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Showing 1 to 15 of 91 results Save | Export
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Moriah Omer-Attali; Adam Lefstein; Hadar Netz – Language and Education, 2025
While once forbidden in classrooms, laughter is increasingly encouraged as contributing to a positive learning environment. However, analyses of laughter in conversation show that laughter performs multiple social functions, some of which are not necessarily positive. Applying this lens, this study investigates the interactional functions of…
Descriptors: Humor, Elementary School Students, Student Behavior, Behavior Standards
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Orhan Gazi Yildirim; Nezahat Hamiden Karaca; Fatma Betül Senol – International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education, 2024
Self concept is an experiential formation gained as a result of certain experiences. The concept of self-concept has an interesting intersection with the psychological field of humour. The aim of the study is to examine the relationship between the humor styles and self-perceptions of primary school 4th grade students and to conduct the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Self Concept, Humor, Elementary School Students
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Eskidemir Meral, Seda; Koçer, Hale – Problems of Education in the 21st Century, 2023
Knowing humor development can be rather beneficial in terms of providing opportunities to better know children and evaluate their development. This study aimed to explore the process of humor development in preschool and primary school children in line with McGhee's humor development theory. The study employed a single screening model,…
Descriptors: Humor, Individual Development, Preschool Children, Elementary School Students
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Leung, Suzannie K. Y.; Yuen, Mantak – Education 3-13, 2023
The role of storybooks in offering an educational resource that promotes young children's cognitive and creative development has been recognised in the previous literature. The small-scale exploratory study reported here investigated children's senses of humour through pop-up storybook production. A workshop in Hong Kong, entitled Storybook…
Descriptors: Talent, Humor, Picture Books, Story Telling
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Marja-Leena Rönkkö; Juli-Anna Aerila; Tuula Stenius – Design and Technology Education, 2025
This study explores humour's role in a holistic craft process when 7-8-year-olds design personalised soft toys. Humour enhances learning environments by fostering joy, belonging and a positive atmosphere, acting as a motivational tool in experiential and arts-based learning. The study aims to answer the following questions: (1) What are the…
Descriptors: Humor, Toys, Handicrafts, Young Children
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Ioannis Ch. Konstantinou; Angeliki C. Tsatsouli; Stamatoula G. Logotheti – Open Journal for Educational Research, 2023
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the opinions of primary school and high school students regarding the role of humor as a practice in the management of educational communication on the part of the teacher. More specifically, it is investigated whether and to what extent humor affects the students' behavior towards the teacher, the…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Humor, Elementary School Students, High School Students
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McDermott, Mairi; Lenters, Kim – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2021
Humour, when engaged in the classroom, tends to be used as a means to hook youth into the 'real' material of school, when officially sanctioned at all. Humour can be dangerous, not-the-least in its potential to produce chaos, presenting difficulties in the rigid climate of accountability and standardisation. As we animate, humour can trouble…
Descriptors: Humor, Play, Critical Literacy, Psychological Patterns
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Rochelle Yi Hsuan Yang – Educational Research and Development Journal, 2024
The integration of augmented reality (AR) into children's literature has transformed traditional reading experiences, creating immersive and interactive environments that engage young readers. This study examines the creative methods of comic language within AR children's books, positing that the combination of humor and visual storytelling can…
Descriptors: Humor, Creativity, Language Usage, Books
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Barrett, Margaret S.; Zhukov, Katie – Research Studies in Music Education, 2023
Over the last decade research has reported a range of positive life and learning outcomes for adult and child choristers through first-person accounts derived through surveys and interviews. Little is known regarding parent and child perspectives on choral learning, particularly regarding the impacts of participating in excellent choirs on musical…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Music Education, Music Activities, Singing
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Rowe, Lindsey W. – Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, 2022
Under dominant, autonomous views of literacy, students' humorous language use during literacy events is often dismissed as 'off task' behaviour. Taking a languaging perspective, this paper considers how third-grade, emergent bilingual students' humorous language use functioned in both 'official' and 'peer' worlds during eBook composing events…
Descriptors: Bilingual Students, Humor, Grade 3, Electronic Publishing
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Kim, Sol – English Teaching, 2021
The use of humor has been a controversial research topic in language classrooms. Humor is pervasive; however, the functions of humor in primary English-as-a-foreign-language (EFL) classrooms is under-investigated. To analyze the distinct features of humor, this study explores the specific functions of humor in primary English teaching classrooms…
Descriptors: Humor, Elementary School Students, English (Second Language), Foreign Countries
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Morris, Ronald V. – Social Studies, 2023
Students used inquiry to invest folklore in their community. As part of the C3 inquiry arc students defined questions, connected folklore to a discipline, gathered data from their community and communicated information. Students' agency drove each of the projects as the students determined how much they would investigate each topic. Students…
Descriptors: Folk Culture, Social Studies, Teaching Methods, Personal Autonomy
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Lenters, Kimberly; Whitford, Alec – Literacy, 2018
In this article, we explore the idea that comedy, with its often unorthodox ways of looking at, experiencing, and responding to the world, offers untold possibility for classroom literacy instruction. The article focuses on the potential of Improv comedy as socio-materialist literacy in the classroom. It provides an account of Improv as a form of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Comedy, Humor, Literacy Education
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Tassell, Janet Lynne; Novak, Elena; Kessler, Bruce – Technology, Instruction, Cognition and Learning, 2019
"Operation Comics" is a series of mathematics comic books for 4th-6th grades that was implemented with 142 elementary school students to investigate the effects of an "Operation Comics" books intervention on student mathematics and comic book attitudes using the Attitudes Toward Mathematics Inventory (Tapia, 1996; Tapia &…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Cartoons, Student Attitudes, Gender Differences
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Charisse L. Nixon; Dharma Jairam; Stan Davis; Christine A. Linkie; Seria Chatters; James J. Hodge – International Journal of Bullying Prevention, 2020
Bullying victimization is a pervasive problem nationwide and is related to students' psychological distress, including increased loneliness, anxiety, depression, helplessness, and suicidal behaviors. Importantly, not all students respond to peer victimization in the same way. This study examined the effectiveness of students' coping strategies in…
Descriptors: Bullying, Gender Differences, Victims, Instructional Program Divisions
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