • Cultural Studies: Intersecting anthropology, sociology, and literary critique to analyze contemporary media, pop culture, and power structures.

  • Political Philosophy: Merging political science and ethics to evaluate concepts of justice, rights, liberty, and the legitimacy of state power.

3. Integrated Global Themes

These overarching areas of study weave elements of all three disciplines together to address complex, modern societal realities.

  • Digital Humanities and Educational Technology: Using computational tools to analyze historical texts or cultural trends, while training students to navigate the ethics of digital societies.

  • Global Citizenship and Human Rights Education: Designing curricula based on political theory and ethics to teach students about international law, empathy, and global social justice.

  • Social Justice and Equity Frameworks: Investigating systemic inequalities through sociological research, framing them through ethical philosophies, and implementing inclusive teaching practices to remedy them.

  • Language, Identity, and Literacy: Studying how linguistics (humanities) and social background (social sciences) influence a learner’s ability to master reading, writing, and communication (education).