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Showing 1 to 15 of 17 results Save | Export
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Tasnim Ahmed – Malaysian Journal of Learning and Instruction, 2025
Purpose: This paper explores the pedagogical practices employed in supervising law PhD students within law schools. The study adopts an auto-ethnographic approach to investigate the beliefs of both supervisors and students regarding teaching, learning, research and supervision. Methodology: An overarching auto-ethnographic method was used to…
Descriptors: Doctoral Students, Legal Education (Professions), Law Students, Student Attitudes
Dearybury, Jed; Jones, Julie P. – Jossey-Bass, An Imprint of Wiley, 2020
Research studies show that all students--young and old, rich and poor, urban and rural--benefit immensely from classrooms filled with art, creativity, and laughter. Fun, playfulness, creative thinking, and individual expression reinforce positive experiences, which in turn lead to more engaged students, better classroom environments, and…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Teaching Methods, Play, Creative Teaching
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Sandi Ferdiansyah – Education 3-13, 2024
Digital storytelling (DST) has been widely adopted as a pedagogical approach to English language teaching. However, a few studies have focused on examining primary school students' experience of learning to create digital storytelling of English as a foreign language. To fill the gap, this study reports on an innovation in the use of genre-based…
Descriptors: Cooperation, Literary Genres, Story Telling, English (Second Language)
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Robiul Islam; Happy Kumar Das – Journal on English Language Teaching, 2024
This study investigates the role of English literature in fostering essential soft skills necessary for employability in the context of Bangladesh's educational system. This paper employs qualitative methods, including interviews with faculty members and senior students from tertiary-level colleges affiliated with the National University. The…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Literature, Soft Skills, Skill Development
Sarah C. Wallis – ProQuest LLC, 2021
The concept and practices of being student-centered in classrooms have been researched. However, organizational research regarding the two is limited. This study explored how students and administrators understand and experience what student-centeredness means. It expands the conversation and contributes to the understanding of the organizational…
Descriptors: Student Centered Learning, Graduate Study, Institutional Mission, Teaching Methods
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Kim, Mikyong Minsun – College and University, 2015
This paper focuses on the important roles of peer tutoring and peer tutoring services that utilize student tutors in higher education. First, the roles and potential benefits of peer tutoring are identified and reviewed as they apply to various dimensions of student development. Second, the impacts, benefits, and extended beneficiaries of peer…
Descriptors: Peer Teaching, Tutoring, Higher Education, College Students
Dary, Teri; Pickeral, Terry; Shumer, Rob; Williams, Anderson – National Dropout Prevention Center/Network, 2016
This position paper on student engagement is organized in response to major questions on how student engagement aligns with dropout prevention. Through a set of questions and responses, the "Weaving Student Engagement Into the Core Practices of Schools" position paper on student engagement : (1) defines the term "student…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Alignment (Education), Dropout Prevention, Educational Practices
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Jung, Hyunyi; Brady, Corey – Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education, 2016
Partnership with teachers for professional development has been considered beneficial because of the potential of collaborative work in the teacher's own classroom to be relevant to practice. From this perspective, both teachers and researchers can draw on their own expertise and work as authentic partners. In this study, we address the need for…
Descriptors: Mathematics, Mathematics Instruction, Teacher Role, Mathematics Teachers
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Day, Deborah A.; Lane, Terry – Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2014
Student development has connections to important academic purposes in higher education (King, Baxter Magolda, Barber, Kendall Brown & Lindsay, 2009). In particular, a growing body of work on self-authorship, a social-constructive theory of development, has demonstrated relevance to the purposes of higher education (Baxter Magolda, 2001; King…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, College Faculty, Teacher Role
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Moy, Elizabeth; O'Sullivan, Gerard; Terlecki, Melissa; Jernstedt, Christian – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2014
Discoveries in the learning sciences (especially in neuroscience) have yielded a rich and growing body of knowledge about how students learn, yet this knowledge is only half of the story. The other half is "know how," i.e. the application of this knowledge. For faculty members, that means applying the discoveries of the learning sciences…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Faculty, Metacognition, Teacher Effectiveness
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Counsell, Shelly Lynn; Boody, Robert M. – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2013
Using Head Start as an example of a compensatory social program based on a liberal egalitarian view of justice, this paper shows how all such programs are fundamentally flawed. In spite of any good intentions, by creating a discourse of deficiency and attempting amelioration through segregation this approach contains the seeds of its own failure.…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Disadvantaged Youth, Social Justice, Academic Achievement
Bitter, Catherine; Loney, Emily – Education Policy Center at American Institutes for Research, 2015
The Issue: To prepare for the demands of postsecondary education and the workforce, students need to master content and build skills that allow them to collaborate with others, and then apply that knowledge to new situations. Students will be able to access a wider range of opportunities in college, career, and civic life if they possess the…
Descriptors: College Readiness, Career Readiness, High School Students, Student Development
Griesgraber, James J. – Momentum, 1989
Explains how to implement cooperative learning in the classroom and reasons for doing so. The process involves students working in pairs or small groups to achieve a common goal with the teacher monitoring group activity. Concludes that cooperative learning promotes the academic, social, and emotional growth of students. (DMM)
Descriptors: Cooperation, Educational Benefits, Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Activities
Yowell, Bob – 1979
Based on the belief that improvisational drama is superior to the traditional approach of sequence drama, this paper tells some advantages and methods of improvisational drama and compares the two methods with respect to educational goals. After defining sequence drama (a sequence of activities typically beginning with interpretive movement and…
Descriptors: Affective Objectives, Cognitive Development, Cooperation, Creative Dramatics
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Schneider, Elsa – Office of Education, Federal Security Agency, 1952
This bulletin is designed to show some of the ways in which successful teachers work with children in order to establish rapport and to guide them into productive and happy living. This bulletin presents in the main a viewpoint based on the belief that if children live in a friendly school environment rich with experiences and materials that…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Parent Child Relationship, Cultural Differences, Teacher Student Relationship
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