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Showing 1 to 15 of 35 results Save | Export
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Ruth Irwin – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
Education is concerned with the production of intelligence. Is AI intelligent? and what are the implications for educating humanity? Samuel Butler makes the case that machinery emerges in co-relation with the evolution of humanity. In other words, the evolution of machines relies on the human intervention for reproduction, and the evolution of…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Artificial Intelligence, Educational Philosophy, Humanism
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Albertyn, Ruth – Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 2022
In this conceptual article, I present a hierarchical view of the iterative process of learning and development as applied to the doctoral context and make a conceptual case for Doctoral Intelligence based on an analogous link to Cultural Intelligence. There are four proposed Doctoral Intelligence domains: Knowing (developing expertise), Doing…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Doctoral Students, Intelligence, Thinking Skills
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Oleksiyenko, Anatoly V.; Jackson, Liz – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
With increasing influence of illiberalism, freedom should not be considered or interpreted lightly. Post-truth contexts provide grounds for alt-right movements to capture and pervert notions of freedom of speech, making universities battlefields of politicised emotions and expressions (Peters et al., 2019). In societies facing these pressures…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Freedom of Speech, Ethics, Political Attitudes
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Haimovitz, Kyla; Dweck, Carol S. – Child Development, 2017
Children's mindsets about intelligence (as a quality they can grow vs. a trait they cannot change) robustly influence their motivation and achievement. How do adults foster "growth mindsets" in children? One might assume that adults act in ways that communicate their own mindsets to children. However, new research shows that many parents…
Descriptors: Child Development, Intelligence, Learning Processes, Learning Motivation
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Roeper, George A.; Ruff, Marcia – Roeper Review, 2016
Creativity was an enduring interest for George Roeper. For him, gifted children represented the divergent thinkers who could change the trajectory of the world. In this 1962 presentation to parents at the school, he discussed his findings about the differences between intelligence and creativity--how they overlap, how they differ, and how they are…
Descriptors: Creativity, Intelligence, Gifted, Early Childhood Education
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Moll, Luis – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2020
This paper presents an overview of some of Michael Cole's work, starting with his pioneering research in Liberia with the Kpelle (and later, with Sylvia Scribner, studies of literacy with the Vai, 1981), which was formative of his version of a cultural-historical psychology, his translation and interpretations of the work of L. S. Vygotsky and…
Descriptors: After School Programs, Disadvantaged Environment, Foreign Countries, Educational Anthropology
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Ruitenberg, Claudia W. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2011
In recent years the French philosopher Jacques Ranciere has addressed the predicament of artists and curators who, in their eagerness to convey a critical message or engage their viewers in an emancipatory process, end up predetermining the outcomes of the experience, hence blocking its critical or emancipatory potential. In this essay I consider…
Descriptors: Art, Politics, Philosophy, Teaching Methods
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Shore, Bruce M. – Canadian Journal of School Psychology, 2010
For some three decades psychologists and educators have been working with incomplete or outdated ideas of what constitutes giftedness. Conceptual leadership in the field has moved from a definition based on IQ to expertise- and cognitive science-based definitions. Practice lags behind. Similarly, curriculum concepts are changing to foci based on…
Descriptors: Gifted, Psychologists, Cognitive Psychology, Cognitive Processes
Merrifield, Philip – New Directions for Testing and Measurement, 1981
An intelligence model of processes and content of thought is proposed. Processes include remembering, evaluating, generating, and transforming, while content is self, forms, ideas, and persons, determining levels of complexity for learning. The TETRA model is compared with J.P. Guilford's aptitude structure of intellect. Theory implications for…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Academic Aptitude, Cognitive Processes, Intelligence
Abbott, John – TECHNOS, 1997
Discusses the need for new models and understanding of how we learn and develop independence to successfully prepare our youth for the 21st century. Topics include a new model of learning based on current understandings about the brain, human intelligence, and memory; and a transnational program called the 21st Century Learning Initiative.…
Descriptors: Educational Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Futures (of Society), Intelligence
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St. Julien, John – Australian Journal of Education, 2000
Discusses an alternative view of what makes human competence possible, framed by complexity theory and drawing on connectionism as well as situated cognition. Suggests that, based on these theoretical frameworks, it is possible to develop a perspective whose implications can provide the basis for a more fully articulated theory of instruction. (EV)
Descriptors: Cognitive Psychology, Educational Strategies, Epistemology, Intelligence
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Yinger, Robert J. – Curriculum Inquiry, 1987
Describes learning to teach as a task involving learning to think and act in ways appropriate to the profession's demands. Describes the language of practice, using common sense and practical analyses of knowledge and action. Illustrates these concepts with a study of student teachers and applies architecture's pattern language to teaching.…
Descriptors: Architecture, Beginning Teachers, Definitions, Elementary Secondary Education
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Melchior, Timothy M.; And Others – Educational Leadership, 1988
Describes the use of Edward de Bono's CoRT (Cognitive Research Trust) program in English classes during the past five years at Memorial Junior High School in Valley Stream, New York. CoRT tools were used to analyze literary characters and plot development and to generate and organize ideas for writing assignments. (TE)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Critical Thinking, Educational Strategies
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Derrico, Patricia J. – Educational Leadership, 1988
With Matthew Lipman's Philosophy for Children program, middle school students and their teachers in the Bethlehem (Pennsylvania) Area School District use dialectical reasoning strategies as they contemplate perennial questions. (Author/TE)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Critical Thinking, Educational Strategies
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Barbieri, Edmund L. – Educational Leadership, 1988
At Westover (Connecticut) Elementary Magnet School, a teacher training program called "Talents Unlimited" focuses on critical and creative thinking, invites children to become active learners, and enables teachers to function as facilitators of learning. (TE)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Critical Thinking, Educational Strategies
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