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Showing 1 to 15 of 77 results Save | Export
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Groce, Eric; Groce, Robin; Wells, Cacey; Mize, Carly; Bell, Kirbi; Weschler, Jennie – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2022
In an effort to establish and expand abilities related to perspective, three elementary education professors collaborated with a trio of local fifth-grade teachers to develop and teach a lesson on the topic. In this article, the authors begin with the description and sequencing of the lesson, continue with an explanation of book categories and…
Descriptors: Grade 5, Elementary School Students, Perspective Taking, Student Attitudes
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Christine Eide – English Teaching Forum, 2025
Since the COVID-19 pandemic, the world of education has found a new normal, with new online courses, tools, educational apps, and artificial intelligence gaining in advancement and popularity. Interactive video is a multimedia tool that allows the viewer to actively engage with the content in the video by making choices and inputting data. In this…
Descriptors: Interactive Video, Online Courses, Learner Engagement, Lesson Plans
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Danley, Angela – Educational Renaissance, 2022
This article provides an example of how a television station and a teacher education program located at the University of Central Missouri partnered to provide on-air lessons for kindergarten through fifth grade lessons to respond to the academic need due to the school shutdowns in spring 2020 because of COVID-19. The article highlights how three…
Descriptors: Educational Television, COVID-19, Pandemics, Elementary Education
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Judy Anderson – Australian Mathematics Education Journal, 2023
This article describes a 'research project' at a girls school where teachers wanted to improve their students' engagement and interest in mathematics. Conversations with the students indicated they thought mathematics was difficult but also repetitive and boring, with lessons that had little variety of tasks. While some students like to learn…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Learner Engagement
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Erin V. Piedmont; Alesia Mickle Moldavan – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2025
Providing opportunities for elementary students to engage with enduring social issues, such as houselessness, is essential in preparing informed, engaged, and social justice-oriented citizens. This article draws from the following standards: (1) C3 Framework for Social Studies Standards that center inquiry; (2) Learning for Justice's Social…
Descriptors: Citizen Participation, Student Empowerment, Emergency Shelters, Homeless People
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Polly, Drew – School-University Partnerships, 2022
This article describes one specific course within a large urban university that uses school university partnerships and clinical practice experiences to prompt elementary education teacher candidates to enact equitable mathematics teaching practices in the classroom. It begins by providing a brief overview of equitable mathematics practices,…
Descriptors: College School Cooperation, Partnerships in Education, Equal Education, Mathematics Instruction
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Alanazi, Maryumah Hejji – Arab World English Journal, 2019
Planning a lesson remains a challenging task for the teachers. The transition from a student into a pre-service teacher and turn out into an effective teacher is a challenging task in the teaching field. We all know the nexus between the significant roles of a lesson plan in an effective teaching-learning process. This study aims to analyze the…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Teacher Education Programs, Student Attitudes, Lesson Plans
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Vo, Ngoc; Brodsky, Angela; Wilks, Marla; Goodner, Jason; Christopher, Kelley – Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia, 2018
One of the challenges in higher education courses is to improve learning authenticity or reducing the gap between what being taught at school and what being used in the real world. In this paper, we describe a 6-step model to employ learning authenticity in online courses. Our model infuses characteristics of authentic learning with Madeline…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Sociology, Introductory Courses, College Instruction
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Williams, Jing A.; Johnson, Mary – Social Studies, 2020
Teaching about the comfort women of World War II offers a compelling case study for the social studies classroom and human rights education. The topic will educate students to become knowledgeable about the larger world and its dark histories that have been omitted or scarcely mentioned in U.S. history textbooks. This article provides high school…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Teaching Methods, Females, War
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McParker, Matthew C. – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2021
Researchers have proposed integration as an approach to effectively teach social studies in primary grades. Many teachers integrate by teaching social studies content and skills during time allocated for other subjects, such as literacy, science, or math. Integration clearly uses time efficiently to allow for more social studies content. However,…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Social Studies, Teaching Methods, Educational Quality
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Brandon, Esther – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2021
This article describes a 6-week module course called Just Google It! that the author developed and teaches each fall semester. Students who take the course explore personal data collection by private companies, search algorithms, identify implicit bias in the results, and learn the best recommended privacy and security practices. At the end of the…
Descriptors: Technological Literacy, Course Descriptions, Data Collection, Corporations
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Kim McDonough; Heike Neumann; Julie Corrigan; Maria Jimenez; Andrea Barrios Guerrero – BC TEAL Journal, 2024
Evaluating the credibility of online information, a key component of digital literacy, is challenging for secondary students because they often rely on superficial strategies that do little to help them differentiate between information and disinformation. For example, our research has shown that students are prone to believe sites that appear…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Critical Thinking, Credibility, Information Sources
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Elsdon, Kathryn; Howard, Hannah – Teaching History, 2019
As teachers trainees, the authors were frustrated trying to create a lesson on the British Empire. But this challenge seems to be magnified ten-fold when teaching the history of Britain's empire: a complex political, cultural, social and economic phenomenon that has a broad chronological and geographical scope. And yet, despite the seemingly…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Preservice Teachers, Lesson Plans, Teaching Methods
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Thompson-Sharpe, Lucy – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2020
This essay is about teaching Shakespeare, based on my experience of exploring "King Lear" with a Year 7 class. The evidence I use is drawn from one lesson, in which I offered students the opportunity to reject Shakespeare's version of the story. In this, I hope to demonstrate that the act of offering students a choice is a simple but…
Descriptors: English Literature, Teaching Methods, Authors, Drama
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Vyrnwy-Pierce, Jacqueline – Teaching History, 2022
Frustrated by the generic statements that her Year 12 students were making about sources, Jacqueline Vyrnwy-Pierce resolved to undertake a research project into how her students were approaching sources about the French Revolution. Fascinated by the research of American educational psychologist Sam Wineburg, Vyrnwy-Pierce decided to use Wineburg's…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Grade 12, High School Students, Information Sources
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