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Hannah L. Robinson; Sarah E. Rose; Jade M. Elliott; Romina A. Vivaldi – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
Teachers frequently use humour, but it is unclear how this affects the academic experiences and psychosocial development of students. There is sparsity in the literature regarding the impact of teachers' humour on adolescent students. Teachers and the use of humour in the classroom have the potential to foster healthy development of social and…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Teaching Methods, Humor, Teacher Student Relationship
Keren, Lior; Kapon, Shulamit – Science & Education, 2023
Studies on integrated STEM education and the integration of engineering practices into the instruction of science have called for the need to better understand the similarities, differences and interrelations between science and engineering, as well the naïve views often associated with them. The current study contributes to this scholarly work…
Descriptors: Scientists, Engineering, Technical Occupations, Stereotypes
Carter, Katherine – Environmental Education Research, 2023
Television has the potential to be a vector for mainstream audiences to learn about climate change and feel motivated to act. Comedic framings of climate change, while well-studied in television news and late-night comedies, remain under-explored in scripted television comedies. The goal of this study was to use frame analysis to understand…
Descriptors: Television Viewing, Climate, Comedy, Humor
Zhou Tianli; Nor Shahila Mansor; Guoqiang Liu; Peng Junhua – SAGE Open, 2024
In recent times, the number of studies examining the use of humor in teaching English as a second language (ESL) in Asian countries has increased as researchers have acknowledged the positive effects that humor has on language teaching. This study presents a systematic review focused on the use of humor in ESL teaching within Asian countries. Its…
Descriptors: Second Language Instruction, English (Second Language), Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods
Caitlin E. Smith Sockbeson; Leigh R. Hartman; John C. Shaw – Management Teaching Review, 2024
Popular culture references have demonstrated usefulness as a pedagogical tool as they enhance student engagement and information retention. Use of the American version of the hit mockumentary TV series "The Office" has demonstrated pedagogical effectiveness in management, organizational behavior, and human resources courses. The show…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Television, Office Management, Office Occupations Education
Grace-Odeleye, Beverlyn E.; Santiago, Jessica – International Journal of Educational Leadership and Management, 2019
This review examined the literature addressing humor as a potential trait that may enhance leadership styles in higher educational administration. It provides an overview of current humor research from several disciplines of major contemporary leadership theories and styles in higher educational administration and develop and propose a theoretical…
Descriptors: Humor, Leadership Styles, College Administration, Leadership Effectiveness
Lacy, Meagan – Children's Literature in Education, 2015
This literary analysis examines the emergence of children of alcoholics narratives and their growth from "resource" texts to literary subgenre. While early texts offer useful information about parental alcoholism, they are also limited. Namely, they do not adequately mirror the diversity of children, families, and problems associated…
Descriptors: Children, Alcoholism, Parent Influence, Parents
Hirsch, Miriam – Journal of Jewish Education, 2017
This article is based upon a qualitative research study that examined 95 school stories written by Jewish female teacher candidates in an undergraduate education course. Many candidates wrote inspirational or humorous stories about growth and development or a special teacher. However, over one third of the narratives described painful Jewish day…
Descriptors: Judaism, Day Schools, Teacher Educators, Teacher Education
Reddington, Elizabeth – Working Papers in TESOL & Applied Linguistics, 2015
The past two decades have seen a growing interest in the role of humor and play in second-language (L2) learning and teaching. Drawing on the methods of conversation analysis, discourse analysis, and sociolinguistics, researchers have sought to understand how teachers and students "do" humor and play, what functions humor and play serve,…
Descriptors: Humor, Play, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
Roesky, Herbert W.; Kennepohl, Dietmar – Journal of Chemical Education, 2008
Cartoons are part of a much larger effort by chemical educators to introduce activities to enhance learning and student participation. There are a variety of cartoon types used in teaching that have been evaluated and discussed within the chemical education community including caricatures, comics, and concept cartoons. This article focuses on the…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Chemistry, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods
Gross, Lawrence W. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2007
The literature on humor generally focuses on the nature of incongruities as the root of humor. In this article, the author takes the examination of humor one step further by meditating on the mental frame involved with humor. He is interested in what cultural experiences would predispose the individuals within a given culture to have a sense of…
Descriptors: Religion, Humor, American Indians, American Indian Education
Colker, Laura – Young Children, 2008
Ever wonder what draws teachers to the field of early childhood education? Do you have the personal attributes needed? Unlike knowledge or skills, which can be developed, dispositions are personal characteristics involving the socioemotional and spiritual realms, rooted in feelings and beliefs. Colker reviews the literature on teacher…
Descriptors: Teacher Characteristics, Early Childhood Education, Young Children, Teacher Effectiveness
Pagliano, Paul J.; Zambone, Alana M.; Kelley, Pat – British Journal of Visual Impairment, 2007
Humor is a highly regarded attribute and often forms the basis of childhood friendships. As much humor is visual, children with visual impairment are particularly vulnerable to missing out on this type of development. Recent research indicates that children can be taught to develop their sense of humor. Therefore, children with visual impairment…
Descriptors: Blindness, Humor, Visual Impairments, Literature Reviews
Loizou, Eleni – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2006
This study aimed to investigate the explanations of 80 kindergarten children on pictorial humor. The children were asked to observe and describe a specific visual stimulus, and say whether they considered it as funny providing their rationale. The study was developed on the basis of humor being an incongruity thus the data were examined against…
Descriptors: Young Children, Humor, Cognitive Ability, Kindergarten