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Park, Sungmi – International Journal of Educational Management, 2016
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to define the concept of "convergence thinking" as a trading zone for knowledge fusion in the engineering field, and develops its measuring scale. Design/ Methodology/Approach: Based on results from literature review, this study clarifies a theoretical ground for "convergence thinking."…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Engineering Education, Content Analysis, Construct Validity
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Thornberg, Robert; Thornberg, Ulrika Birberg; Alamaa, Rebecca; Daud, Noor – Educational Psychology, 2016
This study examined 307 elementary school children's judgements and reasoning about bullying and other repeated transgressions when school rules regulating these transgressions have been removed in hypothetical school situations. As expected, children judged bullying (repeated moral transgressions) as wrong independently of rules and as more wrong…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Bullying, Value Judgment, Logical Thinking
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Tümay, Halil – Science & Education, 2016
Philosophical debates about chemistry have clarified that the issue of emergence plays a critical role in the epistemology and ontology of chemistry. In this article, it is argued that the issue of emergence has also significant implications for understanding learning difficulties and finding ways of addressing them in chemistry. Particularly, it…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Undergraduate Students, Scientific Concepts
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Akçay, Süleyman – Educational Research and Reviews, 2016
Analogical reasoning is both an innate ability and a basic learning mechanism that can be improved. In classrooms, it is an important tool used by teachers, especially when explaining difficult or abstract issues. In addition to its use in all aspects of our lives, analogical reasoning is commonly used in textbooks. This research examines the…
Descriptors: Secondary School Science, Logical Thinking, Textbook Content, Textbook Research
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Geerdts, Megan; Van De Walle, Gretchen; LoBue, Vanessa – Early Education and Development, 2016
Research Findings: Anthropomorphism--the attribution of human characteristics to nonhuman entities--has long been a staple of children's media. However, children's experiences with anthropomorphic media may interfere with biological reasoning instead encouraging an anthropocentric view of the natural world. To date, little research has addressed…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Story Telling, Childrens Literature, Animals
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Alshamali, Mahmoud A.; Daher, Wajeeh M. – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2016
This study aimed at identifying the levels of scientific reasoning of upper primary stage (grades 4-7) science teachers based on their use of a problem-solving strategy. The study sample (N = 138; 32 % male and 68 % female) was randomly selected using stratified sampling from an original population of 437 upper primary school teachers. The…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Science Teachers, Problem Solving, Logical Thinking
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Riggs, Anne E.; Young, Andrew G. – Developmental Psychology, 2016
What influences children's normative judgments of conventional rules at different points in development? The current study explored the effects of two contextual factors on children's normative reasoning: the way in which the rules were learned and whether the rules apply to the self or others. Peer dyads practiced a novel collaborative board game…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Logical Thinking, Context Effect
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Alach, Zhivan – Tertiary Education and Management, 2016
This study explores difficulties in the conceptual positioning of the higher education performance indicator of qualification completion within a standard logic model taken from the public sector performance literature, involving inputs, processes, impacts and outcomes. Organisations are held to be more accountable for the delivery of outputs than…
Descriptors: Performance Based Assessment, Accountability, Higher Education, Educational Policy
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Tunstall, Samuel Luke; Matz, Rebecca L.; Craig, Jeffrey C. – Journal of General Education, 2016
In this article, we examine how students in a general education quantitative literacy course reason with public issues when unprompted to use quantitative reasoning. Michigan State University, like many institutions, not only has a quantitative literacy requirement for all undergraduates but also offers two courses specifically for meeting the…
Descriptors: General Education, Numeracy, Logical Thinking, Undergraduate Students
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Falco, Lia; Summers, Jessica J. – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2016
This goal of this study was to develop a measure that captures the three dimensions of youth purpose proposed by Damon, Menon, and Cotton-Bronk (2003). We tested a theoretical model that links youth purpose (comprised of intention, engagement, and prosocial reasoning) with achievement motivation, agency, and civic engagement for a sample of high…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Intention, Prosocial Behavior, Logical Thinking
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Baron, Andrew Scott; Dunham, Yarrow – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2015
Three experiments explored whether group membership affects the acquisition of richer information about social groups. Employing a minimal-groups paradigm, 6- to 8-year-olds were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 novel social groups. Experiment 1 demonstrated that immediately following random assignment to a novel group, children were more likely to…
Descriptors: Group Membership, Young Children, Antisocial Behavior, Prosocial Behavior
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Merrotsy, Peter – Australian Senior Mathematics Journal, 2015
In the "Australian Curriculum," the concept of mathematical induction is first met in the senior secondary subject Specialist Mathematics. This article details an example, the Tower of Hanoi problem, which provides an enactive introduction to the inductive process before moving to more abstract and cognitively demanding representations.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, Mathematics Instruction, Problem Solving
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Bauer, Patricia J.; Jackson, Felicia L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2015
Like language, semantic memory is productive: It extends itself through self-derivation of new information through logical processes such as analogy, deduction, and induction, for example. Though it is clear these productive processes occur, little is known about the time course over which newly self-derived information becomes incorporated into…
Descriptors: Semantics, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Concept Formation, Diagnostic Tests
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Johnson, Heather Lynn – Mathematical Thinking and Learning: An International Journal, 2015
Contributing to a growing body of research addressing secondary students' quantitative and covariational reasoning, the multiple case study reported in this article investigated secondary students' quantification of ratio and rate. This article reports results from a study investigating students' quantification of rate and ratio as…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Mathematical Concepts, Logical Thinking, Case Studies
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Kapon, Shulamit; Ron, Gila; Hershkowitz, Rina; Dreyfus, Tommy – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2015
There is ample evidence that reasoning about stochastic phenomena is often subject to systematic bias even after instruction. Few studies have examined the detailed learning processes involved in learning probability. This paper examines a case study drawn from a large corpus of data collected as part of a research project that dealt with the…
Descriptors: Probability, Learning Processes, Junior High School Students, Case Studies
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