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Vettori, Oliver – Quality in Higher Education, 2023
Time is an omnipresent key dimension in everyone's life, yet academic time has only recently found scholarly attention. The temporal aspects of quality assurance, in particular, are basically unchartered territory. Taking a chronopolitical perspective, this article aims to close the gap, by critically examining how temporalities are firmly…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Quality Assurance, Higher Education, Time
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Shahjahan, Riyad A. – Journal of Education Policy, 2020
Amid growing studies of time in higher education, few have theorized the interconnections between affect, academic work, and temporality -- the way we make sense of and relate to time changes -- in the neoliberal academy. By interconnecting temporality with shame, this article presents a critique of dominant temporalities of neoliberal higher…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Higher Education, Time, Psychological Patterns
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Gonen, S. Ipek Kuru – Journal of Education and Training Studies, 2016
Reflective practice is considered as an effective way for professional development in order to gain awareness of one's own teaching as well as to compete with the changing needs of the students. Especially in pre-service period, when pre-service teachers work cooperatively with their peers in a reciprocal fashion towards reflectivity, it has a…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Coaching (Performance), Conceptual Tempo, Higher Education
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Mcauliffe, Garrett John; Grothaus, Tim; Jensen, Margaret; Michel, Rebecca – International Journal for the Advancement of Counselling, 2012
Multicultural counseling is often promoted as a core element in counselor development. As such, educational efforts aim to increase counselors' cultural relativism, or their ability to recognize their own enculturation and to appreciate the value of other cultural norms. This mixed qualitative-quantitative study explored the relationship between…
Descriptors: Sexual Orientation, Counselor Training, Cultural Pluralism, Moral Development
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Clarke, Dave – International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction, 2012
Based on the transpersonal model of stress, the purpose of the study was to investigate the moderating effect of impulsivity on the relationship between stressful life events (SLE) and depression among first year university women. Impulsivity consists of tendencies towards lack of premeditation, lack of perseverance, urgency and sensation seeking.…
Descriptors: Conceptual Tempo, Females, Adolescents, Multiple Regression Analysis
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Seli, Helena; Dembo, Myron H.; Crocker, Stephen – College Student Journal, 2009
This study examined community college students' future-related self-concept, termed "possible selves," in relationship to their current academic behavior with a focus on self-worth protective strategies. As demonstrated via hierarchical regression, possible selves added to understanding the students' self-protective behavior above and…
Descriptors: Self Esteem, Motivation, Community Colleges, Higher Education
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Wepner, Shelley B.; D'Onofrio, Antonia; Wilhite, Stephen C. – Journal of Teacher Education, 2008
Education deans in the United States describe their approach to solving leadership problems that were cast as organizational dilemmas. The deans who participated in the study had been education deans for at least 6 to 7 years, indicating that they had avoided the revolving door syndrome of 4.5 years in a single appointment. Deans described their…
Descriptors: Leadership, Deans, Higher Education, Professional Development
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Lavin, Thomas J.; Prull, Richard W. – Journal of College Student Development, 1989
Assessed possible generational differences in student personality traits and values by analyzing four samples of college freshmen (N=317) who had completed the Omnibus Personality Inventory at intervals spanning 1969 through 1987. Found a linear increase in impulsivity during that period was the strongest of the observed shifts. (Author/ABL)
Descriptors: Age Differences, College Freshmen, Conceptual Tempo, Higher Education
Welfel, Elizabeth Reynolds; Davison, Mark L. – Journal of College Student Personnel, 1986
The reflective judgment stages of 25 college students were compared at college entry and four years later, and significant gains were found in stage scores. (Author)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, College Students, Conceptual Tempo, Evaluative Thinking
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Brown, Heather J.; And Others – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 1985
The effect of designated learning strategies and reflective versus impulsive cognitive styles on performance in a maze learning task was investigated. Performance of both reflective and impulsive subjects was improved by appropriate learning strategies. (Author/MT)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Conceptual Tempo, Higher Education, Learning Strategies
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Mines, Robert A.; And Others – Journal of College Student Development, 1990
Examined relationship between reflective judgment and standardized critical thinking tests in college students (n=100). Results indicated students who reasoned at higher stages of reflective judgment also revealed better critical thinking skills, suggesting a developmental basis for the acquisition of critical thinking skills. (Author/ABL)
Descriptors: College Students, Conceptual Tempo, Critical Thinking, Developmental Stages
Hall, Donald E. – ADE Bulletin, 2001
Addresses a particular paradox isolated by Cathy N. Davidson, that our gift to the world can be a curse to ourselves. Names this "gift" as a critical, intense, trained, sometimes skeptical but always skilled habit of attentive reading. Suggests administrators and professors respond to the "text" of the English profession as a creative work. (SG)
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Conceptual Tempo, Critical Reading, Higher Education
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Heckel, Robert V.; And Others – Journal of Psychology, 1981
Measures of latency and accuracy and self-ratings of performance on Kagan's Matching Familiar Figures Test (MFFT) were found to significantly differentiate between college students self-rated as high- and low-success problem solvers. Results suggest a need for training low-success, impulsive problem solvers in more effective problem-solving…
Descriptors: College Students, Conceptual Tempo, Higher Education, Individual Differences
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Papell, Catherine P.; Skolnik, Louise – Journal of Social Work Education, 1992
A discussion of the role of reflective thinking in the social work professional's training and practice looks at theories on the relationship of reflection and skilled action and at contemporary social work theories. It is suggested that Donald Schon's reflection-in-action model has applications in social work education and practice. (MSE)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Conceptual Tempo, Critical Thinking, Higher Education
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Haller, Coralie; Fisher, Ron; Gapp, Rod – Multicultural Education & Technology Journal, 2007
Purpose: To provide an understanding of the ways in which Confucian Heritage students use reflection as a means of learning at university. Design/methodology/approach: The approach is an exploratory qualitative study into the ways in which Confucian Heritage students learn while studying at university. Data are collected by means of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Learning, Cognitive Processes
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