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Showing 1 to 15 of 615 results Save | Export
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Ádám Nagy; Gábor Ákos Csutorás – Acta Educationis Generalis, 2025
Introduction: The lives of young people in the first place, but of all of us, are much more complicated than to immediately, almost automatically, pour the "generation sauce" on everything. However, it seems that today, in scientific, science communication and popular literature, the generational response often seems to be the only one.…
Descriptors: Age Groups, Generational Differences, Logical Thinking, Classification
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Luis Vila-Henninger; Claire Dupuy; Virginie Van Ingelgom; Mauro Caprioli; Ferdinand Teuber; Damien Pennetreau; Margherita Bussi; Cal Le Gall – Sociological Methods & Research, 2024
Qualitative secondary analysis has generated heated debate regarding the epistemology of qualitative research. We argue that shifting to an abductive approach provides a fruitful avenue for qualitative secondary analysts who are oriented towards theory-building. However, the concrete implementation of abduction remains underdeveloped--especially…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Research Methodology, Epistemology, Theories
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Peter Woelert; Bjørn Stensaker – Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy, 2025
Over recent decades, one can identify two key narratives associated with changes in university organization and governance. The first narrative focuses on the administrative consequences of an off-loading state relinquishing direct control over some of universities' internal operations while at the same time driving bureaucratization at the…
Descriptors: Strategic Planning, School Restructuring, Administrative Organization, Universities
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Mills, Terence – Australian Mathematics Education Journal, 2023
Inductive reasoning is used when generalizing from particular cases to a general theory. The purpose of this paper is to present some highlights in the history of the problem of induction through notes on a selection of writers from ancient Greece to modern times. These notes contribute to the argument that there is a fundamental problem with…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Philosophy, Mathematics Education, Educational History
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Albert Weideman – Educational Linguistics, 2024
The theoretical defensibility of applied linguistic intervention design provides the rationale for such designs, demonstrating how they are supported by theory, constructs, and analysis. Though founded upon science, imaginative design has its leading technical function as guiding lodestar. A scientific rationale for a plan underwrites the design,…
Descriptors: Theories, Applied Linguistics, Intervention, Design
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Widaman, Keith F. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2023
The import or force of the result of a statistical test has long been portrayed as consistent with deductive reasoning. The simplest form of deductive argument has a first premise with conditional form, such as p[right arrow]q, which means that "if p is true, then q must be true." Given the first premise, one can either affirm or deny…
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Statistical Analysis, Logical Thinking, Probability
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Erika C. Bullock – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2024
In this conceptual paper, the author argues that equity research in mathematics education is a genre that operates according to certain implicit ideological and rhetorical rules and assumptions--or discursive formations--that form how one can think about equity and inequity. One such rule that forms the basis of this paper is the axiom of…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Racial Factors, Logical Thinking, Equal Education
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José Luis Rodríguez Illera – Digital Education Review, 2024
The article reviews some of the relationships between AI and education, emphasizing the metaphors used, the difficulties in finding points of agreement, as well as aspects of the social criticism that is made of AI (e.g. considering that it can be a form of unwanted deviation). AI appears as one more case of technology that comes to improve…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Thinking Skills, Ethics
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Xu, Huiling; Yan, Xun-Wang; Wang, Yanyun – Physics Teacher, 2022
Aristotle's wheel paradox is a fascinating example of a classical puzzle that can pique a student's interest. The existing explanations in the literature are limited to discussions of the wheel trajectory; in this paper, we study the paradox from the viewpoint of motion decomposition, an approach we consider more intuitive. The motion of the point…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Motion, Learner Engagement, Science Activities
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Misawa, Koichiro – Environmental Education Research, 2023
Michael Bonnett's highly regarded "Environmental Consciousness" (2021) is an admirable extension of the phenomenology of nature inaugurated in his previous work "Retrieving Nature" (2004). To fully capture the essentials of his environmental thinking, I locate the set of ideas he has developed in his phenomenology of nature…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Educational Philosophy, Logical Thinking, Phenomenology
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Jérôme Proulx – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2024
In their recent article on teachers' proportional reasoning, Copur-Gencturk et al. (2022) draw attention to a type of strategy that they call "relative", lodged right between additive and multiplicative thinking. This strategy raised interest in our research team, as it aligned well and helped give stronger meaning to some strategies…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Mathematics Skills, Addition, Multiplication
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Julie R. Klein – Theory and Research in Education, 2024
This article develops the ideas of perfection and education in Spinoza and Maimonides. Both thinkers identify human perfection with intellectual knowledge and a transformation in affect. They accordingly envision education in terms of enhancing cognition and shaping the desire to know. The first steps are a critical evaluation of imagination and…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Epistemology, Learning Processes, Logical Thinking
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Davidyan, Arik – Advances in Physiology Education, 2021
University-level physiology courses are considered challenging. Postsecondary instructors indicate the top three reasons that make physiology courses difficult for student are 1) the need for the learner to reason mechanistically, 2) the belief among students that memorization is equal to learning, and 3) the need to think about the physiological…
Descriptors: College Students, Logical Thinking, Physiology, Teaching Methods
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Anders Vassenden; Marte Mangset – Sociological Methods & Research, 2024
In Goffman's terms, qualitative interviews are social encounters with their own realities. Hence, the 'situational critique' holds that interviews cannot produce knowledge about the world beyond these encounters, and that other methods, ethnography in particular, render lived life more accurately. The situational critique cannot be dismissed; yet…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Research Methodology, Interviews, Middle Class
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William Kuehnle – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2024
When confronted with the ineffable, poets turn to metaphor. Similarly, philosophers of education often employ metaphors and analogies to explain the functions of education (e.g., schools are families, machines, prisons, etc.), and, more specifically, the role of educators. Teachers have been described as prophets, liberators, and midwives, which,…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Figurative Language, Logical Thinking, Role of Education
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