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Dave Nagel; Bruce Potter – Learning Professional, 2025
Effective collective learning demands that educators be fully present and actively engaged--both mentally and physically--during professional learning community (PLC) meetings. When teams build norms that explicitly support a culture of presence, honesty, and continuous reflection, they create an environment where every educator can contribute…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Teacher Participation, Group Dynamics, Leadership Role
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Yates, Chris – Action Learning: Research and Practice, 2023
What is it about an Action Learning set that has survived and thrived for a quarter of a century? Although now with only one of the original set members, nevertheless this self-managing set can claim to have 'lived' from 1997 to 2022, still going strong. And, as Socrates said, since the unexamined life is not worth living, this article inspects…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Meetings, Group Dynamics, Self Management
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Jiunwen Wang – Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education, 2025
Purpose: This essay articulates the vision of a flourishing classroom, which arguably is the ultimate goal of a positive approach to management education. By demonstrating how improvisational theater is the epitome of a flourishing ensemble, this essay proposes that there are some lessons educators can glean from improvisational theater in order…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Group Dynamics, Classroom Communication, Trust (Psychology)
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Elahe Javadi; Judith Gebauer; Season Tanner – Journal of Information Systems Education, 2025
In this teaching tip, we describe our approach to elevating the quality of group work in an information technology (IT) project management course by implementing three practices of experiential and peer learning that work more effectively when combined. The first practice addresses slacking in group work by applying a flipped classroom style that…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Flipped Classroom, Information Technology, Group Activities
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Orlando R. Serrano Jr. – Journal of Museum Education, 2023
This article draws on my time as a classroom teacher and my experience as a museum educator affiliated with the Center for Restorative History to argue for learning that centers relationships over education that centers measurement. The world we live in is shaped by a logic that prioritizes categorization, regulation, and metrics measured against…
Descriptors: Restorative Practices, Interpersonal Relationship, Peace, Critical Theory
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Jaclyn Carter; Patti Dyjur; Kimberley A. Grant – International Journal for Academic Development, 2025
While scholarly writing on trust in academic development (AD) is still relatively limited, current literature explores trust within a number of institutional relationships. Here, we reflect specifically on the relationship between academic developers (ADs) and faculty groups, consider how we as ADs aim to build rapport and trust when supporting…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Trust (Psychology), College Faculty, Teacher Role
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David Coghlan; Vivienne Brady; Denise O'Leary; Geralyn Hynes – Educational Action Research, 2024
This article describes how, the authors, as members of an action research writing group, responded to a comment about feeling vulnerable in risking bringing their work-in-progress to the group and in giving feedback to colleagues by adopting a cooperative inquiry approach to explore vulnerability and risk in the group. In cooperative inquiry group…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Groups, Action Research, Risk
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Cimino, Aldo – Journal of College and Character, 2023
Some collegiate anti-hazing programs are employing anti-hazing messaging that consists of exaggerated, misleading, or dubious claims. These claims are typically phrased in a way that is either a poor representation of the overall state of the research literature on hazing or oversells the findings from a single study. The failure to prioritize…
Descriptors: Hazing, Communication Strategies, Misinformation, College Students
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Lorraine L. Taylor; Madeleine A. Butler – Decision Sciences Journal of Innovative Education, 2025
Compared to more complex personality assessments, Wired That Way by Marita Littauer, presents four personality types that students find easy to understand and internalize: Popular Sanguine, Powerful Choleric, Perfect Melancholy, and Peaceful Phlegmatic. Students' awareness of their own and their peers' classification in this comprehensive…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Personality Measures, Student Projects, Group Activities
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Odunsi, Ifeoluwatobi Abiodun – Communication Teacher, 2023
The corporate migration activity is designed to help students connect practical concepts of how language creates power within organizational structures. By engaging in this activity, students will demonstrate and observe how unclear language, (in)effective communication, and disorganization (re)create and sustain power within an organization. This…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Power Structure, Corporations, Communication (Thought Transfer)
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SepĂșlveda, Samentha – Communication Teacher, 2023
This single-class activity augments the popular desert island activity to include a secret insider who aims to influence their group covertly. The motivation for this augmented activity is twofold: (1) to highlight and dispel notions of invulnerability to groupthink and (2) to provide an opportunity to engage in small-group decision making. To…
Descriptors: Group Dynamics, Social Influences, Interpersonal Communication, Persuasive Discourse
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Swartz, Barbara Ann; DeRosa, Katherine – Middle School Journal, 2023
Groupwork provides opportunities to learn important communication and collaboration skills, but how can we ensure all students are participating equitably while also engaging with the academic content when working in groups? Group-worthy tasks provide participation structures needed for students to engage with the content as well as develop and…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Teamwork, Cooperation, Group Dynamics
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Campbell, Tye G.; Yeo, Sheunghyun – British Educational Research Journal, 2022
Over the past three decades, research and policy in many geographic regions has promoted a shift from direct, lecture-oriented mathematics instruction to inquiry-based, "dialogic" forms of instruction. While theory and research support dialogic instructional approaches, some have noted that the complexities of dialogic teaching make it…
Descriptors: Observation, Mathematics Skills, Thinking Skills, Inquiry
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Renee Owen; Simon Priest; Andre Kotze – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2024
This conceptual article examines the role of team-building in outdoor learning, reviews group development theory in relation to teamwork, and outlines the Behaviour Analysis model as a tool to facilitate team-building. Working with this foundation, the theory and model are combined with discussion about team, leader, and facilitator behaviours at…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Teamwork, Interaction, Emotional Intelligence
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Bayne, Hannah B.; Ocampo, Robert; Wilson, Tawanda – Counselor Education and Supervision, 2023
Counselor training that does not attend to dynamics of cultural differences and oppression can run the risk of promoting false empathy that serves the voyeuristic purpose of the counselor rather than achieving accurate empathy for the client. In this article, we discuss the differences between true and false empathy and how Whiteness, racial…
Descriptors: Counselor Training, Cultural Differences, Empathy, Racism
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