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Nina Bergdahl; Melissa Bond; Jeanette Sjöberg; Mark Dougherty; Emily Oxley – International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education, 2024
Educational outcomes are heavily reliant on student engagement, yet this concept is complex and subject to diverse interpretations. The intricacy of the issue arises from the broad spectrum of interpretations, each contributing to the understanding of student engagement as both complex and multifaceted. Given the emergence and increasing use of…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, College Students, Student Behavior, Educational Technology
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Gerben Tolkamp; Bart Verwaeren; Tim Vriend; Aart-Jan Riekhoff; Bernard Nijstad – Creativity Research Journal, 2025
Scholars view the creative process as a sequence of activities (e.g. problem construction, information search, idea generation, and idea development) that unfolds over time. This implies that time plays an important role in creativity. Unfortunately, however, the field lacks clear and explicit propositions about the temporal aspects of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Business Education, College Students, Creative Development
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Eyvind Elstad; Hans Harryson; Knut-Andreas Abben Christophersen; Are Turmo – Teacher Education Advancement Network Journal, 2024
Studies have indicated that the learning results are closely related to how much effort a student puts into the course and how effectively the student works with the learning material. Adequate time-on-task is crucial for student teachers because it allows them to develop their teaching skills, build strong relationships with students, adapt to…
Descriptors: Time on Task, Student Motivation, Teacher Education, Foreign Countries
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Xiaohong Wen – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
This study investigated motivation in the context of L2 Chinese in the USA. A total of 120 college students took the survey and 27 of them participated in post-survey interviews. Through a mixed-methods design, the study captured interactions between motivation and the learning environment in the learning process. The results revealed six…
Descriptors: College Students, Second Language Learning, Mandarin Chinese, Student Motivation
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Afif Ikhwanul Muslimin; Muhammad Zaki – Issues in Educational Research, 2024
This research scrutinises the Three Minute Thesis (3MT) participants' experiences, with a focus on the incorporation of visual rhetoric in the presentations. The study employed a mixed method with an explanatory sequential design. The participants were seventeen students ranging from bachelor to doctoral programs joining the Training-of-Trainer…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Public Speaking, Visual Aids, College Students
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Lars de Vreugd; Anouschka van Leeuwen; Marieke van der Schaaf – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2025
Background: University students need to self-regulate but are sometimes incapable of doing so. Learning Analytics Dashboards (LADs) can support students' appraisal of study behaviour, from which goals can be set and performed. However, it is unclear how goal-setting and self-motivation within self-regulated learning elicits behaviour when using an…
Descriptors: Learning Analytics, Educational Technology, Goal Orientation, Learning Motivation
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Emma C. Holtz; Vanessa G. Lee – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Increasing evidence has shown that implicit learning shapes visuospatial attention, yet how such learning interacts with top-down, goal-driven attention remains unclear. This study investigated the relationship between task goals and selection history using a location probability learning (LPL) paradigm. We tested whether a top-down spatial cue…
Descriptors: College Students, Spatial Ability, Goal Orientation, Visual Learning
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Mathias Norqvist; Bert Jonsson; Johan Lithner – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2025
In mathematics classrooms, it is common practice to work through a series of comparable tasks provided in a textbook. A central question in mathematics education is if tasks should be accompanied with solution methods, or if students should construct the solutions themselves. To explore the impact of these two task designs on student behavior…
Descriptors: Attention, Algorithms, Creativity, Mathematics Education
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Maria Theobald – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2025
Background and Aims: The hypothesis that study strategies can compensate for less study time in predicting learning outcomes has often been proposed but rarely tested empirically. Methods: In the present study, 231 university students reported their daily perceived time spent on self-study, study strategies (planning, monitoring, concentration and…
Descriptors: Study Skills, Study Habits, Learning Strategies, Time on Task
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Petrow, Gregory A. – Higher Education Studies, 2022
Scholars studying scholastic achievement in higher education find that students have specific course grades in mind that satisfy their desires for academic performance. When students believe that they are on-track to achieve those grades, they divert resources to other endeavors. This paper tests a resulting hypothesis: Students balance higher…
Descriptors: Grades (Scholastic), Student Satisfaction, Time on Task, Anxiety
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Eliot Hazeltine; Iring Koch; Daniel H. Weissman – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Responses are slower in two-choice tasks when either a previous stimulus feature or the previous response repeats than when all features repeat or all features change. Current views of action control posit that such partial repetition costs (PRCs) index the time to update a prior "binding" between a stimulus feature and the response or…
Descriptors: College Students, Psychological Studies, Neurosciences, Memory
James E. Lee – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The purpose of this cross-sectional study is to examine the perceptions of Psychological Capital (PsyCap) growth among college student leaders who mentor. Recent research documented a positive association between mentoring and the mentee's PsyCap growth, yet little is known about how mentoring impacts the mentor's PsyCap. Additionally, though…
Descriptors: Psychological Characteristics, College Students, Student Leadership, Mentors
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Kapoor, Hansika; Inamdar, Vedika; Kaufman, James C. – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2022
Students display resistance, including academic dishonesty, at all educational levels. In the present study, we qualitatively examined the extent and incidence of academic misbehaviors by 101 US college students (M[subscript age] = 22.98 years, SD = 6.70). Using a combination of self-reported closed- and open-ended questions, we developed a…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, College Students, Cheating, Student Attitudes
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Hajer Mguidich; Bachir Zoudji; Aïmen Khacharem – Journal of Experimental Education, 2025
The imagination effect occurs when learners who imagine a procedure perform better on a subsequent test than learners who study it. The present study explored whether this effect is restricted to short-term learning or whether it also applies when learning is tested after a delay. Forty novices and forty experts learned about a basketball game…
Descriptors: Imagination, Expertise, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level
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Jennifer S. Feenstra; Chika Nwaelugo; Jessica Nibbelink; Andrew De Noble – Discover Education, 2024
Study skills are important for success in college. However, students may not be aware of or willing to use effective strategies such as spaced practice and self-testing. This replication-extension study of Susser and McCabe (Susser and McCabe in Instr Sci 41:345-363, 2013) supports their original findings regarding spaced practice and extends the…
Descriptors: College Students, Study Habits, Learning Strategies, Metacognition
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