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Guadalupe Elizabeth Morales-Martinez; Ricardo Jesus Villarreal-Lozano; Maria Isolde Hedlefs-Aguilar – International Journal of Emotional Education, 2025
This research study explored the systematic thinking modes underlying test anxiety in 706 engineering students through an experiment centred on the cognitive algebra paradigm. The participants had to read 36 experimental scenarios that narrated an imaginary academic assessment situation one by one and then judge the level of anxiety they…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Cognitive Style, College Students, Student Attitudes
Lu, Chia-Chen – International Journal of Technology and Design Education, 2023
The incongruity-resolution model plays a key role in the cognitive mechanisms of perceived humour. This study employed the incongruity-resolution model to discuss humorous design techniques to help design novices and students understand the influence of various humorous design techniques on perceived humour. First, 260 humorous products currently…
Descriptors: Humor, Design, Cognitive Processes, Graduate Students
David Squires; Sameera Massey; Robin Pizzitola; Carmen Tejeda-Delgado; David D. Jimenez – Journal of Educational Technology, 2025
Massive open online courses (MOOCs) have grown in popularity since 2008 but suffer from low completion rates, as low as 2%. This study examines how designing MOOCs with consideration of cognitive load can improve retention and learning outcomes, particularly for adult learners such as educators. Employing a design-based research methodology, five…
Descriptors: MOOCs, Program Design, Difficulty Level, Cognitive Processes
Kirman-Bilgin, Arzu; Kala, Nesli – Journal of Theoretical Educational Science, 2022
Any science teacher must first acquire analytical thinking skills in order to give their students the ability to think analytically. Therefore, the candidacy period is important for teachers to develop and transform this skill into professional knowledge. Based on this idea, the current research aims to determine the ability of third-grade…
Descriptors: Case Method (Teaching Technique), Vignettes, Preservice Teachers, Thinking Skills
Tobisch, Anita; Dresel, Markus – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2022
Based on the continuum model of impression formation (Fiske & Neuberg, 1990), information processing can be more or less automated or controlled and thus relies more or less on stereotype-based or individual-based characteristics. Also, teachers' impression formation can be influenced by social categories like students' ethnic background or…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Social Status, Ethnicity, Cognitive Processes
Prevodnik, Katja; Vehovar, Vasja – Sociological Methods & Research, 2023
When comparing social science phenomena through a time perspective, absolute and relative difference (RD) are the two typical presentation formats used to communicate interpretations to the audience, while time distance (TD) is the least frequently used of such formats. This article argues that the chosen presentation format is extremely important…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Social Science Research, Public Agencies, College Faculty
Siddiqui, Hasan; Rutherford, M. D. – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2022
Essentialism is the intuition that category membership relies on an invisible essence. Essentialist thinking about social categories is most evident in young children, while comparable methods do not reveal essentialist thinking about social groups in adult participants. However, previous work has found that essentialist thinking about gender was…
Descriptors: Intuition, Self Concept, Social Differences, Group Membership
Wasfy, Nourhan F.; Abed, Rabab Abdel Raoof; Gouda, Enas Mohamed; Ghaly, Mona Sayed; El-Wazir, Yasser Mohamed – Advanced Education, 2021
Purpose: Cognitive load theory (CLT) is receiving increased recognition in medical education and it was cited as an important theoretical framework for simulation-based medical education. Simulated learning environments can place a high demand on the cognitive resources of the learners, hence, we aimed to design an instructional framework to…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Instructional Effectiveness, Medical Education, Medical Students
Van Lith, Theresa; Bullock, Lindsay; Horbal, Iryna; Lvov, Alexander – International Journal for the Advancement of Counselling, 2017
A particular political and social mindset toward mental health support has impacted how and why people seek counseling and therapy in Ukraine. Although a relatively small and developing field, art therapy is beginning to provide a means for assisting cultural and identity development for young adult Ukrainians during a time of civil and political…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes, Self Concept
Herzog, Michael A.; Katzlinger, Elisabeth – EURASIA Journal of Mathematics, Science & Technology Education, 2017
Peer review, as an e-assessment tool incorporates the human factor to treat complexity for rating and grading students. It could address the qualitative more than quantitative aspects with flexible human feedback that leads up to metacognitive knowledge aspects, which e-assessment usually is not able to achieve. Peer review is an internationally…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Higher Education, Independent Study, Active Learning
Robert L. Moore – International Journal of Designs for Learning, 2019
This design case details the critical design decisions used in the development of an e-learning module library for North Carolina local government officials focused on land use regulations. These modules cover topics from an introduction to land use regulations, to evidentiary hearing conduct guidelines, defining vested rights, and explaining how…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Instructional Effectiveness, Electronic Learning, Educational Principles
Chang, Hyung-Joo; Kang, June; Ham, Byung-Joo; Lee, Young-Mee – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2016
As clinical reasoning is a fundamental competence of physicians for good clinical practices, medical academics have endeavored to teach reasoning skills to undergraduate students. However, our current understanding of student-level clinical reasoning is limited, mainly because of the lack of evaluation tools for this internal cognitive process.…
Descriptors: Physicians, Medical Education, Medical Students, Logical Thinking
Durall, Eva; Leinonen, Teemu; Gros, Begoña; Rodriguez-Kaarto, Tania – Designs for Learning, 2017
The increasing availability of self-monitoring technologies has created opportunities for gaining awareness about one's own behavior and reflecting on it. In teaching and learning, there is interest in using self-monitoring technologies, but very few studies have explored the possibilities. In this paper, we present a design study that…
Descriptors: Diagnostic Tests, Metacognition, Teacher Behavior, Scripts
Eidson, R. Cole; Coley, John D. – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2014
We examined young adults' essentialist reasoning about gender categories. Previous developmental results suggest that until age 9 or 10, children show marked essentialist reasoning about gender, but this disappears by early adulthood. In contrast, results from social cognition suggest that essentialist thinking about social categories persists…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Gender Differences, Social Cognition, Task Analysis
Röer, Jan P.; Bell, Raoul; Buchner, Axel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2013
Memory for words rated according to their relevance in a grassland survival context is exceptionally good. According to Nairne, Thompson, and Pandeirada's (2007) evolutionary-based explanation, natural selection processes have tuned the human memory system to prioritize the processing of fitness-relevant information. The survival-processing memory…
Descriptors: Memory, Cognitive Processes, Recall (Psychology), Word Lists
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