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Clipson, Timothy W.; Wilson, S. Ann; DuFrene, Debbie D. – Business Communication Quarterly, 2012
Social networking via texting, Facebook, Twitter, and similar media is enormously popular with students, though it often leads to communication challenges along gender lines. Research supports the fact that men and women have divergent expectations for social networking and use it differently. Students can benefit from classroom experiences that…
Descriptors: Social Networks, Gender Differences, Computer Mediated Communication, Consciousness Raising
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Luyt, Ilka – Journal of Educational Technology Systems, 2013
The globalization of online courses has transformed online learning into cross-cultural learning spaces. Students from non-English backgrounds are enrolling in credit-bearing courses and must adjust their thinking and writing to adapt to online practices. Online courses have as their aim the construction of knowledge, but students' perceptions of…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Learning Experience, Global Approach, Cross Cultural Studies
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Miyazoe, Terumi; Anderson, Terry – Educational Technology & Society, 2011
This paper examines the learning outcomes associated with implementing discussion forums and blog writings using pseudonyms in blended learning. Although anonymity or masking one's identity has been used as a teaching strategy designed to induce higher writing production and lowering anxiety in face-to-face writing instruction, little research has…
Descriptors: Blended Learning, Writing Assignments, Web Sites, Instructional Effectiveness
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Xu, Jianzhong – Educational Psychology, 2010
The present study linked gender and grade level to homework management strategies and homework completion behaviours. The participants were 685 African American students in the south-eastern USA, including 370 eighth graders and 315 eleventh graders. Gender appeared related to the majority of homework measures examined in the present study.…
Descriptors: African American Students, Homework, Gender Differences, Grade 8
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Chulkov, Dmitriy – Journal of Instructional Psychology, 2008
The choice of assignment types in a course is shown to have differential effect on performance of specific types of students. Using data from six semesters of college Economics classes, the study demonstrates that male and non-traditional students are more likely to have higher performance on multiple choice questions. Students whose major field…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Assignments, Academic Achievement, Gender Differences
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Geiser, Christian; Lehmann, Wolfgang; Eid, Michael – Multivariate Behavioral Research, 2006
Items of mental rotation tests can not only be solved by mental rotation but also by other solution strategies. A multigroup latent class analysis of 24 items of the Mental Rotations Test (MRT) was conducted in a sample of 1,695 German pupils and students to find out how many solution strategies can be identified for the items of this test. The…
Descriptors: Psychological Testing, Test Items, Gender Differences, Assignments
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Woodfield, Ruth; Earl-Novell, Sarah; Solomon, Lucy – Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education, 2005
This paper reports on research conducted at the University of Sussex and examines whether female students have a particular preference for coursework, and whether such a preference is a key factor in their current undergraduate success. The performances of 638 students on courses whose assessment modes comprised both coursework and examinations…
Descriptors: Tests, Undergraduate Study, Gender Differences, Student Attitudes
Blazer, Christie – Research Services, Miami-Dade County Public Schools, 2009
Although homework is assigned for a variety of academic and non-academic purposes, there is disagreement within the educational community about the value of homework and the amount of homework students should be assigned. This Literature Review summarizes the benefits and drawbacks of homework and examines how much time students should and…
Descriptors: Homework, Teaching Methods, Feedback (Response), Community Information Services
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Devonport, Tracey J.; Lane, Andrew M. – Psychological Record, 2006
The present study examined changes in primary and secondary appraisal, and coping strategies utilized in the final weeks leading to dissertation submission. Sixty volunteer Sports Studies dissertation students (male: n = 29; female: n = 31) completed an adapted Cognitive Appraisal of Health Scale (CAHS: Kessler, 1998), and Brief COPE (Carver,…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Multivariate Analysis, Males, Coping
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Quitadamo, Ian J.; Kurtz, Martha J. – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2007
Increasingly, national stakeholders express concern that U.S. college graduates cannot adequately solve problems and think critically. As a set of cognitive abilities, critical thinking skills provide students with tangible academic, personal, and professional benefits that may ultimately address these concerns. As an instructional method, writing…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Science Laboratories, Biology, Critical Thinking
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Sanford, Kathy – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2005
The research reported in this article intends to contribute to an understanding of how out-of-school literacies can influence the present and future learning of adolescents. Evidence suggests that students, boys particularly, are becoming literate in many ways through out-of-school activities (e.g., video games, Internet browsing, chatrooms), but…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Video Games, Literacy, Expectation