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Hodkinson, Alan; Smith, Christine – Education 3-13, 2018
Coming some four years after the introduction of the new National Curriculum, this article considers the media storm and debate around the concept of chronology and how it should be taught in schools. Drawing on empirical evidence, the article strongly suggests that young children are capable of grasping complex temporal concepts, specifically…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, Curriculum Development, History Instruction
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Higgins, David; Galloway, Laura – Industry and Higher Education, 2014
The field of entrepreneurship has struggled with fundamental questions concerning the subject's nature and purpose. To whom and to what means are educational and training agendas ultimately directed? Such questions have become of central importance to policy makers, practitioners and academics alike. There are suggestions that university business…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Entrepreneurship, Reflection
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Penaluna, Andrew; Coates, Jackie; Penaluna, Kathryn – Education & Training, 2010
Purpose: Enabling entrepreneurial creativity is a key aim of UK Government; however, there is a dearth of constructively aligned models of teaching and assessment. This paper aims to introduce design-based pedagogies and to highlight cognitive approaches that develop innovative mindsets; it seeks to indicate their propensity for adoption in…
Descriptors: Evidence, Creativity, Leisure Time, Money Management
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Sicilia-Camacho, Alvaro; Brown, David – Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, 2008
Background: Teaching styles in physical education (PE) found prominence through Muska Mosston's teaching styles "Spectrum" model. Mosston's Spectrum has been remarkably successful and its logic currently underpins the conceptualisation of teaching styles in many PE practices in Western education systems, including those in the United…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Teaching Styles, Models, Teaching Methods
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Johnson, Colleen – Early Child Development and Care, 2002
This article explores drama's potential for fostering metacognition, arguing that for effective learning, children need to be given access to activities in which they gain deeper understanding about their own thinking processes. To this end, and with reference to practice in primary education, a case is offered for the increased status of drama,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Curriculum Development, Drama, Elementary Secondary Education
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Cunliffe, Leslie – Oxford Review of Education, 2005
This article explores and attempts to rectify current conceptual confusion found in secondary art education in the UK between procedural knowledge or "knowing how" and declarative knowledge or "knowing that". The paper argues that current practice confuses procedural knowledge with declarative knowledge. A corollary is that…
Descriptors: Art Education, Secondary Education, Cognitive Processes, Thinking Skills
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Bennett, Judith; Lubben, Fred – International Journal of Science Education, 2006
This paper describes briefly the development and key features of one of the major context-based courses for upper high school students, Salters Advanced Chemistry. It goes on to consider the research evidence on the impact of the course, focusing on teachers' views, and, in particular, on students' affective and cognitive responses. The research…
Descriptors: Chemistry, High School Students, Student Reaction, Science Curriculum
Kimbell, Richard – 1995
This report seeks to answer a set of related questions in the context of the United Kingdom: where technology education comes from, what it contributes to the curriculum and what its unique qualities are, and how excellence in students should be assessed. Part 1 describes and analyzes the evolutionary steps in the emergence of technology in the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Curriculum Development, Design, Education Work Relationship
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Knight, Peter – Oxford Review of Education, 1989
Discusses how empathy is promoted in the United Kingdom's National Curriculum. Notes that the concept is ambiguous, especially as it is used in the subject of history. Describes how this concept impedes planning, teaching, and assessment. Suggests that understanding how children reason is more productive that making assumptions about how they…
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Cognitive Processes, Curriculum Development, Educational Practices
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Thorpe, Mary – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 1995
Addresses one of three major challenges facing distance education--its claimed overreliance on behaviorist approaches to teaching and learning. Maintains that distance learning encourages students to review their own learning approaches and to be more proactive about their study methods. (CFR)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Restructuring, Curriculum Development, Distance Education