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Showing all 15 results Save | Export
Geiger, Vince; Galbraith, Peter; Niss, Mogens; Holland-Twining, Ben – Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia, 2022
Competency with mathematical modelling is increasingly important for career and informed and engaged participation in personal, civic and work life. In this paper we report on an aspect of a three-year longitudinal study that aimed to identify and describe enablers of mathematical modelling. Teacher interview data has been drawn upon to exemplify…
Descriptors: Mathematical Models, Mathematics Skills, Skill Development, Competence
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Gouvea, Julia Svoboda – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2018
The "Current Insights" feature is intended to highlight diverse perspectives on teaching, learning and cognition from outside life sciences education. In this installment, I feature recent examples of scholarship examining the intersections between culture and equity in science education. The articles in this set build on intuitions we…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Biology, Science Instruction, Cultural Differences
McCann, Nicholas F. – ProQuest LLC, 2019
Researchers and instructors have only recently embraced the role of errors as vehicles for learning in the algebra classroom. Studying a mixture of correct and incorrect worked examples has been shown to be beneficial relative to correct worked examples alone. This study examines the effectiveness of having students generate, or anticipate, errors…
Descriptors: Algebra, Mathematics Instruction, Error Patterns, High School Students
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Behrmann, Lars – European Journal of Educational Research, 2019
Teachers' use of everyday cognitive heuristics can lead to biases in information processing and, thus, to unfair assessments of student characteristics. This problem can be addressed by a core aspect of research-based learning, i.e., by making use of principles and methods of empirical research in order to systematically collect information.…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Heuristics, Student Characteristics, Preservice Teachers
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Moscardini, Lio – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2015
This paper presents findings from a qualitative study of a group of 12 teachers in primary special schools in Scotland for children with moderate learning difficulties. It sets out an analysis of classroom observations and interviews that explored teachers' knowledge and beliefs about teaching and learning in mathematics with children with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Qualitative Research, Elementary School Teachers, Learning Problems
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Soffian, Judy – Perspectives: The New York Journal of Adult Learning, 2003
Examines the process of teaching critical thinking in an adult basic education classroom. Introduces an alternative learning process that challenges the traditional model of unquestioning, uncritical acceptance of teacher and text and enables students to become more active and equal participants in learning. (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Cognitive Processes, Critical Thinking, Teacher Expectations of Students
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Geist, Eugene A.; King, Margaret – Journal of Instructional Psychology, 2008
This article reviews the assessment data, literature and research on gender differences in mathematics. The question of whether boys are better at mathematics has been an issue in education for the past 5 years. The assumption is that there is a biological difference between boys and girls that make boys predisposed to do better in mathematics.…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Females, National Competency Tests, Gender Differences
Oller, John W., Jr. – 1971
The ability to anticipate elements in sequence is the foundation of all language skills. Because of its naturally high redundancy, it is almost always possible in the normal use of language to partially predict what will come next in a sequence of elements. The central feature of language processing is expectancy for successive elements. A very…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Cognitive Processes, Expectation, Language
Schunk, Dale H. – 1984
This article discusses the role of perceived self-efficacy during classroom learning of cognitive skills. Self-efficacy refers to personal judgments of performance capabilities in a given domain of activity. Students enter classroom activities with various aptitudes and prior experiences, which affect their initial sense of self-efficacy for…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Secondary Education, Expectation, Feedback
Powell, J. C. – 1980
The selection of wrong answers for multiple choice tests appears not to be blind guessing, as the current theory assumes, but represents systematic choice based upon the ways in which learners extract meaning and solve problems. It appears the departures from "expected" answers arise when the learner interprets the question in a manner different…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Processes, Diagnostic Teaching, Elementary Secondary Education
Gifford, Sue – Open University Press, 2005
This book provides a research background for adults helping three to five year olds learn mathematics, including social and emotional processes as well as key mathematical ideas and common difficulties. It includes implications for practice and proposes presented with a playful and sensitive approach. It is illustrated with examples from the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Curriculum, Holistic Approach
Norris, William R. – 1972
Discovery of which learner characteristics or aptitudes interact with different methods of instruction is the objective of this research study. A model is used to match the cognitive, motivational, value, and sensory orientations of the student with forms of presentation considered compatible with characteristics of the learner. Description of the…
Descriptors: Aptitude, Citations (References), Cognitive Processes, Conceptual Schemes
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Allen, Rodney F. – International Journal of Social Education, 1995
Maintains that much of the high school curriculum, particularly in social studies, contains innumerable facts that have no use except to pass school tests. Reviews research on effective instruction as applied to social studies. Includes 17 characteristics of highly engaging social studies teaching and learning. (ACM)
Descriptors: Active Learning, Classroom Environment, Classroom Techniques, Cognitive Processes
Payler, Jane, Comp. – 2002
This paper presents a collection of studies that examine interactions in preschool and school settings around the time of school entry. The studies are loosely organized around five themes: (1) differences between intended and experienced curricula, and intended and experienced patterns of interaction; (2) contingent and responsive nature of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Communication Skills, Early Childhood Education, Educational Research
Stasz, Cathleen; And Others – 1990
Instruction should emphasize generic skills as much as it does occupational or domain-specific skills. Generic skills enable people to: (1) cooperate and communicate for group problem solving; (2) identify and define problems in complex environments; (3) seek, acquire, and synthesize new information; and (4) adapt to changes in the problem-solving…
Descriptors: Academic Education, Adjustment (to Environment), Basic Skills, Classroom Environment