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Noel Carroll; Michael Lang; Cornelia Connolly – Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 2025
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, universities across the world were forced to move from a classroom-based delivery model to an online learning model which heavily disrupted the learning process for students. Despite proactive efforts for academic staff to embrace online teaching tools and techniques, the pressing urgency with which solutions…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Electronic Learning, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Mohamed Shameem Adam; Junainah Abd Hamid; Ali Khatibi; S. M. Ferdous Azam – Online Learning, 2025
Community of Inquiry--a theoretical framework that consists of three interrelated elements: teaching presence, social presence, and cognitive presence--has been used widely in online and blended learning as an instructional design model to create and sustain conditions that facilitate meaningful learning in a learning community. Teaching presence…
Descriptors: Blended Learning, Interpersonal Relationship, Cognitive Processes, Direct Instruction
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Zijun Yin; Bin Xuan; Chengchi Liu; Jingchao Yi; Xiaoyan Zheng; Mingming Zhang – npj Science of Learning, 2025
Previous studies have insufficiently explored the influence of task and interpersonal interdependence on synchronous cooperation behavior. To address this gap, this study utilized fNIRS hyperscanning technique to investigate the behavioral and neural mechanisms within both friend and stranger dyads engaging in various levels of interdependent…
Descriptors: Task Analysis, Cooperative Learning, Interpersonal Relationship, Brain
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Mirah J. Dow; Ting Wang; Bobbie S. Long; Corey Ptacek – Journal of Education for Library and Information Science, 2025
Students' social experience in fully online learning is critical to academic success. However, little is known about students' experience in online asynchronous education, particularly regarding social presence, knowledge building, and collaborative learning. In a constructivist grounded theory study, 22 graduate students enrolled in library and…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Relationship, Cognitive Processes, Electronic Learning, Asynchronous Communication
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Peijian Paul Sun; Zeqi Ren; Xian Zhao – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2025
Background: Student engagement has been conceptualised and operationalised in various learning environments. However, there is currently a lack of established scales to measure student engagement in synchronous online learning. One possible reason is the existence of the conceptual and structural ambiguity regarding student engagement. Objective:…
Descriptors: Student Participation, Second Language Learning, Synchronous Communication, Electronic Learning
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Varghese Panthalookaran – Higher Education for the Future, 2025
Unlike other technologies that augment human physical skills and abilities, artificial intelligence (AI) technologies interact with human thinking skills nurtured through various educational processes. Hence, advances in these technologies challenge the education sector to reimagine the suitable intellectual formation of students in the AI age. It…
Descriptors: Taxonomy, Artificial Intelligence, Thinking Skills, Educational Objectives
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Jeanette Lancaster – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
Small human complex systems, here called co-present groups, are found across all fields of human social life. Complexity thinking suggests why this is so: that these groups, irrespective of formal content, have a meta-function of providing maximum complexity to manage the "indeterminacy" or "uncertainty" that characterises the…
Descriptors: Groups, Group Dynamics, Interpersonal Relationship, Experience
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Helia M. Aval; Kasey Pankratz; Elizabeth L. Davis – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: A Peer Relations Journal, 2024
Children's responses to new, unfamiliar social interactions should be influenced by their cognitive appraisals and physiology, though little is known about how these constructs interrelate. To investigate these links, we examined whether children's appraisals of recalled events and resting parasympathetic physiology predicted social…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Physiology, Problem Solving, Child Behavior
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Rosman, Tom; Kerwer, Martin – Psychology Learning and Teaching, 2022
Fostering students' epistemic beliefs is key for achieving a more nuanced approach to psychological knowledge. The Bendixen-Rule model on epistemic change posits epistemic doubt (questioning one's prior epistemic beliefs), epistemic volition (the will to change one's beliefs) and resolution strategies (strategies to overcome epistemic doubt by…
Descriptors: Epistemology, College Students, Reflection, Interpersonal Relationship
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Golnaz Ghaderi; Virginie Cobigo – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2024
Background: Understanding the cognitive processes of individuals with intellectual disabilities in financially abusive situations is critical to develop effective prevention strategies. Aims: This study investigated how persons with intellectual disabilities define and analyse financially abusive situations, and how they would feel and act in…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Cognitive Processes, Prevention, Money Management
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Jessica Bradshaw; Xiaoxue Fu; John E. Richards – Developmental Science, 2024
Sustained attention (SA) is an endogenous form of attention that emerges in infancy and reflects cognitive engagement and processing. SA is critical for learning and has been measured using different methods during screen-based and interactive contexts involving social and nonsocial stimuli. How SA differs by measurement method, context, and…
Descriptors: Infants, Child Development, Attention Span, Cognitive Processes
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Crystal Bae; Daniel Montello; Mary Hegarty – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2024
Navigation is essential to life, and it is cognitively complex, drawing on abilities such as prospective and situated planning, spatial memory, location recognition, and real-time decision-making. In many cases, day-to-day navigation is embedded in a social context where cognition and behavior are shaped by others, but the great majority of…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Friendship, Individualism, Stranger Reactions
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Yu-Chi Chen; Huei-Tse Hou – Asia-Pacific Education Researcher, 2025
To promote motivation and interaction among learners for relationship education in online learning, we designed a digital gamified learning activity for relationship education combined with conceptual and reflective scaffolding. We measured the learning achievement of learners' knowledge, motivation, anxiety and flow during the activity. This…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Gamification, Learning Activities, Interpersonal Relationship
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Wells, Trish; Sandretto, Susan; Tilson, Jane – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2023
A small, but growing, number of studies explore the connections between process drama pedagogy and the development of empathy. In our view, empathy involves affective and cognitive processes of the heart and the mind. In this article, we report findings from a year-long New Zealand research project with four primary school teachers who integrated…
Descriptors: Holistic Approach, Empathy, Affective Behavior, Cognitive Processes
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Munson, Jen; Dyer, Elizabeth B. – Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2023
Background: Pedagogical sensemaking, in which teachers attempt to figure something out in relation to teaching and learning, as a form of generative teacher discourse can provide opportunities for teachers to learn. However, much of the research in these areas examines how teachers reason during sustained collegial discourse outside the classroom.…
Descriptors: Coaching (Performance), Interpersonal Relationship, Interaction, Collegiality
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