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Coch, Donna – Peabody Journal of Education, 2018
The majority of teacher preparation programs do not address neuroscience in their curricula. This is curious, as learning occurs in the brain in context and teachers fundamentally foster and facilitate learning. On the one hand, merging neuroscience knowledge into teacher training programs is fraught with challenges, such as reconciling how…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Teacher Education Programs, Teaching Methods, Correlation
Nadelson, Louis S.; Heddy, Benjamin C.; Jones, Suzanne; Taasoobshirazi, Gita; Johnson, Marcus – International Journal of Educational Psychology, 2018
Conceptual change can be a challenging process, particularly in science education where many of the concepts are complex, controversial, or counter-intuitive. Yet, conceptual change is fundamental to science learning, which suggests science educators and science education researchers need models to effectively address and investigate conceptual…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Teaching Methods, Educational Research
Ocampo, Amber C.; Squire, Larry R.; Clark, Robert E. – Learning & Memory, 2018
Prior experience has been shown to improve learning in both humans and animals, but it is unclear what aspects of recent experience are necessary to produce beneficial effects. Here, we examined the capacity of rats with complete hippocampal lesions, restricted CA1 lesions, or sham surgeries to benefit from prior experience. Animals were tested in…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Experience, Spatial Ability, Memory
Kruse, Adam J. – Music Education Research, 2018
With the aim of diversifying popular music education scholarship, this article explores the phenomenon of hip-hop musical learning as experienced by eight American hip-hop musicians who describe how as well as with whom they learned to create and perform. The study explores issues related to learning processes, social relationships, and the role…
Descriptors: Music Education, Popular Culture, Musicians, Learning Processes
Braund, Heather; DeLuca, Christopher – Australian Educational Researcher, 2018
This study explored how elementary teachers leveraged and structured student-involved formative assessment to promote metacognition and self-regulation. Research has suggested a connection between formative assessment practices (e.g., self-assessment and peer-assessment) and metacognition. However, this connection has limited empirical support,…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Elementary School Students, Feedback (Response), Student Attitudes
Pepin, Matthias – Industry and Higher Education, 2018
In the French-speaking province of Québec in Canada, entrepreneurship was officially introduced into the Québec Education Program (QEP) in 2001. Entrepreneurship is viewed there as a learning tool associated with the conduct of entrepreneurial projects; that is, student-led action projects that respond to a community need by creating a good,…
Descriptors: Entrepreneurship, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries, Student Projects
Roberts, Darbi L. – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2018
As approaches to leadership learning are culturally examined and modified, educators will also need to do their own work to enhance their effectiveness in teaching and learning across culture.
Descriptors: Leadership Training, Teaching Methods, Cultural Differences, Instructional Effectiveness
Nilsson, Monica; Ferholt, Beth; Lecusay, Robert – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2018
In this article, the authors problematize the dichotomization of play and learning that often shapes the agenda of early childhood education research and practice. This dichotomization is driven in part by the tendency to define learning in terms of formal learning (i.e. learning as an outcome of direct instruction and school-based approaches that…
Descriptors: Play, Learning Processes, Child Development, Outcomes of Education
Jobrack, Matthew; Bossé, Michael J.; Chandler, Kayla; Adu-Gyamfi, Kwaku – International Journal for Mathematics Teaching and Learning, 2018
Student problem solving in the context of a dynamic mathematics environment (DME) has previously been investigated primarily through the lens of whether or not the student could complete a problem-solving task. Herein, we investigate what trajectories students employ in the realms of mathematics, technology, and problem solving as they attempt to…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Mathematics Education, Geometry, Visual Aids
Hu, Yenya; Gao, Hong; Wofford, Marcia M.; Violato, Claudio – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2018
This is a longitudinal study of first year medical students that investigates the relationship between the pattern change of the learning preferences and academic performance. Using the visual, auditory, reading-writing, and kinesthetic inventory at the beginning of the first and second year for the same class, it was found that within the first…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Medical Education, Neurosciences, Medical Students
Wu, Qi; Jessop, Tansy – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2018
In this study, we analysed survey data from 386 third year undergraduate students on 14 programmes within three UK universities. The universities are characterised as teaching-focused or research-intensive: a 'plate-glass' and 'red-brick' research-intensive; and a 'new' teaching-intensive university. We used the Assessment Experience Questionnaire…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Student Evaluation, Formative Evaluation
Boyd, Maureen P.; Jarmark, Christopher J.; Edmiston, Brian – Pedagogies: An International Journal, 2018
Collaborative social practices that people participate in to coauthor, or co-create, support, and sustain, a classroom community are challenging to research and represent because they are fluid and emergent, and interdependent and cumulative, as they develop across time and space, across experiences and relations. In this article, we take a…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Educational Practices, Longitudinal Studies, Classroom Techniques
Sapey-Triomphe, Laurie-Anne; Sonié, Sandrine; Hénaff, Marie-Anne; Mattout, Jérémie; Schmitz, Christina – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2018
The learning-style theory of Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) (Qian, Lipkin, Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 5:77, 2011) states that ASD individuals differ from neurotypics in the way they learn and store information about the environment and its structure. ASD would rather adopt a "lookup-table" strategy (LUT: memorizing each…
Descriptors: Adults, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Cognitive Style
Rau, Martina A. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2018
Making connections among multiple visual representations is key to students' learning. This article considers two learning processes involved in connection making: explicit sense making of connections and implicit perceptual induction of connections. Instructional interventions support these processes via different problem types: sense-making…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Association (Psychology), Visual Aids, Undergraduate Students
Hankovszky, Tamás – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2018
According to Fichte's early science of knowledge, man is a free and independent being who becomes somebody not through the power of nature, by developing his innate skills and abilities, or through external influence, but by his own power. Since the essence of human beings is I-hood, the individual, having defeated the not-I or nature living in…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Teacher Role, Individual Development, Teacher Student Relationship

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