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Margaret Lee – Learning Professional, 2025
In this article, the author describes learning principles that are grounded in Daniel Willingham's (2017) simple model of the mind and suggest professional learning strategies aligned with them. These strategies are consistent with the Learning Designs standard of the Standards for Professional Learning, which states, in part, "Educators use…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Instructional Design, Cognitive Science, Standards
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Campbell, Stephen R. – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2020
This talk provides the speaker's perspective on how the fledgling new area of educational neuroscience has emerged from a disenchantment with brain-based education, through various multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary, and transdisciplinary initiates and collaborations involving educationists and neuroscientists. Specific examples and results…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Education, Brain, Mathematics Education
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Jamie K. Opper – Teaching of Psychology, 2025
Introduction: As higher education continues to prioritize diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI), cognitive/behavioral neuroscience and other physiologically based psychology courses may face challenges incorporating DEI issues into the curriculum relative to other subfields of psychology. Statement of the Problem: Instructors of these courses may…
Descriptors: Cognitive Science, Behavioral Sciences, Neurosciences, Psychology
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Varma, Sashank; Blair, Kristen P.; Schwartz, Daniel L. – Research in Mathematics Education, 2019
This chapter considers psychological and neuroscience research on how people understand the integers, and how educators can foster this understanding. The core proposal is that new, abstract mathematical concepts are built upon known, concrete mathematical concepts. For the integers, the relevant foundation is the natural numbers, which are…
Descriptors: Cognitive Science, Mathematical Concepts, Numbers, Psychological Patterns
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Clark, John – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2017
Those in education committed to folk psychology (everyday talk about ourselves) reject the advances of neuroscience as the way to explain learning. Winch is one of the most determined defenders of folk psychology. Yet his account of folk psychology is weak and his rejection of neuroscience is deeply flawed. This article sets out Winch's…
Descriptors: Folk Culture, Cognitive Science, Psychology, Neurosciences
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Stringer, Steve; Tommerdahl, Jodi – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2015
As the field of Mind, Brain, and Education seeks new ways to credibly bridge the gap between neuroscience, the cognitive sciences, and education, various connections are being developed and tested. This article presents a framework and offers examples of one approach, predictive modeling within a virtual educational system that can include…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Brain, Neurosciences, Cognitive Science
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Ng, Betsy; Ong, Aloysius Kian Keong – Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2018
The purpose of this article is to offer insights into current understanding of digital learning environments (DLEs) from a neuroscientific perspective. Cognitive neuroscience methods are increasingly applied in educational research to examine the neural underpinnings of learning. As such, neuroscientific evidence can play an important role in…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Higher Education
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Morgan, Patricia Fay – Journal of Transformative Education, 2015
This article explores the history of the current reemergence of a contemplative orientation in education. While referencing an ancient history, it primarily examines the history of contemporary contemplative education through three significant stages, focusing on the third. The first was arguably initiated by the introduction of Buddhism to the…
Descriptors: Educational History, Religious Factors, Religion, Spiritual Development
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Patton, Michael Quinn – American Journal of Evaluation, 2014
Theory and practice are integrated in the human brain. Situation recognition and response are key to this integration. Scholars of decision making and expertise have found that people with great expertise are more adept at situational recognition and intentional about their decision-making processes. Several interdisciplinary fields of inquiry…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Neurosciences, Recognition (Achievement)
Sparks, Sarah D. – Education Week, 2012
Neuroscience exploded into the education conversation more than 20 years ago, in step with the evolution of personal computers and the rise of the Internet, and policymakers hoped medical discoveries could likewise help doctors and teachers understand the "hard wiring" of the brain. That conception of how the brain works, exacerbated by the…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Cognitive Science, Cognitive Psychology, Behavioral Sciences
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Kantrowitz, Andrea – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2012
Over the past 10 to 15 years the twin fields of neuroscience and cognitive psychology have exploded. Through a number of new imaging technologies, such as functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) scans, scientists have been able to look into the living brain in ways never before possible. What they have…
Descriptors: Freehand Drawing, Cognitive Science, Neurosciences, Cognitive Psychology
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Lally, J. Ronald – Kappa Delta Pi Record, 2012
Much of what gets in the way of learning in elementary, middle, and high schools has to do with lessons missed, skills undeveloped, and experiences in the world that have shaped the early development of the brain. Neuroscience tells people that early experience, even experience in the womb, is the soil in which the young brain grows and that early…
Descriptors: Brain, Early Experience, Neurosciences, Neuropsychology