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Lauren Margulieux; James Prather; Masoumeh Rahimi – Educational Psychology Review, 2025
Failure can be an effective tool for learning, but it comes with negative consequences. Educators and learners should practice strategies that leverage the benefits of failure while managing its negative consequences on learners' motivation and persistence. Towards that goal, this paper examines the biological effects of failure on learning to (1)…
Descriptors: Biology, Failure, Learning Processes, Priming
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Ferreira, Juliene Madureira – Educational Psychology Review, 2021
The bodily experiences and implications of understanding the functioning of the human brain--body mechanism has been a center of attention in the field of cognitive neurosciences for over two decades. Research in this field has enlarged the theories of learning and development, and contributed to changes in educational practices involving language…
Descriptors: Human Body, Cognitive Processes, Cooperative Learning, Neurosciences
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Hidi, Suzanne E.; Renninger, K. Ann – Educational Psychology Review, 2019
In order to consider the relation between interest and curiosity, we first review various points of view on this issue, and discuss the scientific importance of making a distinction between the two concepts. Next, we explain that interest defined as a psychological state and as a cognitive and motivational variable can be supported to develop.…
Descriptors: Interests, Personality Traits, Neurosciences, Cognitive Processes
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Mason, Lucia; Zaccoletti, Sonia – Educational Psychology Review, 2021
Recent research about the learning of science has suggested that misconceptions are not replaced by scientific conceptions and extinguished once conceptual change has occurred. Rather, misconceptions still exist alongside the acquired scientific conceptions and must be suppressed in order to use scientific conceptions. Our goal in this review is…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Learning Processes, Scientific Concepts, Misconceptions
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Mayer, Richard E. – Educational Psychology Review, 2017
This paper explores the potential of neuroscience for improving educational practice by describing the perspective of educational psychology as a linking science; providing historical context showing educational psychology's 100-year search for an educationally relevant neuroscience; offering a conceptual framework for the connections among…
Descriptors: Brain, Neurosciences, Educational Psychology, Cognitive Science
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Hidi, Suzanne – Educational Psychology Review, 2016
Rewards have been examined extensively by both psychologists and neuorscientists and have become one of the most contentious issues in social and educational psychology. In psychological research, reward processing has typically been studied in relation to behavioral outcomes. In contrast, neuroscientists have been examining how rewards are…
Descriptors: Rewards, Learning Motivation, Neurosciences, Educational Benefits
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Beauchamp, Catherine; Beauchamp, Miriam H. – Educational Psychology Review, 2013
Within the emerging field of educational neuroscience, concerns exist that the impact of neuroscience research on education has been less effective than hoped. In seeking a way forward, it may be useful to consider the problems of integrating two complex fields in the context of disciplinary boundaries. Here, a boundary perspective is used as a…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Educational Research, Interdisciplinary Approach, Intellectual Disciplines