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Joshua Clements; William Gooden – Learning Assistance Review, 2025
This brief essay aims to probe an accepted norm in peer tutoring hiring processes, specifically the "ipso facto" acceptance that a good student equates to being a good tutor. While this practice makes sense in many instances, perhaps a more holistic approach is warranted, particularly in light of the humanistic work we perform in…
Descriptors: Peer Teaching, Tutoring, Student Characteristics, Humanistic Education
Fanxiao Wani Qiu; Joanna Park; Amanda Vite; Erika Patall; Henrike Moll – Developmental Science, 2025
Empirical studies on selective teaching and informing indicate that children may vary what they teach depending on whom they are teaching, taking into account how helpful the information is for a given audience. The current meta-analysis quantifies the effect of selective informing and teaching in 2-7-year-olds by examining the relationship…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Meta Analysis, Young Children, Peer Teaching
Verena Hawelka; Maria Kreilinger; Christina Penn; Eva Steindl – British Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2025
Background: BLuE -- 'Bildung, Lebenskompetenz und Empowerment' ['Education, Life Skills and Empowerment'] -- is an inclusive university programme with a peer-mentoring system, where students of the primary education programme assist students with attributed cognitive or mental disabilities as tutors. Deutsch et al. (2024) showed that it is a…
Descriptors: Peer Teaching, Mentors, College Students, Inclusion
Geno Castillo – ProQuest LLC, 2025
The problem investigated in this study was the trend of decreasing student retention of first-year, degree-seeking college students at an independent community college located in northeastern New Mexico. The purpose of the study was to examine the association between student retention and program utilization. The research question was to determine…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Programs, Community College Students, Student Participation
Sandra Flynn – Studies in the Education of Adults, 2025
In 2021, data on Internet usage for those aged 75 years and older in Ireland indicated that almost half of this cohort (46%) had never accessed the Internet. This study examines the role of informal peer learning in the digital lives of older adults in Ireland. A mixed methods case study methodology was employed. Data were collected from 100…
Descriptors: Older Adults, Internet, Digital Literacy, Informal Education
Helena Kantanen; Kati Kasanen; Susanna Kohonen; Vesa Paajanen; Sanni Pirttilä; Piia Siitonen – Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education, 2025
Purpose: This qualitative study assesses the enablers of the work of a novel, self-managing digital pedagogy peer support team in a Finnish higher education institution. Design/methodology/approach: This study employs a qualitative methodology with in-depth interviews of five digital pedagogy facilitators. The data collected are analyzed with the…
Descriptors: Self Management, Peer Teaching, Web Based Instruction, Teaching Methods
Santiago Rincon-Gallardo – Professional Development in Education, 2025
This conceptual article presents a challenge to the dominant view and practice of teacher professional learning and its focus on preparing "experts in teaching" and proposes instead an emphasis on preparing "experts in learning." Drawing on contemporary knowledge on the nature of human learning and development, and in…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Educational Innovation, Foreign Countries, Expertise
Betty Thomason; Natalia A. Ward – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2025
Heightened attention to the importance of equitable educational practices in today's schools reveals a growing number of emergent bilingual students who have not received consistent formal education and may be struggling with overall literacy. Labeled as Students with Interrupted Formal Education (SIFE), these learners require novel educational…
Descriptors: Peer Teaching, Tutoring, Empowerment, Bilingual Students
Christine M. Pribbenow; D'Andrew Harrington; Chinmay P. Rele; Katie M. Sandlin; Wilson Leung; David Lopatto; Laura K. Reed – Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education, 2025
The Genomics Education Partnership (GEP; thegep.org) is a collaboration of more than 260 faculty from over 200 colleges and universities across the continental United States and Puerto Rico, all of whom are engaged in bringing Course-based Undergraduate Research Experiences (CUREs) centered in genomics and bioinformatics to their students. The…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Genetics, Student Research, Computer Uses in Education
Elahe Javadi; Judith Gebauer; Season Tanner – Journal of Information Systems Education, 2025
In this teaching tip, we describe our approach to elevating the quality of group work in an information technology (IT) project management course by implementing three practices of experiential and peer learning that work more effectively when combined. The first practice addresses slacking in group work by applying a flipped classroom style that…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Flipped Classroom, Information Technology, Group Activities
Jessica Sim; Patrick J. Nebl – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2025
Many are unfamiliar with the field of industrial-organizational (I-O) psychology. Vocational interests are often used to guide students' academic and career choices, but there is no scale that measures interest in the specific areas of I-O psychology. Study 1 and 2 present the initial development and refinement of the I-O Psychology Interest…
Descriptors: Test Construction, Peer Teaching, Mentors, Industrial Psychology
Richard Madel; Nancy Zimmerman – NECTFL Review, 2025
This study seeks to understand from the perspective of its participants the extent to which a year-long structured, state-level peer mentorship program for world language educators provides benefits, focusing on how involvement impacts their classroom practices and professional development. Research questions explore the specific advantages gained…
Descriptors: Mentors, Peer Teaching, Program Effectiveness, Language Teachers
Allison Merritt Dennings Wiedemeier; Kim Marie Tolson – American Biology Teacher, 2025
Biology and art have been linked throughout history. Early scientists, such as Leonardo de Vinci and John James Audubon, used sketches and painting to document their findings. Even early hominids left evidence of their world through cave art. Histology, the microscopic study of tissues and cells, relies on defining shape and spatial relationships…
Descriptors: Biology, Science Instruction, Art Education, Museums
Alina Kadluba; Anselm Strohmaier; Christian Schons; Andreas Obersteiner – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2025
Teachers need technological pedagogical content knowledge (TPACK) for teaching with technology, and its assessment is crucial for research and practice. Previous literature reviews on TPACK assessment were not specific to a content area (e.g., mathematics), although, by definition, the TPACK framework includes content-specific knowledge facets.…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Technological Literacy, Course Content
Amanda Hay; Nicky Stanley-Clarke; Louise Winder; Robbie Maris; Chris Andrews; Jorie Knook – Health Education Journal, 2025
Background: Effectively supporting and promoting mental health education for at-risk populations is crucial. In New Zealand, risks in relation to the suicide for young farm labourers, alongside the stress associated with the transition to university and the vulnerability of rural communities, place agricultural students in a vulnerable position.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Peer Teaching, Well Being, Agricultural Education