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DiGregorio, Nikki; Liston, Delores D. – College Teaching, 2022
Diversity-centered courses may prompt student biases and misconceptions in unique ways. Studies have illustrated that developing an understanding of why value-laden content is difficult for students to learn is paramount to effective teaching. Research has indicated that self-reflection has a positive effect on academic growth. This study explores…
Descriptors: Reflection, College Students, Diversity, Bias
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Michalski, Joseph H. – Journal of Moral Education, 2022
Science is an ethical community whose practitioners aim to discover information about the natural world and to explain discernible patterns that might be detected. Those who pursue science generally embrace certain epistemic values that help establish the moral boundaries of the community, while the twin pillars of rationality and empiricism serve…
Descriptors: Sociology, Sciences, Bias, Scientific Principles
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Burkholder, Joel M.; Phillips, Kat – Journal of Information Literacy, 2022
What is bias? A review of the library literature reveals no attempts to define the concept. Nor does it reveal systematic attempts to develop interventions that teach the identification and evaluation of bias. Current pedagogical approaches (checklists and bias charts) tend to assume a self-evident definition that categorises bias as…
Descriptors: Bias, Information Literacy, Information Sources, Evaluation Methods
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Bak, Vanessa – About Campus, 2022
"What is time anyway?" This is a question more and more people have asked themselves as quarantine and COVID-19 dramatically shake up routines and throw concepts of time into flux. The author started to think about this question during their graduate work at Ohio University when talking to students who were "too busy" and…
Descriptors: Time Perspective, Time Management, Anxiety, College Students
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Binur, Nahal; Hel-Or, Hagit; Hadad, Bat-Sheva – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2022
Modulation in sensory-perceptual processing is a known characteristic of autism, although the underlying mechanism is debated. A prevailing account is formulated in Bayesian terms, where either a reduced prior or reduced noise in the measurement (sensory input) may account for the modulated perception as expressed by the posterior distribution.…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Sensory Experience, Reliability, Visual Perception
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Blumenfeld-Jones, Donald – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2022
The distinction between 'self' and 'identity' is explored using James Baldwin's work and Western anthropology's assignment of 'self' only to Western dominant cultures. Anthropologists perform epistemicide on these 'less advanced' cultures by reducing them to identification with the group with no inner life. Identity is then explored as an artifact…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Cultural Differences, Western Civilization, Language Usage
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Zimbalist, Zack – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2022
Public attitude surveys provide invaluable data for assessing perceptions, values, and attitudes across societies and over time. Ideally, respondents feel secure to disclose accurate information (avoiding reporting bias and item non-response) in the context of a face-to-face interview. Yet, survey research seldom accounts for peer effects caused…
Descriptors: Audiences, Responses, Bias, Public Opinion
Junjie, Ma; Yingxin, Ma – Online Submission, 2022
This paper aims to explore the philosophical theoretical foundations of two basic research paradigms, namely positivism and interpretivism. In the discussion process, literature in the relevant fields including academic papers and books is reviewed and used as support for the analysis. Firstly, the paper explores the differences between the…
Descriptors: Ideology, Bias, Credibility, Research Methodology
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Jackson, Norman V. – Learning Organization, 2021
Purpose: Asking whether we should regard the learning organization as a tautology and, thus, of questionable utility, the purpose of this paper is to assess the ur-definition of the concept furnished by Senge. It seeks to demonstrate, particularly to those unaware of a textual-analytic approach, how claims that have academic authority can have…
Descriptors: Organizational Learning, Definitions, Bias, Ethics
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DeCarlo, Lawrence T.; Zhou, Xiaoliang – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2021
In signal detection rater models for constructed response (CR) scoring, it is assumed that raters discriminate equally well between different latent classes defined by the scoring rubric. An extended model that relaxes this assumption is introduced; the model recognizes that a rater may not discriminate equally well between some of the scoring…
Descriptors: Scoring, Models, Bias, Perception
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Amaya, Ashley; Zimmer, Stephanie; Morton, Katherine; Harter, Rachel – Sociological Methods & Research, 2021
Address-based sampling (ABS) refers to the use a list of addresses derived from the U.S. Postal Service's Computerized Delivery Sequence File as a sampling frame. While most residential addresses are included on an ABS frame, it still suffers from undercoverage. Undercoverage is problematic only if the uncovered units have different attributes…
Descriptors: Sampling, Research Problems, Bias, Surveys
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Henmi, Masayuki; Hattori, Satoshi; Friede, Tim – Research Synthesis Methods, 2021
In meta-analyses including only few studies, the estimation of the between-study heterogeneity is challenging. Furthermore, the assessment of publication bias is difficult as standard methods such as visual inspection or formal hypothesis tests in funnel plots do not provide adequate guidance. Previously, Henmi and Copas (Statistics in Medicine…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Computation, Bias, Publications
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Rachel Leslie; Alice Brown; Ellen Larsen – Learning Disability Quarterly, 2025
Current understandings of disability experience are centered around individuals who hold the disability identity and membership in the marginalized group. This perspective does not include the experiences of disability allies, such as parents, who act alongside their children to support their access and engagement in the education setting. This…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Students with Disabilities, Learning Disabilities, Family School Relationship
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Tim Hartelt; Helge Martens – Science Education, 2025
Evolution is challenging to understand for students. Frequently, students hold coexisting intuitive conceptions based on cognitive biases and scientific conceptions of evolution. For the self-regulation of intuitive and scientific conceptions, metacognitive awareness is fundamental. However, students are mostly unaware of their conceptions. A…
Descriptors: Self Evaluation (Individuals), Accuracy, Secondary School Students, Evolution
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Tong Wu; Stella Y. Kim; Carl Westine; Michelle Boyer – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2025
While significant attention has been given to test equating to ensure score comparability, limited research has explored equating methods for rater-mediated assessments, where human raters inherently introduce error. If not properly addressed, these errors can undermine score interchangeability and test validity. This study proposes an equating…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Evaluators, Error of Measurement, Test Validity
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