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Kevin King – English in Education, 2025
This paper provides educators a foothold in the tricky terrain of metaphor, its theoretical underpinnings and pedagogical possibilities. Metaphor provides us with a means of comprehending domains of experience that do not have a preconceptual structure of their own. Conceptual metaphors permit mental imagery from sensorimotor domains to hold sway…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, English Teachers, High School Teachers, College Faculty
Haglund, Jesper – Science & Education, 2017
Entropy is often introduced to students through the use of the disorder metaphor. However, many weaknesses and limitations of this metaphor have been identified, and it has therefore been argued that it is more harmful than useful in teaching. For instance, under the influence of the disorder metaphor, students tend to focus on spatial…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Figurative Language, Language Usage, Misconceptions
Hovardas, Tasos; Korfiatis, Konstantinos – Science & Education, 2011
The "Balance of Nature" metaphor is a pervasive idea in ecology. However, the scientific community acknowledged during the last decades that equilibrium conditions are rare, while disturbance events are not uncommon. We suggest that the exclusive teaching of the "Balance of Nature" metaphor produces cultural, scientific and learning misconceptions…
Descriptors: Intervention, Environmental Education, Figurative Language, Ecology
Brown, Simon; Salter, Susan – Advances in Physiology Education, 2010
Analogies are often used in science, but students may not appreciate their significance, and so the analogies can be misunderstood or discounted. For this reason, educationalists often express concern about the use of analogies in teaching. Given the important place of analogies in the discourse of science, it is necessary that students are…
Descriptors: Science Education, Logical Thinking, Teaching Methods, Concept Mapping
Hawkins, B. Denise – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2011
In this article, the author profiles Dolores E. Cross, who, during her more than 30-year academic career, has advocated for multicultural education, championed equal education access for all students, and blazed trails as the first African-American female president of Chicago State University and the first female president of Morris Brown College.…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Equal Education, Black Colleges, College Administration
Klabbers, Jan H. G. – Simulation & Gaming, 2009
Since its introduction in academia and professional practice during the 1950s, gaming has been linked to simulation. Although both fields have a few important characteristics in common, they are distinct in their form and underlying theories of knowledge and methodology. Nevertheless, in the literature, hybrid terms such as "gaming/simulation" and…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Figurative Language, Simulation, Definitions
Whalley, Peter – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2007
The instructional metaphor is an important bridge to understanding, particularly when students are undertaking tasks that are conceptually difficult and outside their previous experience. It is suggested that the limitations of the implicit metaphor of the procedural control languages are the main cause of the problems experienced with delivering…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Cognitive Structures, Difficulty Level, Concept Formation
Duncan-Andrade, Jeffrey M. R. – Harvard Educational Review, 2009
In this essay, Jeff Duncan-Andrade explores the concept of hope, which was central to the Obama campaign, as essential for nurturing urban youth. He first identifies three forms of "false hope"--hokey hope, mythical hope, and hope deferred--pervasive in and peddled by many urban schools. Discussion of these false hopes then gives way to…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Figurative Language, Educational Practices, Urban Youth
Carpenter, Lorelei; Austin, Helena – Qualitative Inquiry, 2007
This project explores the experiences of women who mother children with ADHD. The authors use the metaphor of the text and the margin. The text is the "motherhood myth" that describes a particular sort of "good" mothering. The margin is the space beyond that text. This marginal space is inhabited by some or all of the mothers they spoke with, some…
Descriptors: Mothers, Figurative Language, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Females
Brookes, David T.; Etkina, Eugenia – Physical Review Special Topics - Physics Education Research, 2007
This paper introduces a theory about the role of language in learning physics. The theory is developed in the context of physics students and physicists talking and writing about the subject of quantum mechanics. We found that physicists' language encodes different varieties of analogical models through the use of grammar and conceptual metaphor.…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Language Role, Quantum Mechanics, Physics
Green, Matthew J.; Mitchell, Don C. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2006
Using evidence from eye-tracking studies, Van Gompel, Pickering, Pearson, and Liversedge (2005) have argued against currently implemented constraint-based models of syntactic ambiguity resolution. The case against these competition models is based on a mismatch between reported patterns of reading data and the putative predictions of the models.…
Descriptors: Syntax, Predictor Variables, Reading Processes, Sentence Structure
Goldstein, Lisa S. – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2005
Becoming a teacher is hard work. A sizable body of research indicates that student teaching internships or other field-based practica are a particularly difficult part of this process. Many preservice teachers have misconceptions about the work of teachers and teaching; when they begin their field placements they often feel disillusioned by the…
Descriptors: Student Teaching, Preservice Teachers, Teacher Education Programs, Mythology