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Alexander, Patricia A. – Educational Psychologist, 2017
In this commentary, theoretical principles pertaining to the role of epistemic cognition in teaching and professional development, synthesized from the content of this special issue on reflection and reflexivity, are proffered. These theoretical notions are then followed with a critical analysis of specific challenges encountered in enacting these…
Descriptors: Reflection, Theory Practice Relationship, Reflective Teaching, Faculty Development
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Gebhardt, Richard – Writing Instructor, 2011
"Process and Intention: A Bridge from Theory to Classroom" is rooted in a time when intuitive, experience-based awareness that we should "Teach Writing as a Process Not Product" (Murray 3) was bolstered by systematic research into the complexity of writing. Lots of years have passed since those days, so as a reminder, the author mentions five…
Descriptors: Intention, Writing Processes, Writing Instruction, Cognitive Processes
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Young, Michael F.; Slota, Stephen T.; Lai, Benedict – Review of Educational Research, 2012
In large measure the authors agree with Tobias and Fletcher's (2012) comments stating that clearer operational definitions of game features are needed to enable research on games and learning. The authors cannot accept that games are a subset of simulations, preferring to identify instances when games and simulations overlap and when they do not.…
Descriptors: Definitions, Cognitive Processes, Academic Achievement, Trend Analysis
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Holgersen, Sven-Erik – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2010
The role of the body in music experience is extremely complex and multifaceted, and this is exactly what makes it interesting to discuss the implications such notions as "body consciousness" and "somaesthetics" may have for music experience. Richard Shusterman generally argues that human beings can achieve enhanced life quality through increased…
Descriptors: Human Body, Role, Music, Aesthetics
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Pearce, Cathie – Qualitative Inquiry, 2010
Using the notion of a suggestion, or rather charting the life of suggestions, this article considers the happenings of chance and embodiment as the "problems that got away." The life of suggestions helps us to ask how connectivities are made, how desire functions, and how "immanence" rather than "transcendence" can open up the politics and ethics…
Descriptors: Ethics, Research Methodology, Educational Research, Educational Philosophy
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Powell, Kimberly – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2010
In this essay, the author first addresses the theme of disciplined somatic training and its relationship to self-awareness and transformation. Her attention is focused specifically on the chapter on Ludwig Wittgenstein, in which Richard Shusterman presents and then elaborates upon the philosopher's connections between conscious bodily feelings and…
Descriptors: Human Body, Aesthetics, Ethics, Politics
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Shusterman, Richard – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2010
The author of this article responds to the seven papers in this journal that commented on his book titled "Body Consciousness: A Philosophy of Mindfulness and Somaesthetics." Shusterman responds to comments and criticisms made on the subjects of (1) embodiment and gender; (2) Asian cultural dimensions; (3) the somaesthetics of music; (4)…
Descriptors: Human Body, Cognitive Processes, Holistic Approach, Music
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Yagelski, Robert P. – English Education, 2009
In this frankly utopian essay, Robert Yagelski's theme is the transformative power of writing as an act in and of itself. He makes us reevaluate our motivation and point for teaching writing in schools and asks us to consider an agenda that will quite frankly scare teachers as he explains why we need an ontology of writing. (Contains 6 notes.)
Descriptors: Authors, Writing (Composition), Emotional Experience, Group Activities
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Gergen, Kenneth J. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2008
Given the centennial of the publication of the first two textbooks in social psychology, the one by William McDougall and the other by Edward Alsworth Ross, the author stresses that it is an auspicious time for reflection. It is a time to reconsider the movements into which these volumes were secreted, and the resulting trajectories of…
Descriptors: Social Psychology, Intellectual Disciplines, Development, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Glevey, Kwame E. – London Review of Education, 2006
How children are guided in the development of their thinking is now crucial in the twenty-first century. Over the past decades special thinking skills programmes have been developed to enhance thinking but these programmes have so far been unable to produce clear evidence to support their effectiveness. This article argues that due to the complex…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Thinking Skills, Cognitive Processes, Skill Development