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Showing 1 to 15 of 71 results Save | Export
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Les P. Cook; Marilee Bresciani Ludvik; Jennifer Henline – About Campus, 2024
This article showcases a few campuses' intentional investments in their students' inner well-being and what they are discovering because of their efforts. In the fall of 2016, researchers disseminated a survey exploring the implementation of mindfulness practices on campus. The survey was designed around what businesses had been doing, and left…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Student Attitudes, Anxiety
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Liu, Xiaohua; Read, John – Language Assessment Quarterly, 2021
Expert judgement has been frequently employed with reading assessments to gauge the skills potentially measured by test tasks, for purposes such as construct validation or producing diagnostic information. Despite the critical role it plays in such endeavours, few studies have triangulated its results with other types of data such as reported…
Descriptors: Reading Tests, Reading Skills, Test Items, Expertise
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Jeong, Allan; Kim, Hae Young – Knowledge Management & E-Learning, 2022
Research shows that using computer-aided mapping tools improves critical thinking skills, but prior research provides limited evidence to show how the use of specific critical thinking skills increases map quality. This qualitative study observed 4 experts and 5 novices use a computer-aided mapping tool to construct argument maps. The analysis of…
Descriptors: Identification, Critical Thinking, Thinking Skills, Expertise
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Peskin, Joan; Ellenbogen, Beverly – Cognition and Instruction, 2019
To identify expert poets' cognitive processes as they compose poetry, we asked 10 expert poets and 10 novice writers of poetry to think aloud as they composed a poem. Compared to the novices, expert poets revealed an associative playfulness and surrendering of consciousness, similar to that shown in research on general creativity in domains such…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Poetry, Protocol Analysis, Expertise
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Yoon, Jong-Sung; Boutis, Kathy; Pecaric, Martin R.; Fefferman, Nancy R.; Ericsson, K. Anders; Pusic, Martin V. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2020
Models for diagnostic reasoning in radiology have been based on the observed behaviors of experienced radiologists but have not directly focused on the thought processes of novices as they improve their accuracy of image interpretation. By collecting think-aloud verbal reports, the current study was designed to investigate differences in specific…
Descriptors: Radiology, Clinical Diagnosis, Allied Health Personnel, Protocol Analysis
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Hoard, Brent; Stefaniak, Jill; Baaki, John; Draper, Darryl – Educational Technology Research and Development, 2019
This study explored the interaction of multimedia production competencies of expert and novice instructional designers on the design decisions made during the instructional design process/workflow. This multiple measures study used qualitative survey instruments to access and measure the production competencies of participants, then a design aloud…
Descriptors: Multimedia Instruction, Multimedia Materials, Instructional Design, Decision Making
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Chang, Hsin-Yi – Science Education, 2022
This study investigated eight experienced science teachers' and eight senior high school students' metavisualization when they drew models to represent their concepts of carbon cycling. Qualitative data collection techniques including think-aloud tasks and follow-up retrospective interviews were employed. The purposes of the study included: (1) to…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, High School Students, Visualization, Freehand Drawing
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Haugh, Todd – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2019
This article's goal is to encourage the use of modeling as a pedagogical approach, particularly in business law and ethics education. It attempts to do so in three parts. First, it sets forth the expert-novice knowledge gap problem. It draws on academic research regarding expertise from a diverse set of fields to demonstrate how experts and…
Descriptors: Business Administration, Ethical Instruction, Expertise, Novices
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Nelms, April A.; Segura-Totten, Miriam – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2019
Student engagement in the analysis of primary scientific literature increases critical thinking, scientific literacy, data evaluation, and science process skills. However, little is known about the process by which expertise in reading scientific articles develops. For this reason, we decided to compare how faculty experts and student novices…
Descriptors: Primary Sources, Undergraduate Students, College Faculty, Novices
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Kontorovich, Igor'; Koichu, Boris – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2016
This paper is concerned with organizational principles of a pool of familiar problems of expert problem posers and the ways by which they are utilized for creating new problems. The presented case of Leo is part of a multiple-case study with expert problem posers for mathematics competitions. We present and inductively analyze the data collected…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Expertise, Problem Solving, Mathematics
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Resnick, Ilyse; Kastens, Kim A.; Shipley, Thomas F. – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2018
This study identifies a population of students who have an intermediate amount of relevant content knowledge and skill for working with data, and characterizes their approach to interpreting a challenging data-based visualization. Thirty-three undergraduate students enrolled in an introductory environmental science course reasoned about salinity…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Visual Aids, Data Interpretation, Undergraduate Students
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Després, Jean-Philippe; Burnard, Pamela; Dubé, Francis; Stévance, Sophie – Journal of Research in Music Education, 2017
The growing interest in musical improvisation is exemplified by the body of literatures evidencing the positive impacts of improvisation learning on the musical apprentice's aptitudes and the increasing presence of improvisation in Western classical concert halls and competitions. However, high-level Western classical music improvisers' thinking…
Descriptors: Classical Music, Creative Activities, Semi Structured Interviews, Expertise
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Strasser, Josef; Gruber, Hans – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2015
An important part of learning processes in the professional development of counselors is the integration of declarative knowledge and professional experience. It was investigated in-how-far mental health counselors at different levels of expertise (experts, intermediates, novices) differ in their availability of experience-based knowledge…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Professional Development, Counselors, Mental Health
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Randles, Christopher; Overton, Tina; Galloway, Ross; Wallace, Marsali – International Journal of Science Education, 2018
This paper describes the results of a comparative study into the approaches used by science undergraduates when solving open-ended problems. This study adopted a pseudo-grounded theory framework to analyse six case studies, one from each of the science disciplines studied. The study involved 70 participants from 5 institutions solving open-ended…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Science, Problem Solving, Science Process Skills
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Van Valey, Thomas; Hartmann, David; Fuqua, Wayne; Evans, Andrew; Ing, Amy Day; Meyer, Amanda; Staros, Karolina; Walmsley, Chris – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2015
As one approach to examining the way ethical decisions are made, we asked experts (i.e., ethicists, regulatory officials, and experienced researchers) and novices (i.e., inexperienced graduate students) to review a set of scenarios that depict some important ethical tensions in research. The method employed was "protocol analysis," a…
Descriptors: Ethics, Decision Making, Protocol Analysis, Graduate Students
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