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Ouellet, Lorie; Laberge, Suzanne – Journal of Outdoor Recreation, Education, and Leadership, 2023
Group status hierarchies can affect individuals' experiences (e.g., sense of belonging) and the group's outcomes (e.g., cohesion) in group-based outdoor adventure education programs. The study aimed to explore how specific interpersonal status processes, which we also call the "relational status game," within an expedition group, affect…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Group Dynamics, Inclusion, Interpersonal Relationship
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Elizabeth Dickens; Andrea Han; Nausheen Shafiq; Jessica Taggart – To Improve the Academy, 2025
This mixed methods study explores the work and perspectives of curriculum developers, a subset of educational developers who support the development, revision, and/or renewal of academic degree programs and similar sequences, beyond an individual course. Thirty-five developers in the United States and Canada completed a survey addressing…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Development, Academic Degrees, Program Development
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Baer, Carolyn; Odic, Darko – Child Development, 2022
Strategic collaboration according to the law of comparative advantage involves dividing tasks based on the relative capabilities of group members. Three experiments (N = 405, primarily White and Asian, 45% female, collected 2016-2019 in Canada) examined how this strategy develops in children when dividing cognitive labor. Children divided…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Group Dynamics, Foreign Countries
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Tavares, Vander – Journal of Comparative and International Higher Education, 2022
In Canada, research has examined international-local student interaction by focusing on international students' perceptions and experiences. As such, the perspectives of local students toward socialization with international students remain less explored. Designed as a survey-based case study with 17 local students at a university in Ontario, this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Foreign Students, College Students, Geographic Location
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Anita Acai; Mandy Frake; Melanie Hamilton; Patrick T. Maher; Roselynn Verwoord; Cherie Woolmer – Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2024
Considering the expansive context of the international Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL) community, SoTL scholars may wish to reflect and identify what exists for building and nurturing fellowship, and how they may be enacted in practice to benefit others. In this reflective article, we draw on our experiences as International Society…
Descriptors: Fellowships, Scholarship, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes
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Paméla McMahon-Morin; Bouchra Nasri; Ingrid Verduyckt; Stefano Rezzonico; Marie-Pier Gingras – Journal of Educational Research, 2024
This study examined the effects of an SLP-delivered whole-class interactive book reading intervention and a professional development program on children's self-initiated participation. Eleven kindergarten teachers and the children in their classes participated in this quasi-experimental study. They were filmed during book reading at pre- and…
Descriptors: Books, Reading Aloud to Others, Student Participation, Group Dynamics
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Bene, Rose; McNeilly, Elizabeth – Papers on Postsecondary Learning and Teaching, 2020
Design Thinking (DT) has recently been adopted in some higher education disciplines as an effective pedagogical approach to enable students to acquire the skills needed for solving real world problems. As a human-centered, iterative process, design thinking is characterized by working with others to understand, define and solve problems using…
Descriptors: Design, Cooperative Learning, Teamwork, College Students
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Switzer, Jessica L.; San Juan, Valerie; Graham, Susan A. – Developmental Psychology, 2020
A core question in social categorization research focuses on how children organize social categories. We examined whether 4- and 5-year-olds: (a) identify the social category membership of a person based on relational interactions between that person and a known category member; and (b) use these social categories to guide inferences about certain…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Interaction, Classification, Helping Relationship
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Brannen, Sydney F.; Beauchamp, David; Cartwright, Nadia M.; Liddle, Danyelle M.; Tishinsky, Justine M.; Newton, Genevieve; Monk, Jennifer M. – International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2021
Group work (GW) in undergraduate education facilitates the development of communication and collaborative skills. However, dysfunctional and inequitable group dynamics can have adverse effects, leading to increased anxiety. This research sought to determine the effectiveness of a Group Work Contract to facilitate the GW process in the face-to-face…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Contracts, Anxiety, Distance Education
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Poort, Irene; Jansen, Ellen; Hofman, Adriaan – Higher Education Research and Development, 2022
Group work is a common active learning strategy in higher education when the goal is to enhance deep learning and develop teamwork skills. Culturally diverse learning groups are particularly valuable in preparing university students to participate in a globalized world. Student engagement in group work is critical in realizing these benefits.…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Diversity, Cultural Differences, Cooperative Learning
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Maureen Coady – Adult Education Quarterly: A Journal of Research and Theory, 2024
Building resilience is a key concern for adult educators today as we face unprecedented global challenges such as the coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19). Nowhere is this more apparent than in educational initiatives with health professionals who experience many stressors in their work, now amplified by the pandemic. This paper reports the results…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Rural Areas, Health Services, Allied Health Occupations
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Alice S. N. Kim; Danielle Robinson; Celia Popovic; Alecia Carolli; Brad Jennings; Franz Newland – Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2024
In this study we explored the experiences of students who completed a project-based, interdisciplinary capstone course that was offered at a large university in Southern Ontario, Canada. To do so, we interviewed students after they completed the course, adopting a constructivist perspective and a phenomenological approach. Interview transcripts…
Descriptors: Capstone Experiences, Active Learning, Student Projects, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Armstrong, Alayne – Research in Mathematics Education, 2020
The Zen concept of beginner's mind describes how one's level of awareness can open one's mind to growth and possibilities, an attitude that would be beneficial for many mathematics students. In this naturalistic case study, two small groups of middle years students engage in the same mathematical task, one group demonstrating the characteristics…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Cooperative Learning, Mathematics Activities, Group Dynamics
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Manion, Kathleen; Shah-Preusser, Noreen; Dyck, Trish; Thackeray, Susan – Collected Essays on Learning and Teaching, 2020
Learning in teams offers unique benefits to understand and address contemporary, global, and local challenges through effective and thoughtful learning journeys. However, learning in teams is not always thoroughly planned or effectively delivered. In trying to better understand what processes support or hinder effective and innovative learning in…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, College Students, Foreign Countries, Learning Processes
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Butler, Joy; Burns, David P.; Robson, Claire – European Physical Education Review, 2021
Though students can learn a great deal about ethics as they play sport, the authors of this article ask what, exactly, they learn from playing dodgeball. As they look beyond the usual arguments offered for and against the teaching of the game, they view it through three ethical lenses: the ethic of care, the ethic of anti-oppressive education, and…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Ethics, Health Education, Team Sports
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