Publication Date
In 2025 | 5 |
Since 2024 | 32 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 81 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 124 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 162 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Location
Australia | 10 |
China | 7 |
Canada | 6 |
Turkey | 5 |
United Kingdom (England) | 4 |
California | 3 |
United Kingdom | 3 |
United States | 3 |
Europe | 2 |
Idaho | 2 |
South Africa | 2 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Doe v Plyler | 1 |
Head Start | 1 |
Assessments and Surveys
Foreign Language Classroom… | 1 |
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Dana Kanhai – ProQuest LLC, 2024
While the number of autistic students attending college has increased, research in this area has only recently gained momentum. Research on faculty interactions and relationships with autistic students is particularly limited. In this qualitative study, I conducted semi-structured interviews with 15 faculty to explore how they interacted with and…
Descriptors: College Students, Autism Spectrum Disorders, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes
Jairo Jiménez – Teaching in Higher Education, 2024
This paper analyzes academic identities and academic agency in the context of knowledge management and production that permeate the contemporary university. A practical argumentation on the meaning of teaching activity seeks to propose, in contrast to traditional approaches, that identity and meaning are constitutive dimensions of present…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Professional Identity, Knowledge Management, Teaching (Occupation)
Benjamin E. Goldsmith; Megan MacKenzie; Thomas Wynter – International Journal of Education Policy and Leadership, 2024
Building on Milkman, Akinola, and Chugh (2015), this article presents data from an experiment conducted in Australia that included fictional emails from prospective students seeking a meeting with faculty members. The results show significantly different responses from faculty depending on the student's name and association with a racialized…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Racism, Gender Bias
Pearce, Julia M.; Lindekilde, Lasse; Parker, David – British Educational Research Journal, 2023
Higher education institutions in England, Scotland and Wales have an obligation under the 2015 Counter Terrorism and Security Act to protect students from being drawn into terrorism. This legislation has proved controversial, with concerns about the securitisation of education, as well as fears of over-reporting which could stigmatise individuals…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Terrorism
Danijela Dodlek; Gorazd Planinsic; Eugenia Etkina – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2024
Research carried out through the last 20 years gave us undeniable evidence that to learn anything we need to be active participants, not passive observers. One of the important aspects of learning physics is constructing explanations of physical phenomena. To support and guide students toward constructing their explanations, teachers need to be…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Preservice Teachers, Teacher Response, Physics
David R. Firth; Adam Gonzales; Michelle Louch; Bryan Hammer – Information Systems Education Journal, 2025
ChatGPT is having an impact on students, and information systems (IS) and computing academic professionals alike. Our goal for this paper is to help faculty and students know the conditions in which generative AI such as ChatGPT should or should not be used. To that end, we describe the development of a 2x2 matrix. On the horizontal axis we have…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Computer Software, Synchronous Communication, Information Systems
Socorro Morales; Tanya J. Gaxiola Serrano; Van T. Lac – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2024
In this essay, the authors who identify as Women of Color (a Chicana, a Latina, and a Southeast Asian woman, respectively) faculty theorize their experiences with white resistance when teaching about race and racism in higher education. Drawing from Critical Race Theory, we merge our collective experiences of teaching about race into a composite…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, College Faculty, Minority Group Teachers, Teaching Experience
Marmur, Ofer; Zazkis, Rina – Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education, 2022
We explore the responses of 26 prospective elementary-school teachers to the claim "1/6.5 is not a fraction" asserted by a hypothetical classroom student. The data comprise scripted dialogues that depict how the participants envisioned a classroom discussion of this claim to evolve, as well as an accompanying commentary where they…
Descriptors: Ambiguity (Context), Fractions, Elementary School Teachers, Preservice Teachers
Pamela S. Lottero-Perdue; Heidi L. Masters; Jamie N. Mikeska; Meredith Thompson; Meredith Park Rogers; Dionne Cross Francis – Science Education, 2024
Engaging children in argumentation-focused discussions is essential to helping them collaboratively make sense of scientific phenomena. To support this effort, teachers must listen and be responsive to students' ideas to move the discussion forward with the goal of reaching consensus. Given the complexity of this ambitious science teaching…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Preservice Teachers, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Persuasive Discourse
Context Matters as Racialization Evolves: Exploring Bias in Preservice Teacher Responses to Children
Hughes, Sherick A.; Sun, Wenyang; Garner, Pamela W.; Legette, Kamilah B.; Halberstadt, Amy G. – American Educational Research Journal, 2023
This study explores preservice teacher attributions to children's behaviors portrayed in specific emotion-laden school scenarios. Participants included 178 preservice teachers from three universities. The preservice teachers viewed video vignettes of Black and White child actors in six different school scenarios. Our team constructed two themes…
Descriptors: Racism, Preservice Teachers, Student Behavior, Teacher Response
Kyle D. S. Maclean; Tiffany Bayley – INFORMS Transactions on Education, 2024
We introduce a novel type of assessment that allows for efficient grading of higher order thinking skills. In this assessment, a student reviews and corrects a technical memo that has errors in its formulation or process. To overcome the grading challenges imposed by essay-type responses in large undergraduate courses, we provide a Visual Basic…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Thinking Skills, Test Construction, Error Correction
Byung-Yeol Park; Rebecca Campbell-Montalvo; Todd Campbell; Hannah Cooke; Chester Arnold; Maria Chrysochoou; Peter Diplock – Cogent Education, 2024
There has been little scholarship about the use of instructional practices in undergraduate environmental service-learning courses. In this study, we examined the implementation of high leverage practices (HLPs) in environmental service-learning courses (i.e. E-Corps). These HLPs included: eliciting initial ideas, informing approaches to problems,…
Descriptors: Service Learning, Courses, Teaching Methods, Educational Practices
Xiao-Yu Liu; Caiting Yu; Endong Zhu; Meng Yin – Asia-Pacific Education Researcher, 2025
This study investigated the relationship between students' intrinsic learning motivation and mind wandering as well as the moderating role of teachers' emotional display and emotional labor strategies in class, drawing upon the attention-based view. With a sample of 1098 undergraduates, 159 teachers and 10 research assistants from a university in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, College Faculty, Research Assistants
Hea-Jin Lee; Hee-Jeong Kim – Educational Studies, 2024
This study aimed to characterise preservice teachers' (PSTs') noticing in a mathematics classroom and its influence on their lesson modification. Written narratives on video-taped lesson observation were analysed qualitatively in two components, attending and reasoning. The findings indicate that PSTs' initial noticing focused on general…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Preservice Teachers, Observation, Mathematics Teachers
Maimone, Luciane; Jolley, Jason – Foreign Language Annals, 2023
This article reports the results of an empirical study designed to determine the degree to which college instructors of Spanish can distinguish between machine translation (MT) and non-MT writing samples produced by second language (L2) learners of Spanish in an intermediate-level writing course. We also investigated relationships between…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Language Teachers, Spanish, Identification