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Showing 1 to 15 of 217 results Save | Export
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Traugh, Cecelia – Schools: Studies in Education, 2022
Building on Carini's idea of works bearing the imprint of their makers and using an example from my work in educator education that illustrates how Descriptive Inquiry can be a means of making and remaking a body of thought and practice, I explore the large idea of schools as made work. Through the exploration of the college faculty into race, I…
Descriptors: Inquiry, College Faculty, Race, Figurative Language
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Annie Isabel Fukushima; Tanjerine Vei – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
To teach about race is to recognize how there are communities whose worlds are shaped by violence, death, and resurrection, such as Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Emmett Till, George Floyd, and the many unnamed. Resurrection invokes the zombie figure. Zombies are iconic, and as implemented in an interdisciplinary course, a means to foster…
Descriptors: Feminism, Teaching Methods, Racial Relations, Figurative Language
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Pinyan Lin; Steven J. Courtney; Paul Armstrong; Amanda McKay – Oxford Review of Education, 2025
In China, formal school groupings known as 'education collectives' have become one of the most common forms of school-to-school collaboration, promoted by policymakers to narrow the achievement gap between schools and optimise resource allocation. Previous research has focused on the purposes and achievements of education collectives rather than…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cooperation, Partnerships in Education, Figurative Language
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Chandana Sanyal; Mary Hartog; Julie Haddock-Millar – Action Learning: Research and Practice, 2024
This account of practice offers reflections and insights on facilitating Action Learning (AL) in Leadership Programmes within the Higher Education context. The account shares our reflections and key observations as practitioner academics, facilitating AL Sets within three higher education leadership programmes. We draw on our knowledge and…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Leadership Training, Professional Development, Higher Education
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Kevin King – English in Education, 2025
This paper provides educators a foothold in the tricky terrain of metaphor, its theoretical underpinnings and pedagogical possibilities. Metaphor provides us with a means of comprehending domains of experience that do not have a preconceptual structure of their own. Conceptual metaphors permit mental imagery from sensorimotor domains to hold sway…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, English Teachers, High School Teachers, College Faculty
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Perrow, Margaret; Feldstein, Mary; Sieler, Arlene – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2020
Students who understand their writing process and see themselves as writers are more likely to successfully tackle unfamiliar genres and writing tasks. In this self-study, a college English professor and two first-year college students make a case for an extended-metaphor assignment that helps students build stronger identities as writers.…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), College Freshmen
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Park, Sophia S.; Tran, Mai-Anh Le; Parker, Angela; Ghali, Adam A.; Helsel, Carolyn B.; Cardoza-Orlandi, Carlos F. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2019
How is quilt-making both metaphor and pedagogy for early-career faculty of theology and religion who seek to cultivate critical and creative imagination for teaching, and to probe the challenges and promises of complex identities and vocations within 21st-century landscapes of theological education? This forum presents essays (with explanatory…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Teaching Methods, College Faculty, Theological Education
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Kähkönen, Elina; Hölttä-Otto, Katja – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2022
Interdisciplinary engineering programs have many perceived benefits including developing broader skills and an ability to work with complex real-life problems. However, the development of interdisciplinary programs faces many challenges including how to balance breadth and depth, how to integrate interdisciplinary learning into existing studies…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Genetics, Models
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Peran, Salvador – European Journal of Educational Sciences, 2019
Law students should be able to fathom the application of legal rules to specific cases and develop a consistent argumentation to support this interpretation by using logic. Different skills and competencies are required for each of these processes. Therefore, effective learning of Law must complement the necessary knowledge of Positive Law with a…
Descriptors: Games, Legal Education (Professions), Law Students, Teaching Methods
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Stavroula Philippou; Vassilis Tsafos – Curriculum Journal, 2024
This paper explores the transfer, translation and recontextualisation of Laurence Stenhouse's work, as encapsulated in the 'teacher as researcher' metaphor, to the Greek language and in the fields of research and policy in Greece and Cyprus. We first briefly frame action research work as emerging through and within a specific space-time (and in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Theories, Greek, Translation
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Szwabowski, Oskar; Gruntkowska, Dominika – Policy Futures in Education, 2021
In this article, we use the zombies as a metaphor for reforms in the Polish academy and a description of how neoliberalism works. According to the interpretation of the production of zombies as a critique of late capitalism, we want to show, by using an autoethnographic method, how subjectivity, relationships with others and the world are changing…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Authoritarianism
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Terese Thonus – Journal of Response to Writing, 2021
Writing instructors and writing tutors are often interested in discovering whether their responses to student writing facilitate student revision at a deep level. This teaching article illustrates how written metaphorical response can prompt student revision beyond surface features. It includes a description of tutor training in metaphorical…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Revision (Written Composition), Freshman Composition
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E. Michele Ramsey – NACADA Review: Academic Advising Praxis and Perspectives, 2022
This essay discusses the rhetorical impacts of the consumption metaphor on how advisors think about their work using student responses to the COVID-19 pandemic to highlight the problematic nature of the consumption metaphor for higher education. Academic advisors should reconsider how they "think about" their work and their messages to…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Academic Advising, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Clark, Jeneva; Hale, James – Australian Mathematics Education Journal, 2019
Should proof by induction be reserved for higher levels of mathematical instruction? How can teachers show students the nature of mathematics without first requiring that they master algebra and calculus? Proof by induction is one of the more difficult types of proof to teach, to learn, and to understand. Thus, this article delves deeper into…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Validity, Mathematical Logic
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Spadoni, Michelle Marie; Manankil-Rankin, Louela – Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education, 2020
Teaching is a journey that draws upon an educator's creativity to meet the emerging challenges of the undulating waves of experiences. Like sailors, navigating the sea, we as nursing educators engage in a journey of introspection to create a shared reflective space that fosters dialogue. Using letter writing as a reflective device, we wrote…
Descriptors: Letters (Correspondence), Nursing Education, Teacher Attitudes, Figurative Language
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