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Vindya V. Senadheera; Thilini P. Rupasinghe; Dileepa S. Ediriweera – Journal of Learning for Development, 2024
Most students in higher education at present are 'digital natives.' They use technology in every facet of their life, including their education. They learn from formally organised courses as well as from informal learning. Hence, informal learning has been identified as crucial for the sustainability of higher education in the current global…
Descriptors: Informal Education, Sustainability, Higher Education, Influence of Technology
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Hill, Jennifer; West, Harry – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2022
A key debate in higher education is how assessment and feedback can be constructed to maximize opportunities for meaningful student learning. In this paper, we explore how a learning-focused model of feedback, teacher-student dialogic feed-forward, is enacted in practice, exposing many affordances but also some challenges. Adopting a small-scale…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Feedback (Response), Higher Education, Teacher Student Relationship
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Van Bergen, Penny; Parsell, Mitch – Australian Educational Researcher, 2019
While constructivism enjoys considerable popularity in higher education, both in Australia and internationally, it nonetheless takes a variety of forms. These different interpretations make it difficult to draw strong conclusions about constructivism as a whole. In this essay, we therefore take a psycho-philosophical approach: reviewing and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Constructivism (Learning), Higher Education, Teaching Methods
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Thurlings, Marieke; van Diggelen, Migchiel – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2021
This study explores how engineering academic teachers perceive their practical knowledge on learning and feedback. Academic teachers and education directors of different disciplines in an engineering university were interviewed. Responses were analysed using the matrix method and cross-case analysis. Five different profiles emerged that provided…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Feedback (Response), Teacher Attitudes, College Faculty
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Owusu-Agyeman, Yaw; Fourie-Malherbe, Magda – Studies in Continuing Education, 2019
Adults who enrol in higher education institutions (HEIs) often have contributions that could serve in enhancing the planning and implementation of their programmes. Importantly, while terms such as active learner engagement and knowledge co-creation dominate adult learning discussions, there are unanswered questions pertaining to how adult…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Higher Education, Learner Engagement, Structural Equation Models
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Doyle, Elaine; Buckley, Patrick – Interactive Learning Environments, 2022
While research and practice centred around students and academics working together to co-create in the higher level sector has increased, co-creation in assessment remains relatively rare in a higher education context. It is acknowledged in the literature that deeper comprehension of content can be realised when students author their own questions…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, Student Participation, Test Construction, Academic Achievement
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Leiber, Theodor – Quality in Higher Education, 2019
In contemporary knowledge societies, performance indicators are an indispensable element of sustainable quality management and enhancement through monitoring and evaluating quality performance of higher education institutions. It is argued that learning and teaching quality in higher education should be approached in a holistic way, namely across…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Educational Indicators, Teaching Methods, Knowledge Economy
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Shi, Dan; Irwin, Derek; Du, Ping – Classroom Discourse, 2023
The present study aims to explore an embodied approach to students' deep learning; specifically, how deep learning is interactively achieved through teachers' languaging dynamics and multimodal representations in interactive lecturing in L2 higher education (HE) contexts. The purpose is to understand how an instructor's embodied and multimodal…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Classroom Communication, Student Participation
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Orsmond, Paul; Merry, Stephen – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2017
This article uses situated learning theory to consider current tutor assessment and feedback practices in relation to learning practices employed by students outside the overt curriculum. The case is made that an emphasis on constructive alignment and explicitly articulating assessment requirements within curricula may be misplaced. Outside of the…
Descriptors: Tutors, Higher Education, Communities of Practice, Teaching Methods
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Howie, Peter; Bagnall, Richard – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2015
This paper reports a critical comparative analysis of two popular and significant theories of adult learning: the transformation and the deep approach theories of learning. These theories are operative in different educational sectors, are significant, respectively, in each, and they may be seen as both touching on similar concerns with learning…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adult Learning, Adults, Learning Theories
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Makani, Joyline; Durier-Copp, Martine; Kiceniuk, Deborah; Blandford, Alieda – International Journal of E-Learning & Distance Education, 2016
Globally, e-learning is gaining popularity as its potential contributions to economic and social development are recognised. However, its full potential has not been realised, as most e-learning practices merely replicate traditional existing teaching methods and have not fully exploited the interactive and social components of peer learning.…
Descriptors: Teamwork, Computer Mediated Communication, Electronic Learning, Instructional Effectiveness
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Kinash, Shelley; Knight, Diana; McLean, Matthew – Educational Technology & Society, 2015
University lectures are increasingly recorded or reproduced and made available to students online. This paper aggregates and critically reviews the associated literature, thematically organised in response to four questions. In response to the first question--does student attendance decrease when online content is made available--research…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Learning Processes, Teaching Methods, Constructivism (Learning)
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Papia Bawa – Journal of Research Initiatives, 2018
Given the exponential growth in international student populations in the United States, supporting cross-cultural language learners (CCLL) in developing their self and co-regulated learning is highly important. This paper presents a conceptual framework on the value of feedback within self-regulated versus co-regulated environments, in the context…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Metacognition, Foreign Countries, Second Language Instruction
Giridharan, Beena – Online Submission, 2012
In constructivist teaching, it is expected that students are able to apply skills and knowledge acquired from their course of study to the various situations that they encounter over the course of their professional lives. Constructivist classrooms engage learners actively in the learning process. Learners actively take knowledge, connect it to…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Values, Learning Processes, Constructivism (Learning)
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Alt, Dorit – Learning Environments Research, 2015
Self-efficacy for learning, which refers to students' beliefs in their capabilities to regulate their own learning, could determine students' motivation and academic achievement and, therefore, is significant in the learning process. This study examined how educational efforts based on constructivist theory were associated with the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Self Efficacy, Constructivism (Learning), Educational Environment
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