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Gerry Dunne – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2025
In education, the concept of 'thinking skills' has long been contentious. This article revisits the 2010 debate between Stephen Johnson and Harvey Siegel on whether thinking can be taught as a general skill. To weigh in on this ongoing dispute, it contributes a novel perspective by augmenting key insights from 4E cognition to avoid treating…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Models, Educational Philosophy, Skill Development
Sarah E. Stanlick; Joseph Doiron – Metropolitan Universities, 2024
Global crises continue to shape the higher education landscape by posing challenges at every step of the educational process. From pedagogical delivery to experience design to undergraduate student research, pandemics, unrest, war, and environmental disasters have given us many imperatives to pivot and adapt. While the COVID-19 pandemic brought…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Models, Global Approach, Electronic Learning
Duncan, Chris; Kim, Minkang; Baek, Soohyun; Wu, Kwan Yiu Yoyo; Sankey, Derek – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
Over the past twenty-five years, or so, considerable advances have been made in understanding how learning occurs in the brain, though much of this research is still to make its way into education. One contribution it should be making is to furnish the philosophical critique of past and current theory with supporting empirical evidence. For…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Learning Motivation, Educational Philosophy, Criticism
Østergaard, Edvin – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2015
The question of how to foster rooting in science education points towards a double challenge; efforts to "prevent" (further) uprooting and efforts to "promote" rooting/re-rooting. Wolff-Michael Roth's paper discusses the uprooting/rooting pair of concepts, students' feeling of alienation and loss of fundamental sense of the…
Descriptors: Science Education, Phenomenology, Scientific Concepts, Models
Habron, John; van der Merwe, Liesl – International Journal of Music Education, 2017
Several authors have noted that one of Émile Jaques-Dalcroze's aims was to dissolve the mind-body dualism, typical of Cartesianism. However, there has been little research on the spirit-body connection, as it appears in Jaques-Dalcroze's writings. The purpose of this document analysis is to understand how a hermeneutic phenomenological model for…
Descriptors: Human Body, Cognitive Processes, Holistic Approach, Philosophy
Jeong, Changwoo; Han, Hye Min – Online Submission, 2011
Developments in neurobiology are providing new insights into the biological and physical features of human thinking, and brain-activation imaging methods such as functional magnetic resonance imaging have become the most dominant research techniques to approach the biological part of thinking. With the aid of neurobiology, there also have been…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Cognitive Processes, Brain, Biology
Chiou, Guo-Li; Anderson, O. Roger – Science Education, 2010
This study first used a new approach, combining students' ontological beliefs and process explanations, to represent students' mental models of heat conduction and then examined the relationships between their mental models and their predictions. Clinical interviews were conducted to probe 30 undergraduate physics students' mental models and their…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Physics, Pattern Recognition, Heat
Clark, Andy – Neuropsychologia, 2009
Much of our human mental life looks to involve a seamless unfolding of perception, action and experience: a golden braid in which each element twines intimately with the rest. We see the very world we act in and we act in the world we see. But more than this, visual experience presents us with the world in a way apt for the control and fine…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Brain, Cognitive Psychology, Psychomotor Skills
Belbase, Shashidhar – Online Submission, 2010
Images, anxieties, and attitudes towards mathematics are common interest among mathematics teachers, teacher educators and researchers. The main purpose of this literature review based paper is to discuss and analyze images, anxieties, and attitudes towards mathematics in order to foster meaningful teaching and learning of mathematics. Images of…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Mathematics Teachers, Mathematics Anxiety, Student Attitudes
Koralus, Philipp Elias – ProQuest LLC, 2010
The dissertation presents a theory of semantics and pragmatics for both language and vision. I focus on sentences including proper names, descriptions, and attitude report verbs, and on the Necker cube. I propose the Open Instruction Theory (OIT), according to which the linguistic meaning of a sentence and the semantic contribution of visual…
Descriptors: Linguistic Theory, Semantics, Pragmatics, Language
Heath, Gregory – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2008
This paper continues to explore the relationship between the imagination and learning. It has been claimed by Maxine Greene, amongst others, that imagination is the most important of the cognitive capacities for learning; the reason being that "it permits us to give credence to alternative realities". However little work has been done on what…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Imagination, Learning, Relationship
Cropley, Arthur; Cropley, David – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2008
Many teachers are interested in fostering creativity, and there are good reasons for doing so. However, the question of how to do it is made difficult by the paradoxes of creativity: mutually contradictory findings that are, nonetheless, simultaneously true (e.g. convergent thinking hampers creativity but is also necessary for it). These paradoxes…
Descriptors: Creativity, Convergent Thinking, Teaching Methods, Cognitive Processes
Greene, Jeffrey A.; Azevedo, Roger A.; Torney-Purta, Judith – Educational Psychologist, 2008
We propose an integration of aspects of several developmental and systems of beliefs models of personal epistemology. Qualitatively different positions, including realism, dogmatism, skepticism, and rationalism, are characterized according to individuals' beliefs across three dimensions in a model of epistemic and ontological cognition. This model…
Descriptors: Predictive Validity, Statistical Analysis, Psychometrics, Epistemology
Dartnall, Terry – Cognitive Science, 2005
One of the arguments for active externalism (also known as the extended mind thesis) is that if a process counts as cognitive when it is performed in the head, it should also count as cognitive when it is performed in the world. Consequently, mind extends into the world. I argue for a corollary: We sometimes perform actions in our heads that we…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Cognitive Processes, Discovery Processes, Thinking Skills
Peritore, N. Patrick – Journal of the University Film Association, 1977
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Definitions, Film Study, Films

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