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Jo Ferrie; Sharon Greenwood – Teaching in Higher Education, 2025
Emotion is an integral part of the knowledge production process, yet is rarely acknowledged within research methods teaching or textbooks. As educators, preparing students for fieldwork is essential, and should go beyond skill-learning, towards building confidence in their ability to react both ethically and appropriately during fieldwork. This…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Field Studies, Research Methodology, Courses
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Tan, Leonard; Sin, Hui Xing – Music Educators Journal, 2020
In 1990, psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi warned against an excessive emphasis on how well music learners perform rather than on the experiential aspect of music in and of itself. Whereas the former approach is, in his words, "a source of psychic disorder," the latter approach offers access to "flow": the optimal,…
Descriptors: Music, Music Education, Performance, Experiential Learning
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Leadbetter, Peter; Bussu, Anna; Richards, Michael – Psychology Teaching Review, 2019
Outdoor learning experiences in Higher Education (HE) provide students with the opportunity for emotional development, cognitive development and learning. Despite this, the literature exploring the impact of emotive outdoor learning experiences on students' development and learning is scarce. The aim of this paper is to present an overview of the…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Emotional Development, Cognitive Development, Historic Sites
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Gooda, Theresa – English in Education, 2019
This paper explores the value of writing journals for both students and teachers beyond English lessons and without insistence on evidencing writing progress. Keeping a journal or undertaking regular reflective writing is an unfamiliar experience for some students, and schools may offer limited privacy for writing. Used in a comprehensive school…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Journal Writing, Reflection, Memory
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Connelly, Susan – Reclaiming Children and Youth, 2013
Trauma can turn anyone inside out. But when an entire community experiences the same trauma in a matter of minutes, it shatters the rhythm of everyday life and forces a redefinition of "normal." In this article, a school counselor in Newtown who experienced the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School shares her perspectives on the…
Descriptors: Reflection, Trauma, School Safety, Violence
Mc Cormack, David – Adult Learner: The Irish Journal of Adult and Community Education, 2015
In this paper I reflect on epiphany moments in teaching and learning and the ways in which writing such moments can serve both to refresh and revitalise what Palmer calls the inner landscape of the educator, while also offering opportunities to enliven pedagogy. I use the notion of the liminal disposition to position such writing as an agentic act…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Learning, Emotional Experience, Writing (Composition)
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Zembylas, Michalinos – Teaching Education, 2013
This paper discusses the role of emotions in mobilizing implicit activisms--that is, small-scale, personal, and modest activisms--in schools. For this purpose, the discussion evokes the notion of critical emotional reflexivity to illuminate how creating spaces for critical reflection on emotions may contribute to making implicit activisms more…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Psychological Patterns, Sustainability, Activism
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Elfer, Peter – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2012
The importance of attention to children's emotions has been emphasised widely in early care and education research and policy. Enabling such attention has been seen as achieved primarily through attachment interactions with nursery staff. However, there is increasing awareness that facilitating such interactions in a way that is optimal for…
Descriptors: Discussion Groups, Emotional Experience, Professional Development, Well Being
Koopman, Beverly Logas – Phi Delta Kappan, 2011
The author, an elementary teacher, used an online message board and wikis to engage students in literature discussions and to deepen their understanding of and interest in the books they were reading. Her students were much more motivated to read and discuss books using the online tools.
Descriptors: Literature, Computer Mediated Communication, Web Sites, Social Networks
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Shapiro, Shawna – Teaching and Teacher Education: An International Journal of Research and Studies, 2010
This essay explores the relationship between emotion and teacher identity, using a framework of personal experience and published research from a variety of disciplines. The author argues that an increased awareness of emotional experience serves not only to increase rapport among educators, but also to counteract the persistent dehumanization of…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Teacher Attitudes, Emotional Experience, Teaching Methods
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Wright, Sarah; Hodge, Paul – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2012
Students undertaking field-based learning, in which they work with Indigenous people in Northern Australia, describe a profound learning experience redolent with emotion. Inspired, challenged and transformed, the students are compelled in ways that require them to interrogate their own selves and taken-for-granted beliefs. In this paper, we draw…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Indigenous Populations, Experiential Learning, Cultural Pluralism