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David Coady – Educational Theory, 2024
It is widely believed that we are facing a problem, even a crisis, caused by so-called "echo chambers" and "filter bubbles." Here, David Coady argues that this belief is mistaken. There is no such problem, and we should refrain from using these neologisms altogether. They serve no useful purpose, since there is nothing we can…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Beliefs, Language Usage, Misconceptions
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Helen Bromhead; Cliff Goddard – Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 2025
This paper explores ways in which applied semantics (coming out of Natural Semantic Metalanguage approach) can inform effective communicative strategies for action on climate change. After framing discussion, it presents three case studies, which are intentionally disparate in nature: contrastive semantics of the expressions 'climate crisis',…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Semantics, Language Usage, Climate
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Júlio J. Conde; Pablo Á. Meira-Cartea – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
The Kigali Amendment introduced a new family of chemical compounds, which do not contribute to stratospheric ozone depletion but present a high global warming potential, under the watch of the Montreal Protocol in 2016. Earlier this year, a press note from the World Meteorological Organization entitled "Ozone layer recovery is on track,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scientific Concepts, Chemistry, Pollution
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Megan Davis Roberts – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2025
Purpose: This paper aims to consider the proliferation of journalistic articles that declare English Language Arts' death--Heller's 2023 The New Yorker piece "The End of the English Major" as a most recent iteration. It puts recent mainstream publications in conversation, reading them as a genre of elegies that, while largely discussing…
Descriptors: English, Language Arts, English Instruction, Public Opinion
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Jane C. Lo; candace moore – Educational Theory, 2024
The rise of political polarization and disagreement within the United States and other democracies indicates an erosion of the social contract, a deterioration exacerbated by the balkanization of social media, that can negatively impact our social relationships. Recent anti-Critical Race Theory (CRT) narratives in education provide insights into…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Trust (Psychology), Educational Research, Critical Race Theory
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Segun Eubanks; Monica Goldson; Pamela Callahan – Theory Into Practice, 2024
The performance of school boards as a governmental body has been a source of often well-deserved critique in both policy and academic outlets. In this article, we explore approaches to school board governance to conceptualize possible approaches to increasing effective governance in service of students -- namely effective governance, district…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, School Administration, Board of Education Role, Governance
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Ferguson, Sarah L. – Science & Education, 2022
Discourse about public perception of science is often positioned as a dichotomy between trust in scientific evidence and scientists as experts, versus critiques of the limitations of scientific knowledge and a mistrust in scientists as biased professionals and political agents. However, this dichotomy becomes something of a false argument, as our…
Descriptors: Science Education, Public Opinion, Teaching Methods, Realism
Brendan Sheran; Ashley Carey; Jack Schneider; Rebecca Woodland; Kathryn McDermott – Phi Delta Kappan, 2024
Dialogue, listening, and compromise are essential elements of living in a democracy. In a highly partisan time, is it possible to reestablish common ground when it comes to how best to educate our children in and for democracy? Authors Brendan Sheran, Ashley Carey, Jack Schneider, Rebecca Woodland, and Kathryn McDermott, who are affiliated with…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Citizen Participation, Models, Public Opinion
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Kazuya Yanagida – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
Higher education has often been accused of its anti-social character, represented by the metaphor of the 'ivory tower'. However, the idea of the pursuit of knowledge per se, which is associated with the ivory tower, has not been widely recognized as a public ideal of higher education. In this study, by drawing on the 20th-century British…
Descriptors: General Education, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Learning
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Randy Connolly – ACM Transactions on Computing Education, 2024
The belief that AI technology is on the cusp of causing a generalized social crisis became a popular one in 2023. While there was no doubt an element of hype and exaggeration to some of these accounts, they do reflect the fact that there are troubling ramifications to this technology stack. This conjunction of shared concerns about social,…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Computers, Technology Uses in Education, Public Opinion
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Lauri, Triin; Põder, Kaire – Journal of School Choice, 2023
This article investigates educational preferences in the bilingual education system that reinforce the salience of both socio-economic and socio-cultural issues. We ask, first, how many distinct groups of educational preferences exist and whether these differ by ethnic nationality. Second, we investigate the extent to which economic self-interest…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Educational Policy, Preferences, Bilingual Education
David M. Quinn – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
Frames shape public opinion on policy issues, with implications for policy adoption and agenda-setting. What impact do common issue frames for racial equity in education have on voters' support for racially equitable education policy? Across survey experiments with two independent representative polls of California voters, framing effects were…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Educational Policy, Policy Analysis, Equal Education
Mukherjee, Renu – Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, 2023
In a plurality opinion in the 1978 Supreme Court case Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, Justice Lewis Powell held that colleges and universities could consider an applicant's race in the admissions process in order to attain a diverse student body. In a pair of cases that will be decided in the current term, the Supreme Court has…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Affirmative Action, Public Opinion, Courts
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O'Rourke, Thomas W. – American Journal of Health Education, 2023
Gun violence is a significant public health issue. The U.S. has more than one mass shooting a day in which four or more people are injured or killed. However, mass shootings are only the tip of the iceberg of gun violence. Among developed nations, the U.S. is an outlier in both gun possession and gun deaths. Gun deaths affect not only the victim…
Descriptors: Violence, Weapons, Intervention, Prevention
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Sinatra, Gale M. – Educational Psychologist, 2022
The psychology of science resistance, doubt, and denial has never had clearer consequences than during the COVID-19 pandemic. This manuscript explores how misconceptions about climate change, vaccines, and COVID-19 cannot be understood apart from the conscious and unconscious motivations and emotions which contribute to public (mis)understanding…
Descriptors: Motivation, Emotional Response, Public Opinion, Misconceptions
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