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Michael S. Palmer; Judith A. Giering – Innovative Higher Education, 2024
To help higher education instructors, academic support personnel, and institutional leadership better identify, encourage, incentivize, fund, support and assess pedagogical innovation, we describe herein a valid taxonomy capable of precisely characterizing the range of pedagogical innovations in higher education. The Taxonomy of Pedagogical…
Descriptors: Taxonomy, Educational Innovation, Teaching Methods, Vocabulary
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Reinke, Luke T.; Stephan, Michelle; Ayan-Civak, Rukiye; Casto, Amanda R. – Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education, 2023
In response to recent trends in the field of mathematics education, real-world contexts are frequently found in curricula and classrooms across the world. Numerous scholars contend that, in addition to making instruction more engaging and relevant, rich, imaginable contexts can provide a semantic grounding that helps students deeply understand…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Mathematical Concepts, Concept Formation, Teaching Methods
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Mehmet Kasim Koyuncu – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
This article presents a new teaching method that embraces media production as a principle in education, aimed at effectively conveying the philosophy of mathematics. Based upon this premise, the content of the philosophy of mathematics course was reimagined as a digital newspaper, reminiscent of past printed editions. This transformation was…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Preservice Teachers, Mathematics Teachers, Philosophy
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Miroslaw Pawlak – Foreign Language Annals, 2025
Although the distinction between explicit and implicit (automatized) knowledge of second or foreign language (L2) is of crucial importance to second language acquisition (SLA) theory and research, it has thus far not been directly applied to L2 pronunciation. The paper attempts to fill this gap by making an initial attempt to illustrate the…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Pronunciation Instruction, Pronunciation, Language Acquisition
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Tutal, Özgür – Journal of Educational Technology, 2023
Context-based learning is an instructional approach that prioritizes the use of real-world contexts and authentic situations to create meaningful learning experiences for students. Numerous individual studies conducted in Turkey have explored the impact of context-based learning on students' attitudes towards the course and motivation, which are…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Context Effect, Student Attitudes, Students
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Reinhard Hochmuth; Jana Peters; Frode Rønning; Carl Winsløw – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2025
The production and use of explicit models of mathematics are important elements of research in Didactics of Mathematics. In this paper, we present and compare two different European approaches to didactical modelling. The first, centred around the notion of basic idea (Grundvorstellung), arose in German-speaking countries as a development within…
Descriptors: Modeling (Psychology), Mathematics, Educational Research, Teaching Methods
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Davis, Elizabeth A.; Palincsar, Annemarie S. – Science Education, 2023
As part of learning to teach, teachers must learn to use a range of teaching practices. In this longitudinal study the authors explore how novice elementary teachers learn to engage in a set of high-leverage science teaching practices, such as "leading a science sensemaking discussion" and "setting up and managing small-group…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Novices, Preservice Teachers, Science Instruction
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Rhona Brown; Michele Schweisfurth – Comparative Education Review, 2024
"Context matters" has been an adage and a mantra in the field of comparative and international education since its earliest days. However, knowing which things matter, how and to whom, and also how they affect each other places challenging demands on comparative researchers. In this article, we outline different ways that comparativists…
Descriptors: International Education, Comparative Education, Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods
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Janina Eberhart; Donna Bryce; Sara T. Baker – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2024
Background: Self-regulation is crucial for children's learning and development. Several studies have explored children's inter-individual differences in self-regulation, but little is known about sources of intra-individual variation. Aims: This study addressed the variability of children's self-regulation across typical classroom situations and…
Descriptors: Self Management, Student Behavior, Executive Function, Young Children
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Saana Mehtälä; Markus Salo; Henri Pirkkalainen – Educational Research, 2024
Background: A wide variety of information and communication technologies (ICTs) is increasingly embedded into numerous facets of everyday life. Young people, in particular, are often viewed as eager and skilful users of new ICTs who have various educational and leisure-related purposes for ICT use. Although school and home lives have traditionally…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Computer Mediated Communication, Information Technology, Teacher Attitudes
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Heidi Lammassaari; Lauri Hietajärvi; Kirsti Lonka; Sufen Chen; Chin-Chung Tsai – Educational Studies, 2024
Teachers' epistemic beliefs may have consequences for their pedagogical work. We used previously developed scales to assess epistemic beliefs that teachers hold about learning, knowledge and knowing, and how they report putting such ideas into practice. The scales consisted of self-reported Likert-type statements considering collaborative…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Beliefs, Epistemology, Foreign Countries
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Annaline Flint; Christine Margaret Rubie-Davies; Elizabeth Peterson – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
Teachers hold many beliefs, shaped by their educational knowledge, experiences, and cultural, social, historical, and political environments. These teacher beliefs, together with teacher characteristics and school context factors can influence cognitive processes, expectations, instructional decisions, and practices which could affect learning…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Beliefs, Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Characteristics
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John Milne – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
The learning and teaching of reading continues to be a source of contention in New Zealand education. In recent years, proponents of structured literacy approaches have argued for more attention to be paid to what they term the "science of reading". They have emphasised skill development and argued against the inclusion of other…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Teaching Methods, Reading Skills, Skill Development
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Olufemi Timothy Adigun; Nhlanhla Mpofu; Mncedisi Christian Maphalala – Higher Education Quarterly, 2025
Higher education (HE) is considered to be the apex of all educational endeavours. Therefore, it is expected that student in various institutions of higher learning should be self-motivated for individualized synchronous and asynchronous learning. Lamentably, it seems that such expectation within the HE spaced is yet to be achieved. While…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Blended Learning, Independent Study, Higher Education
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Thomas Simpson; Lorcan Cronin; Paul Ellison; Thomas Hawkins; Evelyn Carnegie; David Marchant – Journal of Motor Learning and Development, 2025
In physical education (PE), the use of instruction and feedback is central to children's motor skill learning. Recently, it has been identified that instruction, and feedback, which promote OPTIMAL theory motor learning factors (e.g., an external focus of attention, enhanced expectancies, and autonomy support) can enhance children's motor…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Instruction, Feedback (Response), Psychomotor Skills
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