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Rosenberg-Lee, Miriam – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2018
The promise of educational neuroscience lies in its potential to uncover mechanistic insights into the science of learning. However, to realize that promise, the field must overcome a fundamental difference between the constituent disciplines: neuroscience is primarily concerned with understanding how the brain works; whereas education attempts to…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Education, Brain, Training
Zeidner, Moshe – High Ability Studies, 2019
In this closing chapter and commentary to the special issue of "High Ability Studies" focusing on self-regulated learning (SRL) in gifted, high ability, and talented students, I delineate a number of promising challenges and directions for future theory, methodology, research, and applications in the domain of self-regulated learning. I…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Learning Strategies, Gifted, Talent
Li, Guofang – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2017
Immigrant youths' frequent and skillful use of new media technologies outside of school has generated discussion on the need to integrate their expertise in formal literacy instruction in school. This commentary argues that braiding old and new literacies for English learners in empowering ways needs to be guided by a connection to the future (new…
Descriptors: Immigrants, English Language Learners, Literacy Education, Teaching Methods
Aspen Institute, 2019
The promotion of social, emotional, and academic learning is not a shifting educational fad; it is the substance of education itself. It is not a distraction from the "real work" of math and English instruction; it is how instruction can succeed. And it is not another reason for political polarization. It brings together a traditionally…
Descriptors: Social Development, Emotional Development, Cognitive Development, Academic Ability
Inon, Magen – Ethics and Education, 2019
Research shows that various pharmaceuticals can offer modest cognition enhancing effects for healthy individuals. These finding have caused some academics to support liberal use of pharmacological cognitive enhancement (PCE) in schools and universities. This approach partially arises from arguments implying there is little moral justification for…
Descriptors: Pharmacology, Drug Use, Cognitive Ability, Moral Values
Schouten, Gina – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2012
In this article, I develop and defend a prioritarian principle of justice for the distribution of educational resources. I argue that this principle should be conceptualized as directing educators to confer a general benefit, where that benefit need not be mediated by improved academic outcomes. I go on to argue that it should employ a metric of…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Educational Opportunities, Educational Resources, Justice
Lovett, Benjamin J. – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2011
Gifted students often fail to achieve at a superior level in one or more academic areas. In this reply to an article by Assouline, Nicpon, and Whiteman, the author reviews various explanations for this phenomenon, including motivation/interest, learning opportunities, and error in measuring students' ability-achievement discrepancies. The author…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Identification, Gifted, Student Motivation
Levinson, Natasha – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2010
In "Laggards, Morons, Human Clinkers, and Other Peculiar Kids," Robert Osgood takes the readers back to a pivotal moment in the development of American public schools, a time when schools were just starting to be held accountable for seeing to it that children progressed through the system efficiently. As a result of Ayres study, which was…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Special Needs Students, Academic Ability, Accountability
Courtade, Ginevra; Spooner, Fred; Browder, Diane; Jimenez, Bree – Education and Training in Autism and Developmental Disabilities, 2012
This article was written as a response to Ayres, Lowrey, Douglas, and Sievers (2011) who commented on the degree to which promoting the teaching of functional skills had a higher probability of leading to a more independent life for students with severe disabilities. In doing so, the authors take issue with the use of a standards-based curriculum…
Descriptors: Severe Disabilities, Educational Change, Teaching Skills, Probability
Englander, Fred; Fask, Alan; Wang, Zhaobo – American Journal of Distance Education, 2011
This article comments on an earlier article by professors Yates and Beaudrie (2009) who examined whether online assessment facilitates student cheating and found no evidence of such a greater prevalence of cheating. Professors Yates and Beaudrie are commended for their contribution to this increasingly important area of research. The analysis…
Descriptors: Evidence, Cheating, Grades (Scholastic), Distance Education
Bhatti, Ghazala – Ethnography and Education, 2011
This paper is concerned with the experiences of Muslim students attending secondary schools and an elite university in England. The research explores how Muslim young men's identities are defined by their social and cultural locations. It is argued that identity is multi-dimensional. It intersects and overlaps with several categories of difference…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Social Class, Muslims, Ethnography
Allen, Rebecca; West, Anne – Oxford Review of Education, 2009
This article presents the authors' response to the Comment by Gerald Grace on their paper "Religious schools in London: school admissions, religious composition and selectivity". The Comment is a useful contribution to the academic and policy debates about religious schools and the role that empirical research can play. The authors are…
Descriptors: Secondary Schools, Urban Schools, Religious Organizations, Religious Discrimination
Payne, Ruby – Phi Delta Kappan, 2009
Ruby Payne refutes allegations that her work is built on "stereotyping" and negative depictions of poverty. Instead, she says her work is built on a theory of cognitive determinism, that is, a belief that everyone has a mind and educators are able to develop every mind if they understand learning styles for children of poverty.
Descriptors: Poverty, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Style, Learning Processes
Grace, Gerald – Oxford Review of Education, 2009
This paper is a reflection upon the research findings of Rebecca Allen and Anne West in relation to religious schools in London. While welcoming this contribution to the systematic study of faith schools (a neglected area of empirical inquiry), the paper argues that the use of "religious schools" as a unitary category is problematic for…
Descriptors: Secondary Schools, Urban Schools, Religious Organizations, Catholic Schools
Marsh, Herbert W.; Seaton, Marjorie; Trautwein, Ulrich; Ludtke, Oliver; Hau, K. T.; O'Mara, Alison J.; Craven, Rhonda G. – Educational Psychology Review, 2008
The big-fish-little-pond effect (BFLPE) predicts that equally able students have lower academic self-concepts (ASCs) when attending schools where the average ability levels of classmates is high, and higher ASCs when attending schools where the school-average ability is low. BFLPE findings are remarkably robust, generalizing over a wide variety of…
Descriptors: Gifted, Educational Attainment, Ability Grouping, Self Concept