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Elaine Khoo; Linda Mitchell; Maria Sammons – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2024
Creative and innovative reflective methods are important to prompt and sustain alternative and novel ways for teachers to consider their professional identity and practice. Digital storytelling is one such method that enables the sharing of valued events including narratives of lived experience. This paper reports on a case study investigating…
Descriptors: Migrant Children, Refugees, Children, Electronic Publishing
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Resing, Wilma C. M.; Elliott, Julian G. – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2011
Aims: This study sought to explore the use of a novel approach that incorporates dynamic testing and tangible electronics in the assessment of children's learning potential and strategy use. Sample: A total of 77 children with a mean age 8.9 years participated in the study; half of them were dynamically tested using graduate prompt techniques; the…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Testing, Electronics
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Gray, Esther Cappon – Clearing House, 1980
The author reviews some research, particularly that of Roger Sperry, substantiating the existence of different thinking styles in the two brain hemispheres and the development of this differentiation in infancy and childhood. She draws some implications for elementary teaching. (SJL)
Descriptors: Adults, Cerebral Dominance, Children, Cognitive Style
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Allen, Rodney – Southern Social Studies Journal, 2000
Explains that in a study of the Holocaust teachers must connect the stories of the Holocaust to the lives of their students. Provides five activities about the Holocaust that focus upon teaching tolerance. Addresses the children of the Holocaust, difference versus deviance, social identity, and The Night of Broken Glass. (CMK)
Descriptors: Allegory, Children, Community, Educational Strategies
Indiana State Board of Education, Indianapolis. – 1990
This document was prepared to help parents, educators, and concerned citizens better understand how children and adolescents actually learn. True learning involves: (1) developing a passion for learning; (2) acquiring communication skills; (3) constructing new knowledge; (4) taking part in concrete activities; and (5) developing problem solving…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Child Development, Children, Communication Skills