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Yixin Chen; Zhenyang Xi; Talya Greene; Will Mandy – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2025
Ecological momentary assessment has been increasingly used in autism studies over the last decade to capture and understand autistic people's behaviours, thoughts, feelings and daily experiences. This systematic review synthesised previous autism ecological momentary assessment studies to learn about the feasibility of ecological momentary…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Research, Young Adults, Adults
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Sarah Suiter; Kathryn Y. Morgan; Sara Eccleston – American Journal of Evaluation, 2025
Evaluation is essential to achieving program outcomes, especially when stakeholders engage with evaluation and make use of the findings. Both of these activities require evaluation capacity that might not be present in community-based organizations. In this paper, we describe how community-university partnership models can support evaluation…
Descriptors: Evaluation, Capacity Building, School Community Relationship, Community Organizations
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Elizabeth Curtis; Nicole Delaney; Marthy Watson – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
The experience of joy and shared joyful moments benefits children's learning, development and wellbeing. The arts engage the senses, imagination and creativity in meaning making and expression of ideas. Learning through the arts is often collaborative and embodied. This paper reports on a study which explored the use of arts-based practices in…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Writing Instruction, Art Activities, Integrated Activities
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Jiyoon Jung; Jieun You; Daesang Kim – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
Digital technology is used to improve the quality of life for the growing number of older adults in the United States, but it also exacerbated the digital divide between generations and regions. Digital literacy programs effectively designed for older adults have a potential to mitigate this issue; however, sustaining an effectively designed…
Descriptors: Technological Literacy, Older Adults, Program Effectiveness, Self Esteem
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Julia Frohn – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2025
Research on inclusive education has gained major importance over the last decade. However, in the English-speaking discourse, empirical studies on inclusive teaching and learning often lack connections to existing educational theories that focus on the interrelation of teachers, learners and content as the three focal points of teaching and…
Descriptors: Models, Inclusion, Teaching Methods, Heuristics
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Lana Parker – Canadian Journal of Education, 2025
Neo-liberalism's greatest strength as an ideological force has been its ability to traverse boundaries, adapt and adopt customs and cultures, and inflect the central premise of individualism, competition, and capital creation into all manner of non-market spaces. In this article, I argue that Heidegger's rendering of "idle talk"…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Educational Philosophy, Ideology, Individualism
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Juuso Henrik Nieminen; Zi Yan; David Boud – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2025
Digital technologies allow student self-assessment to be adaptive, scalable and multimodal. Despite such technological advances, digital self-assessment practices have largely reinforced the existing norms around student roles, leaving the fundamentals of self-assessment design untouched. Digital self-assessment has centred on learning outcomes…
Descriptors: Self Evaluation (Individuals), Personal Autonomy, Computer Uses in Education, Student Role
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James B. Hale; Lisa Hain; Kim R. Fitzer; Karie Lorenz; Nadine Metro – Learning Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2025
Teachers and allied professionals change the brains of students with their instruction and interventions. Since their efforts lead to physiological changes through the brain's natural propensity for plasticity, it is perplexing that very few educators know about the brain, or how their actions influence brain development in the children they…
Descriptors: Brain, Neurological Organization, Physiology, Child Development
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Scott Thorne; Nathan Mentzer; Scott Bartholomew; Greg J. Strimel; Jason Ware – International Journal of Technology and Design Education, 2025
This conceptual replication study, building upon Bartholomew (2020), addresses a notable gap in the literature by investigating the potential of using learning by evaluating (LbE) as an interview primer for individual assignments in design coursework. While peer feedback commonly involves both giving and receiving feedback, LbE uniquely focuses on…
Descriptors: Design, Teaching Methods, Feedback (Response), Reflection
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Sathyam Sheoratan; Ineke Henze; Marc J. de Vries; Erik Barendsen – International Journal of Technology and Design Education, 2025
Design activities are increasingly used in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education. Guiding students during these activities can be challenging for STEM teachers, who may be inexperienced in the field of design. In this study, we focused on a case of three chemistry teachers who implemented design projects in their…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Design, Science Teachers
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Tan Seng Teck – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2025
Teaching business ethics is a formidable task. The lingering question of whether we can teach business ethics has plagued educators and scholars. Unlike a typical competence-based module that quantitatively reflects a student's performance through their grades, grades alone cannot represent a student's ethical conviction. The business ethics…
Descriptors: Business Education, Ethical Instruction, Ethics, Teaching Methods
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Kimberly B. Marshall; Mary Jane Weiss; Thomas S. Critchfield; Justin B. Leaf – Journal of Behavioral Education, 2025
Applied behavior analysis professionals have valuable expertise to share with parents of individuals with disabilities. Unfortunately, professionals also tend to talk like professionals, which means they use technical terminology that may be detrimental to productive relationships with stakeholders. Several studies have documented that laypersons…
Descriptors: Jargon, Parent Education, Teaching Methods, Behavior Modification
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Khusnun Nisa Muftifah; Wolly Candramila; Anisyah Yuniarti – Pedagogical Research, 2025
Genetics is a fundamental topic in Biology, yet its abstract nature presents challenges in the learning process. Effective teaching of genetics concepts requires appropriate instructional approaches to facilitate student understanding. The success of learning outcomes depends on various components, including teachers, students, learning…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Science Instruction, Genetics
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Åsa Andersson – Policy Futures in Education, 2025
Within education, we often encounter the urgent need to recruit teachers who possess subject-specific knowledges and who can pedagogically teach the students the right things. In this article, I turn to youth work and the statement "I have a plan to not have plan" to put forward another view of pedagogical work--one that views knowledge…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Trust (Psychology), Higher Education, Youth Programs
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Haoze Du; Richard Li; Edward Gehringer – International Educational Data Mining Society, 2025
Evaluating the performance of Large Language Models (LLMs) is a critical yet challenging task, particularly when aiming to avoid subjective assessments. This paper proposes a framework for leveraging subjective metrics derived from the class textual materials across different semesters to assess LLM outputs across various tasks. By utilizing…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Performance, Evaluation, Automation
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