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Mark Fusco – Phi Delta Kappan, 2025
As a high school English and film teacher in the post-quarantine world, Mark Fusco has read about "lost generations" and "learning loss." But he believes these assessments of today's students today are incomplete. What valuable skills did young people actually gain during their time away from school? Fusco has seen a surge in…
Descriptors: Films, Video Technology, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Lei Deng – International Journal of Web-Based Learning and Teaching Technologies, 2025
As science and technology advance rapidly, video semantic understanding (VSU) technology has made significant strides. This technology has garnered widespread recognition within the music industry and piqued the interest of film and television music creators. In the realm of film music creation, VSU technology serves as a powerful tool,…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Artificial Intelligence, Films, Television
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Steven Eastwood; Bonnie Evans; Sebastian Gaigg; Janet Harbord; Damian Milton – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2025
This article discusses the methodological approach of a collaborative research project situated at the intersection of autism and cinema. The Autism through Cinema project stages an encounter between the titular terms in order to challenge the neurotypical assumptions that underpin cinema as an apparatus, and to mobilise new cinematic…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Films, Cooperation, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Atanu Dutta; Aroma Oberoi; Jyoti Modi; Parmod Goyal; Sangeetha Samuel; Tanushree Mondal; Kalyan Goswami; Sibasish Sahoo; Amit Pal – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2025
Cinemeducation is an effective tool to help students develop humanistic skills. However, there was a need for more studies to find out if this can also be utilized to improve the interest and satisfaction of students learning about rare diseases such as the inborn errors of metabolism. The aim was to introduce cinemeducation as part of early…
Descriptors: Films, Film Study, Skill Development, Humanism
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Ellen E. Seiter – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
Films provide many memorable scenes of care that both shape and reinforce ideas about who deserves care, how carers should behave, and what kinds of people appear 'naturally' suited to the labors of caring for children, the sick, the elderly and the disabled (namely women). My specific interest here is in films about migrant domestic workers in…
Descriptors: Films, Caring, Migrants, Child Care
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Michelle Dean; Anders Nordahl-Hansen – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2025
There are an increasing number of autistic characters seen in film and television, and an increasing number of autistic individuals entering the workforce. At the intersection of media and employment, only a small proportion of autistic characters are played by autistic actors. This study examines the experiences of professional autistic actors…
Descriptors: Adults, Young Adults, Acting, Autism Spectrum Disorders
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Gordon B. Schmidt; Stephanie A. Van Dellen; Sy Islam – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2025
While films are primarily created as a means of amusement, their potential values go beyond entertainment. This article highlights how films can be a useful part of leadership development. We underscore how such development can come in self-study by people, in educational programs, or as part of leadership development in organizations. We discuss…
Descriptors: Leadership Training, Teaching Methods, Films, Instructional Effectiveness
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Kerry Chappell; Sharon Witt; Heather Wren; Leonie Hampton; Pam Woods; Lizzie Swinford; Martin Hampton – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2025
This study marks a resting point within ongoing explorations of creativity, transdisciplinarity, materiality, and spatiality in Higher Education (HE) pedagogy. It interrogates how different materialities and spatialities shape learning to re-create practices to better respond to societal challenges. This is situated within an imperative to move…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Development, Educational Change, Spatial Ability
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Andrew Gibbons; Andrew Denton – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
In the film "Sans Soliel", Chris Marker challenges received wisdoms with regard cinematic production of real worlds and real people. In Marker's techniques, Jacques Rancière observes an intensely political, highly accessible, art form that leads to a theorisation of cinema for its democratic and educational functions. In this paper we…
Descriptors: Films, Ethics, Police, Parent Child Relationship
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Josie L. Andrews; Adam L. McClain – Adult Education Quarterly: A Journal of Research and Theory, 2025
Historically, the representation of Black women in film has been non-existent at worst and highly questionable at best. As cross-cultural spectators--"a Black woman and a White man"--we used an oppositional gaze to critically "look" at the representation and adult development of Black female protagonists across U.S. films.…
Descriptors: African Americans, Females, Literary Devices, Films
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Raya Shields; Steacy Easton; Julia Gruson-Wood; Margaret F. Gibson; Patty N. Douglas; Carla M. Rice – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2025
This article takes up multimedia storytelling and interference as methods on the move in and beyond critical Autism studies and considers their contributions to post and qualitative studies in education. We write as a collective of Autistic and non-Autistic researchers, kin, artists, and educators. We think generatively about the tensions of…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Multimedia Materials, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Educational Research
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Alessia Rosa; Claudia Chellini – Journal of Media Literacy Education, 2025
Representations of diversity and otherness in cartoons offer metaphors for identity that can affect children's perceptions and attitudes towards the potential and challenges associated with various forms of disability. This contribution analyses a corpus of animations made up of feature films, series, and short films with a focus on how disability…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Films, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Physical Disabilities
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Kathleen Callahan – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2025
Historically, films and television centered men, but there has recently been a shift toward focusing on women and people of color (and women of color) in leading roles. Films and shows like "Black Panther," "Barbie," and "Ashoka" reflect this trend, offering more complex stories and diverse representation. Despite…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Films, Television, Females
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Marie Sophie Hunze; Franziska Freudenberger; Yvonne Gerigk; Peter Ohler; Gerhild Nieding – Journal of Children and Media, 2025
Evidence shows that the first component of media literacy to develop in children is media sign literacy (MSL), an ability that focuses on the understanding and correct use of the signs and symbol systems that organize different media. Previous research has shown that MSL is a significant predictor of learning from media. In this study, we…
Descriptors: Educational Media, Preschool Children, Films, Audio Books
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Eleni Tsompanaki; Haris Pallas – Policy Futures in Education, 2025
Acknowledging the diverse ways of knowing and communicating knowledge, this article suggests that community dance and cinematography can be powerful tools for sharing lived experiences. The research involved a community of 80 individuals, ages 5-50 years old, during the COVID-19 pandemic and under the strict measures of quarantine. Art-based…
Descriptors: Dance, Films, Experience, COVID-19
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