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Showing 1 to 15 of 108 results Save | Export
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Gill Rutherford – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2024
The compulsory education of students who have complex learning characteristics has received little attention in New Zealand research literature. This paper explores the positive educational experiences of a student who transferred from one high school to another in the same city, which resulted in him 'actually learning'. Using Appreciative…
Descriptors: Learning, Foreign Countries, High School Students, School Choice
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Rachel Denee – Teacher Development, 2024
Networked approaches to professional learning have been shown to offer broad influence and unique benefits to teachers' continuing development. However, despite decades of research into the professional learning community (PLC) approach within single schools, there is a paucity of research about network PLCs and a lack of models for effective…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Social Networks, Foreign Countries, Visual Arts
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Lindsay J. Neill; Heather Brilla-Swenson; Neil Haigh – International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2024
During the COVID-19 pandemic, two higher education teachers, located respectively in the United States and Aotearoa New Zealand, collaborated in the design of curricula on the relationship between identity and food for their students. Intended to help their students develop cross-cultural knowledge and relationships, they hoped that their…
Descriptors: International Cooperation, Teacher Collaboration, College Faculty, Curriculum Design
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Amanda B. Lees; Rosemary Godbold; Simon Walters – Research Ethics, 2024
While the need to protect vulnerable research participants is universal, conceptual challenges with the notion of vulnerability may result in the under or over-protection of participants. Ethics review bodies making assumptions about who is vulnerable and in what circumstance can be viewed as paternalistic if they do not consider participant…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Scholarship, Instruction, Learning
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Lois R. Harris; Gavin T. L. Brown – Assessment Matters, 2024
Teachers often provide or set up opportunities for feedback within classroom contexts. How they understand what feedback is and how it should be given is essential to their feedback practices. Since feedback is commonly a communicative exchange between teacher and students or students and their peers, it is essential to understand teacher…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Expectation, Stakeholders, Well Being
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Lin, Yin-Tzu; Averill, Robin – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2023
Parental involvement in mathematics learning can positively affect student achievement and wellbeing but is challenging to establish and maintain. Asian immigrants make up around 15% of New Zealand's population, yet little is known about these parents' involvement in their child's schooling. To examine the experiences of parental involvement in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Immigrants, Parents, Parent Participation
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Kensington-Miller, Barbara; Webb, Andrea S.; Gansemer-Topf, Ann M.; Lewis, Heather; Luu, Julie; Maheux-Pelletier, Geneviève; Hofmann, Analise K. – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2021
This study examines the lived experiences of seven internationally diverse scholars from Canada, the United States, New Zealand, and Australia to answer the question: how do we make meaning of our collective boundary crossing experiences across disciplines and positions within SoTL? Our positions range from graduate student, faculty, and academic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Research, Instruction, Learning
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McChesney, Katrina; Cross, Jenny – Learning Environments Research, 2023
A core element of almost all educational improvement efforts is an intention to improve teacher practice in order to enhance student- and system-level outcomes. To this end, a range of strategies are deployed to facilitate teacher professional learning and development, with great investments of time, financial, and human resources. However, the…
Descriptors: Teachers, Foreign Countries, School Culture, Faculty Development
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Tiria Shaw; Hoana Mcmillan – Early Childhood Folio, 2023
In te ao Maori, our connection to our maunga and physical landmarks speaks to who we are as a people. Our maunga are also a source of inspiration and direction. This article draws on the symbolism of maunga and describes a Maori process of the way maunga can also act as a metaphorical journey to strengthening identity and transformative change. It…
Descriptors: Malayo Polynesian Languages, Ethnic Groups, Pacific Islanders, Ethnicity
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White, E. Jayne; Rooney, Tonya; Gunn, Alexandra C.; Nuttall, Joce – Australasian Journal of Early Childhood, 2021
This paper reports from a pilot study investigating the ways digital documentation platforms are changing educators' work in early childhood education. Digital documentation platforms are secure websites or application software, enabled by computer, smartphone, or tablet technologies, allowing educators to record observations of children's…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Teachers, Computer Uses in Education, Documentation
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Naomi Pears-Scown – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
This work engages with Karen Barad's philosophy and theory of agential realism through research practices of critical autoethnography and arts-based methods. The work explores how knowledge, memory, language, and experience remain alive within practitioners and inform who we become and how we inherit the stories involved in being educators and…
Descriptors: Learning, Memory, Language, Experience
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Adams, Nicola; Bourke, Roseanna – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2023
Inclusive education communities and systems are based on how teachers can use their knowledge, skills, and social awareness to meet the increasingly diverse needs of the learners within their classrooms. International research suggests that teachers often feel underprepared to meet the needs of all learners and are largely ill-prepared to know how…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Elementary School Students, Chronic Illness
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Angela Page; Joanna Anderson; Jennifer Charteris – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2024
In many schools across Australasia, single-cell classrooms have been replaced by 'innovative learning environments' (ILEs). This redesign of education spaces has had pedagogical and physical ramifications for students and teachers. This qualitative study, conducted in New Zealand and Australia, investigated how students with disability responded…
Descriptors: Educational Innovation, Educational Environment, Students with Disabilities, Mainstreaming
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Billot, Jennie; Rowland, Susan; Carnell, Brent; Amundsen, Cheryl; Evans, Tamela – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2017
Teaching and learning research in higher education, often referred to as the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL), is still relatively novel in many academic contexts compared to the mainstay of disciplinary research. One indication of this is the challenges those who engage in SoTL report in terms of how this work is valued or considered…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Instruction, Learning, Educational Research
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Lois Ruth Harris; Gavin T. Brown – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2016
A phenomenographic analysis explored 18 teachers' conceptions of feedback and how they were enacted. Five hierarchically ordered categories of feedback were seen as aligning with three major functions; that is, (1) satisfying stakeholder expectations (Category 1), maintaining student psycho-social well-being (Category 2), and supporting learning…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Expectation, Stakeholders, Well Being
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