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Yilmaz, Hasan – Asian Journal of Education and Training, 2018
The aim of this study is to compare the Turkish, Uzbek and Kyrgyz university students with regards to their thinking and decision making styles and as well as their cognitive closure. 141 Turkish, 69 Uzbek and 89 Kyrgyz students at the Kyrgyz-Turkish Manas University participated in the study. As the data collection tool, the 15-point version of…
Descriptors: College Students, Decision Making, Cross Cultural Studies, Cognitive Style
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Kunioshi, Nílson; Noguchi, Judy; Tojo, Kazuko – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2019
Teaching styles in science and engineering instruction were compared by analysing corpora of transcripts of lectures delivered in English and Japanese at leading universities in the United States and Japan, respectively. Our findings were compatible with cultural differences related to power distance and field dependence, which have been reported…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Teaching Styles, Computational Linguistics, Power Structure
Sakurai, Yusuke; Pyhältö, Kirsi; Lindblom-Ylänne, Sari – Journal of Research in International Education, 2014
This article is based on a study which investigated whether Chinese international students at a university in Finland are more likely to rely on a Surface approach to learning and dismiss a Deep approach than are other international students in the same university educational context. In responding to a survey, students' scores with respect to the…
Descriptors: Asians, Foreign Countries, Cognitive Style, Foreign Students
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Martínez-Fernández, J. Reinaldo; Vermunt, Jan D. – Studies in Higher Education, 2015
The aim of this study was to analyse and compare the learning patterns of higher education students from Spain and three Latin-American countries (Colombia, Mexico and Venezuela). For this purpose Vermunt's Inventory of Learning Styles (ILS) was translated into Spanish and tested. The participants were 456 undergraduates enrolled in a teacher…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Guidelines, Latin Americans, Cognitive Style
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Bowden, Mark P.; Abhayawansa, Subhash; Manzin, Gregoria – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2015
This study compares learning approaches of local English-speaking students and students from Asian countries studying at an Australian metropolitan university. The sample consists of students across 13 different countries. Unlike previous studies, students from Asian countries are subdivided into two categories: students from Confucian Heritage…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Comparative Analysis, Comparative Education, Learning Strategies
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Ding, Ning; Lin, Wei – Journal of Teaching in International Business, 2013
More than 45,000 international students are now studying for bachelor programs in The Netherlands. The number of Asian students increased dramatically in the past decade. The current research aims at examining the differences between Western European and Asian students' perceptual learning styles, and exploring the relationships between students'…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Foreign Countries, Asians, International Trade
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Maccleave, Anne; Eghan, Felicia – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2010
Educators are seeking to meet student needs in increasingly diverse university classrooms. Two contrasting ways of responding to cultural difference are planning instruction on the basis of cultural styles or repertoires of culturally-based experiences (Gutierrez & Rogoff, 2003). Use of learning styles to address individual differences in learning…
Descriptors: Student Needs, Cultural Differences, Cultural Background, Teaching Methods
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Jian, Hong – International Education Studies, 2009
This paper makes a contrastive study of learning styles between China and the U.S. from five aspects and recognizes that the differences are due to the influence of cultural diversity such as individualism and collectivism, Confucianism, utilitarianism and pragmatism etc.
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Analysis, Cognitive Style, Cultural Differences
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Correa-Chavez, Maricela; Rogoff, Barbara – Developmental Psychology, 2009
This study investigated differences in attention and learning among Guatemalan Mayan and European American children, ages 5-11 years, who were present but not addressed while their sibling was shown how to construct a novel toy. Each child waited with a distracter toy for her or his turn to make a different toy. Nonaddressed children from Mayan…
Descriptors: Maya (People), Family Involvement, Toys, Children
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You, Zhuran; Jia, Fenran – Teaching and Teacher Education: An International Journal of Research and Studies, 2008
Based on the hypothesis that learning preferences tend to vary over cultures, this study compared and contrasted the learning approaches and learning styles between Chinese and American pre-service teachers in an attempt to know more about the learning/teaching landscapes in these two countries as "teachers teach the way they learned"…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Cognitive Style, Teaching Styles, Visual Learning
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Mitchell, Barry S.; Xu, Qin; Jin, Lixian; Patten, Debra; Gouldsborough, Ingrid – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2009
Cultural influences on anatomy teaching and learning have been investigated by application of a questionnaire to medical students in British and Chinese Medical Schools. Results from the responses from students of the two countries were analyzed. Both groups found it easier to understand anatomy in a clinical context, and in both countries,…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Curriculum Design, Student Attitudes, Cross Cultural Studies
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Oakland, Thomas; Alghorani, Mohammed Adnan; Lee, Dong Hun – School Psychology International, 2007
Temperament styles of 400 Palestinian children living in Gaza are described, examined for possible gender and age differences, and compared with those of 3,200 US children in light of Jung's theory of temperament as modified by Myers and Briggs. The results show that Palestinian children generally prefer practical to imaginative, feeling to…
Descriptors: Extraversion Introversion, Personality Traits, Foreign Countries, Age Differences
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Huang, Jinyan – Journal of Instructional Psychology, 2009
The paper investigated four Chinese graduate students' perceptions of the major differences between North American and Chinese classroom teaching styles. Major differences in the following five areas were identified: 1) the teacher's role, 2) the student's role, 3) the form of class organization, 4) the teacher's expectations, and 5) the student's…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Foreign Students, Graduate Students
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Sanders, Mary; And Others – Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1976
As predicted, Anglo American children are significantly more field independent, higher on in achievement, and tend to be higher on in power; Mexican American children tend to be higher on in affiliation. (Author)
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Style, Comparative Analysis, Cross Cultural Studies
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Garza, Raymond T. – Psychology in the Schools, 1978
The role of affective and associative meaningfulness in the learning styles of Chicanos and Anglos was examined. Chicano and Anglo undergraduates (N=64) were compared on learning of affectively and associatively assessed consonant-vowel-consonant trigrams. Chicanos differed significantly from Anglos in affective learning scale. (Author)
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Cognitive Style, College Students, Comparative Analysis
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