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Zachary M. Savelson; Kasia Muldner – Computer Science Education, 2024
Background and Context: Productive failure (PF) is a learning paradigm that flips the order of instruction: students work on a problem, then receive a lesson. PF increases learning, but less is known about student emotions and collaboration during PF, particularly in a computer science context. Objective: To provide insight on students' emotions…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Psychological Patterns, Fear, Failure
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Furman, Cara E. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2023
Amidst a steady clamor about "learning loss" during the pandemic, a minority of educators have cautioned we must, in the words of Donna Haraway, "stay with the trouble," giving children space to grieve, explore, and make sense of a new reality. In this paper I interrogate what it means to stay with trouble and specifically call…
Descriptors: Pandemics, COVID-19, Learning Processes, Teaching Methods
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Dorambari, Diedon – International Journal of Education and Practice, 2022
This study examined whether instructional humor (IH) was not just another type of seductive detail when covariates such as humor pre-disposition, prior-knowledge, and working memory capacity were controlled. Participants were students (N = 228) from universities who were randomly assigned two stimuli conditions in the classic experimental design.…
Descriptors: Humor, Multimedia Instruction, Prior Learning, Short Term Memory
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Garrett, H. James; Segall, Avner; Crocco, Margaret S. – Social Studies, 2020
This article calls for greater attention to the role of emotion and affect in classroom discussions where theoretical models of discussion and deliberation tend to emphasize the rationalistic elements called for in such pedagogical strategies. Using two examples drawn from secondary classrooms, the authors highlight the role of emotion and affect…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Teaching Methods, Secondary School Students, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
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Mary Frances Buckley-Marudas – English Journal, 2018
This article focuses on how adolescent writers took up an invitation to write and share a piece of work in school that wasn't tied to a grade. Students' responses to this invitation are examined in an effort to revise some of the typical approaches to teaching writing.
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods, Time Management
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Laidlaw, Linda; O'Mara, Joanne; Wong, Suzanna So Har – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2021
Contemporary children are growing up in a post-typographic era, where mobile electronic devices and digital texts are increasingly present. For parents and educators, shifts into new digital practices and new text forms can create a sense of uncertainty. In response to parent and teacher interest, popular media have frequently focused on topics…
Descriptors: Child Development, Information Technology, Social Media, Longitudinal Studies
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Bernier, Brian E.; Lacagnina, Anthony F.; Drew, Michael R. – Learning & Memory, 2015
Studies on the behavioral mechanisms underlying contextual fear conditioning (CFC) have demonstrated the importance of preshock context exposure in the formation of aversive context memories. However, there has been comparatively little investigation of the effects of context exposure immediately after the shock. Some models predict that…
Descriptors: Fear, Learning Processes, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Memory
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Wilson, Camille M.; Hanna, Margaret O.; Li, Michelle – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2019
In this essay, the authors challenge the myth of political neutrality in teaching and emphasize the urgent need for teachers to imagine and enact liberatory pedagogical praxis that sensitively responds to the nation's divisive political climate. They point to U.S. political shifts and changing federal policies in education as catalysts for the…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Teaching Methods, Public Policy, Educational Policy
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DeBrincat, Dominic – History Teacher, 2015
This article explores what it means for history students to be "wrong" in the classroom, and the important role that error plays in teaching and learning. Student errors are nothing new to instructors. Nor do they often take much notice of them. Many instructors have been scholar-teachers long enough that they accept the inevitability of…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Error Patterns, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes
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Coleman, Elizabeth; Leider, Megan – Studying Teacher Education, 2014
This study focuses on the experience of designing and implementing an action research-based curriculum in a secondary science classroom. By systematically examining ourselves and our practices, we brought to light beliefs and values that were realized through this process, came to a deeper understanding of our own learning, and developed new…
Descriptors: Secondary School Curriculum, Curriculum Design, Cooperation, Teaching Methods
Tyson, Donald Lee – ProQuest LLC, 2012
This qualitative study explores the critical thinking experiences of African nursing students enrolled in several universities in the U.S. Using a semi-structured interview approach, twelve African students discussed their experiences using and learning a western critical thinking approach, as well as described their educational experiences in…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Semi Structured Interviews, Nursing Students, Student Attitudes
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Rogerson, Christine; Scott, Elsje – Journal of Information Technology Education, 2010
This paper examines how students' experiences of learning to program are affected by feelings of fear, using a phenomenological approach to elicit rich descriptions of personal experiences from the narratives of final year undergraduate students. In the course of reviewing current work concerning learning or teaching programming, certain focal…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Experiential Learning, Information Systems, Programming
Ruffins, Paul – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2007
For years, mainstream thinking about math anxiety assumed that people fear math because they are bad at it. However, a growing body of research shows a much more complicated relationship between math ability and anxiety. It is true that people who fear math have a tendency to avoid math-related classes, which decreases their math competence.…
Descriptors: Fear, Experimental Psychology, Mathematics Anxiety, Mathematics Education
Mojab, Shahrzad; McDonald, Susan – 2001
A comparative study of the impact of violence on immigrant women's learning was conducted among immigrant women of two communities in the Toronto area: the Spanish-speaking community and the Kurds. The two authors of the study each worked with one of the communities in which they had knowledge of the language. An in-depth, non-structured,…
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Adult Literacy, Anxiety, Battered Women