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Cory Legassic – LEARNing Landscapes, 2024
This piece offers a conceptual framework for collective care as pedagogy in higher education, and a proposition of how to theorize its orientations within anticolonial and feminist work on affect in education. First, I spotlight work that helps to define collective care. Next, I call on the concept of affective individualism as a way to describe…
Descriptors: Caring, Higher Education, Decolonization, Feminism
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Mijoo Kim; Seungyeon Park – Strategies: A Journal for Physical and Sport Educators, 2024
Physical educators may be hesitant to adopt cooperative learning in their classes because they are concerned that a focus on socioemotional learning may reduce motor skill development. However, cooperative learning can increase physical activity engagement and interpersonal skills. This article demonstrates what cooperative learning can look like…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Cooperative Learning, Interpersonal Competence, Teacher Role
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Wald, Navé; Harland, Tony – Teaching in Higher Education, 2022
This point for departure piece is about university students working together and working for each other in the context of Vygotsky's Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) and his concept of the 'more capable peer.' Much attention has been paid to what is learned, or the knowledge component of the ZPD. However, what seems to be absent in these…
Descriptors: Sociocultural Patterns, Learning Theories, Peer Relationship, Interpersonal Communication
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Gee, James Paul; Zhang, Qing Archer – Literacy Research: Theory, Method, and Practice, 2022
Educational research regularly claims, with lots of evidence, that humans learn from experience. However, experience is composed of outer and inner sensations. Thus, if humans learn from experience, we would expect that educational research would be replete with work on sensation. Yet sensation in the wild, outside laboratory studies, plays no…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Educational Research, Sensory Experience, Learning Processes
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Xu, Wen; Stahl, Garth – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2023
The teaching and learning of Chinese remains a fragile undertaking across all stages of Australian schooling. This paper reports on a practitioner inquiry into pedagogic practices and student engagement with disadvantaged primary school students in a Chinese as a Foreign Language (CFL) classroom in Sydney, Australia. Drawing upon studies of affect…
Descriptors: Chinese, Second Language Learning, Learner Engagement, Foreign Countries
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Bruna, Katherine Richardson; Farley, Jennifer; Bartholomay, Lyric – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2023
This article uses key concepts of Anzaldúan philosophy to describe the Mosquitoes & Me summer camp as "ciencia zurda" or "left-handed science." It details a day-in-the-life portrait of Elena, a first-generation Latina middle schooler, as she experiences the opportunities that Mosquitoes & Me provided for self-other…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Educational Philosophy, Summer Programs, Science Education
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Rosich, Gina R.; Lopez-Humphreys, Mayra – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2024
Teaching approaches are needed that can normalize students' process of exploring emotions related to their learning and support the internalization of the professional social work values (i.e. human rights and social justice). Within the literature on social work education, the importance of affective processes to support the students' learning of…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Learning Processes, Diversity, Social Justice
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Järvelä, Sanna; Gaševic, Dragan; Seppänen, Tapio; Pechenizkiy, Mykola; Kirschner, Paul A. – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2020
Collaborative learning (CL) can be a powerful method for sharing understanding between learners. To this end, strategic regulation of processes, such as cognition and affect (including metacognition, emotion and motivation) is key. Decades of research on self-regulated learning has advanced our understanding about the need for and complexity of…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Man Machine Systems, Affective Behavior, Cognitive Processes
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Perera, Kaushalya – Applied Linguistics, 2019
Memoirs and autobiographical writing on language learning provide perspectives on migration and residence in North America and Europe for the most part, where struggle and loss are some of the recurrent themes (Aneta Pavlenko 2001a; Besemeres 2004; Kinginger 2004a). An unaddressed aspect of foreign language learning remains the 'reverse'…
Descriptors: North Americans, Second Language Learning, Learning Experience, Females
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MacMahon, Stephanie; Leggett, Jack; Carroll, Annemaree – Information and Learning Sciences, 2020
Purpose: In a classroom, the teacher and other students play an important role in regulating individual and group learning. However, the sudden shift to remote and online learning, as a result of social isolation during COVID-19, has created a social disconnect, making these immediate regulatory supports less accessible. A need was identified for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Students, Electronic Learning, Distance Education
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Mishra Tarc, Aparna – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2023
This paper introduces researchers and scholars to psychosocial qualitative methods when researching affective aspects of classroom pedagogy. It theorises affect as felt processes that defy representation circulating in teaching and learning. Turning to the psychoanalytic field of infant observation, the author outlines the immense potential of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Teacher Student Relationship, Educational Research, Learning Processes
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Crutcher, Paul A. – Distance Learning, 2020
March 2020: The COVID-19 pandemic promoted K-12 and higher education institutions in North America to abruptly transition curricula to online and hybrid formats. As the literature notes, schools discussed digital distance learning programs long before this particular moment in the spring semester. Yet the poignant lesson from the transition had…
Descriptors: Empathy, Distance Education, Electronic Learning, Affective Behavior
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Katherine Burlingame – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2023
Learning by doing has become a common phrase in the scholarship of teaching and learning as research continues to emphasize the benefits of active student engagement in higher education. Instead of passive vessels to be filled with information, students become the architects of their own education. While traditional ways of teaching focus on what…
Descriptors: College Students, Geography, Educational Research, Active Learning
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Jelinski, Nicolas A.; Perrone, Sharon V.; Blair, Hava K.; Fabian, Morgan L. – Natural Sciences Education, 2020
Interacting with practitioners and understanding multiple, contradictory, and complex perspectives is an important skill for effectively managing terrestrial resources in the 21st century. Addressing these needs requires innovative approaches in higher education that elevate student learning outcomes and emphasize the affective learning domain…
Descriptors: Soil Science, Course Descriptions, Teaching Methods, Educational Innovation
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Porto, Melina; Zembylas, Michalinos – Intercultural Communication Education, 2022
In this article we discuss how the design of a higher education language course can challenge the power of sentimentality in the classroom. In particular, the paper analyses the role of literature in intercultural language education through the lens of affect theory, while focusing on minimizing sentimentality in the classroom, especially when the…
Descriptors: Role, Multicultural Education, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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