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Showing 1 to 15 of 17 results Save | Export
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Tiago Ramos Wohlemberg; Cleiton Luiz Klochinski; Eduardo Guedes Villar; Silvana Anita Walter; Sidnei Celerino da Silva – Accounting Education, 2025
This study aims to understand the patterns of conduct, forms of action, role construction, role performance and institutional nexus of behavior that characterize the social role of academics and students in undergraduate Accounting courses through the adoption of active methods for education. A qualitative, multiple case study was developed…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Accounting, Active Learning
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Halim, Lilia; Ramli, Murni; Mohamad Nasri, Nurfaradilla – Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 2023
Inquiry-based science teaching and learning (IBSTL) has been recognized as a powerful learning approach to develop students' problem-solving abilities and higher-order thinking skills. Research has established cultural dimensions in determining successful implementation of IBSTL. Guided by the importance of context in inquiry, this qualitative…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Active Learning
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Walker, Cheryl L.; Shore, Bruce M.; Tabatabai, Diana – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2022
Role diversification, the different roles participants adopt within collaborative or inquiry-based teaching and learning environments, is insufficiently understood. We observed two inquiry classroom groups, two teachers and eight students, in weekly visits over three months. Qualitative analysis of audiorecorded interactions, interviews, journals,…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Active Learning, Teaching Methods, Teacher Student Relationship
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Chapman, Sue; Mitchell, Mary – Learning Professional, 2020
Peek into a math classroom, virtual or physical. What are students doing and saying about their math learning? Are they engaged? Are they thinking critically -- evaluating solutions, assessing their understanding, revising their strategies, explaining concepts, and connecting mathematics to real life? Helping all students become more self-directed…
Descriptors: Independent Study, Mathematics Instruction, Active Learning, Electronic Learning
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Dickerson, Claire; Levy, Roger; Jarvis, Joy; Thomas, Kit – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2021
Teachers' personal understanding of knowledge and how it is acquired has important implications for their approaches to teaching and engaging pupils in learning. This article extends learning about emergent teachers' professional knowledge by critiquing and theorising survey responses detailing student teachers' experience of teaching during their…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Student Role, Knowledge Base for Teaching, Criticism
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Robertson, Justin – Journal of Political Science Education, 2022
Hosting guest speakers is a common practice among instructors because it can yield new insights for students. However, the experience is often disappointing. This article refers to guest experts to signal a break from the conventional approach, in which guest speakers deliver information primarily in a one-directional manner without any engagement…
Descriptors: Political Science, Teaching Methods, Specialists, Student Role
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Walker, Cheryl L.; Shore, Bruce M. – SAGE Open, 2015
Inquiry-based teaching and learning are rooted in social constructivism and are central to curricular reform. Role theory and social constructivism provided insight into a commonly observed but insufficiently understood phenomenon in inquiry. Within inquiry, role shifts have been described as the switching of roles between students and teachers;…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Role Theory, Constructivism (Learning), Active Learning
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Adriaensen, Johan; Kerremans, Bart; Slootmaeckers, Koen – Journal of Political Science Education, 2015
The contributors to this special issue all seek to address the challenge of teaching research methods to political science students. This introduction aims to provide a concise framework for the various innovations presented throughout this issue, situating them in the wider literature. Particular emphasis is placed on the factors that distinguish…
Descriptors: Political Science, Research Methodology, Methods Courses, Student Role
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Duru, Sibel – Eurasian Journal of Educational Research, 2015
Problem Statement: Student teachers' beliefs and conceptions affect not only what and how they learn in teacher education programs, but also their future professional development in their teaching careers. Examining and understanding student teachers' beliefs and conceptions is therefore crucial to improving their professional preparation and…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Student Teachers, Figurative Language, Student Teacher Attitudes
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Maida, Carl A. – Policy Futures in Education, 2011
John Dewey's notion of the school as a "social laboratory" influenced educational policy a century ago when the United States underwent a "great transformation" in its educational history toward mass schooling, resulting partly from the "high school movement", where the focus was on "schooling for life". Project-based learning, which builds on…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Critical Theory, Student Projects, Educational History
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Shosh, Joseph M. – English Journal, 2000
Describes how a new English teacher invited students to negotiate with him their course of study. Discusses setting the stage for negotiated learning, establishing ownership and building ensemble, clarifying expectations and rehearsing together, planning ahead and assessing the performance, helping students take on additional roles, and allowing…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Dramatics, English Instruction, Learner Controlled Instruction
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Green, Jon D. – Interdisciplinary Humanities, 1998
Discusses different teaching methods beginning with the least effective to the most effective and addresses some general weaknesses and strengths of each of the styles as a means of moving from the traditional mode of teaching and learning to a more active engagement with students. (CMK)
Descriptors: Active Learning, Conventional Instruction, Educational Change, Higher Education
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Tobin, Joseph – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2001
Discusses why the Japanese term "otaku" (an obsession with the information exchanged via computers) is preferable to the American term "geek." Discusses a set of pedagogical beliefs and practices that geeks and otaku have in common, which are the antithesis of those of the typical U.S. high school. (SR)
Descriptors: Active Learning, Discovery Learning, Informal Education, Instructional Effectiveness
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DeLay, Randolph – Journal of Experiential Education, 1996
After a brief critique of behaviorist pedagogical assumptions that learning is something done to learners, constructivist learning theory is presented as a framework for understanding experiential education, in that learning is a process involving the active engagement of learners, who adapt the educative event to fit, and expand, their individual…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Concept Formation, Constructivism (Learning), Educational Philosophy
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McVittie, Janet – Language and Education, 2004
In this study, the oral conversations of primary students were examined in an effort to understand how student participation and role in discourse community affects their learning. Discourse analysis provided both an analytical framework for analysing student and teacher talk and a definition of discourse communities. The concept of discourse…
Descriptors: Student Participation, Discourse Communities, Discourse Analysis, Elementary School Students
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