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José Carlos Vázquez-Parra; Isolda Margarita Castillo-Martínez; María Soledad Ramírez-Montoya; Juan Alberto Amézquita-Zamora; Marco Cruz-Sandoval – Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education, 2024
Purpose: The study aims to assess students' perceived mastery of reasoning-for-complexity competency and its sub-competencies in a sample of students in a Latin American university. The intention was to identify statistically significant differences between a population of men and women with similar sociocultural characteristics, assessing whether…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sociocultural Patterns, Undergraduate Students, Private Colleges
Gluckman, Maxie; Gautsch, Leslie; Hopkins, Megan – Comparative Education Review, 2022
The back and forth migration of children and youth between the United States and Mexico has created a unique group of approximately nine million "students we share" who have been educated in both countries (Jensen and Sawyer 2013). The social, political, and economic interconnectivity of the United States and Mexico suggests that these…
Descriptors: Student Mobility, Migration, Educational Trends, Educational Experience
Verónica González – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2024
Research on the inequities present within dual language (DL) programs demonstrates that these programs are not immune from the racial stratification prevalent in the United States. Despite intentions to center justice for minoritized students in DL programs, unexamined ideologies among educators can inadvertently perpetuate the existing status…
Descriptors: Elementary Schools, Foreign Countries, Political Divisions (Geographic), Barriers
Bybee, Eric Ruiz; Feinauer Whiting, Erin; Jensen, Bryant; Savage, Victoria; Baker, Alisa; Holdaway, Emma – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2020
This article explores notions of belonging and citizenship for "American Mexican" students--Mexican-heritage youth born in the United States who return to Mexico with their families. Our findings reveal belonging as a sociocultural practice that participants negotiated spatially and relationally, chiefly by making their US-born status…
Descriptors: Mexican Americans, Citizenship, Sociocultural Patterns, Self Concept
Cervera-Montejano, María-Dolores – Journal for the Study of Education and Development, 2022
Yucatec Maya theory of learning may be thought of as Learning by Observing and Pitching In to family and community endeavours. Children learn everyday and specialized tasks by observing and pitching in. This mode of learning is embedded in children's developmental niche in which parental ethnotheories play the central role. I present results from…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Learning Processes, Child Development, Language Acquisition
Chamoux, Marie-Noëlle – Journal for the Study of Education and Development, 2022
In Nahuatl-speaking villages located in the north of the state of Puebla, family and community educational practices adhere to the Learning by Observing and Pitching In to family and community endeavours model (LOPI). Attentive observation is encouraged as children's principal method of learning. Co-presence is favoured by the adult educators as a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, American Indian Languages, Learning Processes, American Indian Education
Elisheba Kiru – International Dialogues on Education, 2023
Globally, there is considerable investment in education technologies leading to increased attention from stakeholders (Trucano, 2017). For a deeper understanding about the implementation of various technologies, research is needed to examine how teachers are incorporating them in teaching and learning. This study focused on eight countries to…
Descriptors: Teacher Collaboration, Technology Integration, Information Technology, Teaching Methods
Scott, Jessica A.; Kasun, G. Sue – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2021
Little is known about the educational experiences of deaf children in Mexico. Schools for the deaf exist, but no research has examined instructional practices for children in these contexts. In this study, we adopt a sociocultural framework for language acquisition to document and understand how teachers at a bilingual (Mexican Sign Language and…
Descriptors: Deafness, Learning Processes, Teaching Methods, Sign Language
de la Fuente, Tatiana Estefania Galvan; Flores, Jesus Eduardo Fong – MEXTESOL Journal, 2021
Second language classroom interaction has unique characteristics. The purpose of this paper is to describe the linguistic resources that teachers draw on to encourage social interaction in the EFL classroom. This examination includes a detailed analysis of the practical activities teachers engage in, focusing on their use of linguistic repertoires…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Mexicans, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
Munoz Cantu, Luisa Margarita – ProQuest LLC, 2019
From a sociocultural perspective, identity is understood as constructed through active negotiations with others (Gee, 2006; Lantolf, 2009). Language constitutes a mediation tool used to create meanings in new social and cultural contexts as individuals become members of new communities of practice (CoP). In doing so, an ongoing process of sharing…
Descriptors: Bilingual Teachers, Professional Identity, Sociocultural Patterns, Teaching Methods
Lagunas, Rosalva Mojica – International Review of Education, 2019
Although more than a million people still speak Nahuatl, this number is rapidly diminishing. Historically, Nahuatl was the dominant language of Coatepec de los Costales, a small village in Guerrero, Mexico. The last 50 years have seen a pronounced shift there from Nahuatl to Spanish. The ultimate cause of language shift is a disruption in…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Spanish, American Indian History, Language Maintenance
Laura Enriqueta Mendoza-Fierro – ProQuest LLC, 2020
This dissertation aims to contribute knowledge to the literature about ESOL students' digital literacy practices related to educational purposes. I studied the varied digital literacy practices the students used as mediating tools to perform their university activities (e.g., crossing to come to school, communicate with classmates/instructors…
Descriptors: Digital Literacy, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
Kalman, Judy; Reyes, Iliana – Prospects: Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 2016
In this article, we explore the meanings of literacy, and more specifically of reading, in the Mexican context from a sociocultural perspective and as a social practice, underlining the technologies, competence, knowledge, beliefs, and values that permeate literacy use. We consider the historical, cultural, and multilingual specificities of…
Descriptors: Literacy, Literacy Education, Disadvantaged, Mexicans
Paradise, Ruth; Robles, Adriana – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2016
This article presents an ethnographic description of parents' and other community members' participation in the everyday life of two rural schools in indigenous Mexican communities. Adults and children, together with school authorities, transform their schools by introducing a collective orientation that contrasts with the emphasis on individual…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Mexicans, Learning Experience, Culturally Relevant Education
Fernández, Manual; Wegerif, Rupert; Mercer, Neil; Rojas-Drummond, Sylvia – Journal of Classroom Interaction, 2015
The linked concepts of "scaffolding" and the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) were originally applied to the context of asymmetrical teaching and learning with a teacher or adult explicitly supporting a learner, usually a child, to achieve tasks beyond their ability when working alone. In this paper we investigate how these concepts…
Descriptors: Sociocultural Patterns, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Comparative Analysis, Intervention