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Bryndis Gunnarsdottir; Amanda Bateman – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2025
Toddlers often use humour to engage their peers in acts of playful interactions as they build a sense of togetherness through a 'mutual we'. In this paper, we discuss the findings of a study where the aim was to examine the embodied strategies toddlers use to engage their peers in interactions that are playful and full of humour. The study is an…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Humor, Play, Interaction
Maria Berge; Per Anderhag – Science & Education, 2025
Talking science is based on the premise of being serious and dignified. Still, both teachers and students use humour when they communicate. However, little is known about the mechanisms of how learning science is constituted when teachers and students are using spontaneous humour in science classroom activities. In this study, we acknowledge this…
Descriptors: Science Education, Humor, Class Activities, Physics
Tammi, Tuure; Rautio, Pauliina – Environmental Education Research, 2023
Because of their mostly upbeat everyday presence in most people's lives globally, Internet memes have gained attention as tools in spreading information and enacting attitudinal change in the face of environmental troubles. The reappropriation of memes for classroom purposes is not straightforward, however. We focus our exploration of Internet…
Descriptors: Internet, Cartoons, Humor, Animals
Gizem Mutlu Gülbak; Okan Gülbak – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2025
Previous research on the motivation types located along a self-determination continuum revealed that the autonomy in students' motivation has a positive impact on getting favourable results and underlined the importance of autonomy-supportive environments. Given that teacher behaviour is addressed as one of the forms of autonomy-supportive…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Student Motivation, Teacher Behavior, College Freshmen
Kobayashi, Sofie; Berge, Maria – International Journal of Science Education, 2022
We explore how norms of science are given attention through laughter in life science doctoral supervision. Four supervision sessions were observed and video recorded. All laugh units were identified, and instances of humour were coded in relation to norms of science. Our analysis reveals tensions around how to do valid research, governance vs.…
Descriptors: Humor, Biological Sciences, Supervision, Doctoral Students
Siriprapa Srithep; Patharaorn Patharakorn – PASAA: Journal of Language Teaching and Learning in Thailand, 2024
Through the lens of conversational analysis (CA), humor or funniness is not an inherent property of a message, nor an internal state of any social action, but as something interactionally achieved (Glenn, 2003). Teachers are often encouraged to utilize humor to reduce anxiety, lower affective filters, and make language more "memorable"…
Descriptors: College Students, English Language Learners, Humor, Role Playing
Linnea Waade Biermann; Anne Sofie Borsch; Nina Langer Primdahl; Signe Smith Jervelund; An Verelst; Ilse Derluyn; Morten Skovdal – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2025
Learning a new language is a challenge facing most young immigrants and refugees arriving in a new resettlement country. Yet, learning the resettlement country language is critical for the young immigrants and refugees' life chances, in terms of future education, social integration, and participation in the labour market. While literature…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Second Language Learning, Adolescents, Immigrants
Yeh, Chun-Ting – Educational Gerontology, 2023
Since 2008, the Taiwanese government has been establishing Active Aging Learning Centers (AALCs) throughout Taiwan. As of 2021, AALCs had been established in Taiwan's 368 townships and cities, representing a milestone in the development of senior education in Taiwan. This study investigated the experiences of AALC lecturers with various teaching…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Older Adults, Adult Education, Student Motivation
Koç, Tuncay – Pedagogies: An International Journal, 2023
Using Conversation Analysis, this article explores the ways in which teasing is employed as an interactional tool to respond to learner-initiated departures in videotaped adult English as Foreign Language classrooms. The analysis focuses on the moments of classroom interaction where student contributions and behaviours initiate shifts from the…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Second Language Learning, English (Second Language), Student Behavior
Emily Rose Lake – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This dissertation asks what young children do with style at a time when their social and linguistic worlds begin to expand beyond the home, into the peer group. Grounded in a yearlong ethnography of a preschool classroom in the San Francisco Bay Area, I show how play moved gradually from indoors to outdoors as children got older. This shift…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Preschool Education, Play, Peer Relationship
Matsumoto, Yumi; Lee, Jay Jo; Kim, Eunhee – Classroom Discourse, 2022
Using multimodal conversation analysis, this study closely examines moments when an instructor's embodied explanations elicit laughter from his students -- which we refer to as laughing moments -- in an English as a second language classroom. Such laughing moments can exhibit students' attention to the teacher's explanation and also illuminate…
Descriptors: Humor, English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction, Language Teachers
Çopur, Nimet; Atar, Cihat; Walsh, Steve – Classroom Discourse, 2021
Research on humour in second language classrooms has widely focused on the roles, social functions and markers of humour in interaction; however, little attention has been paid to the sequential mechanisms of humour and the relationship between repair and humour. Therefore, drawing on a conversation analytic approach, this study investigates…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Humor, Interaction, English (Second Language)
McQuade, Robert; Ventura-Medina, Esther; Wiggins, Sally; Anderson, Tony – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2020
With the increasing complexity of the engineering role, today's graduates must be capable of confronting both technical and societal problems; underpinned by effective teamwork at their core. Problem-based learning has been implemented in engineering to better prepare students for modern industry. However, limited research has examined the complex…
Descriptors: Problem Based Learning, Engineering Education, Interaction, Undergraduate Students
West, Mckay Steven; Martin, Matthew M. – Communication Education, 2019
Instructors use humor in the classroom in numerous ways, including behaving stupidly, offering impersonations, manipulating their nonverbals, telling a story, joke, or pun, and using a costume or prop. How students decode their instructors' use of humor impacts their feelings about the course and their instructors. In this study, we investigated…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Humor, Student Attitudes, Teacher Behavior
Santana, Josefina C. – Latin American Journal of Content and Language Integrated Learning, 2019
English-medium instruction classes in higher education are increasing in countries where English is not the first language. Though these courses offer advantages, they also offer concerns and challenges. One of these challenges is creating a rapport between a teacher and students who are working in a language that is not their own. Rapport is…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language of Instruction, English (Second Language), College Students

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