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Curry, Kristal – Social Studies, 2010
Online role-playing games such as World Of Warcraft represent new participatory cultures in which today's students engage every day. They are appealing to players largely because of the social aspects of game play. Some features of massively multiplayer online role-playing games (MMORPGs) can be incorporated into classroom culture to create more…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Role Playing, Video Games, Classroom Techniques
Pramling, Niklas – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2010
This article reports an empirical study of an important but under-studied feature of learning practices with young children: the use of metaphors and other kinds of figurative language. The data consist of video-recordings of children (3-5 years old) and their teacher engaged in thematic work about soil. The analysis revealed that the teacher and…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Young Children, Language Usage, Preschool Children
Thinking Aloud Together: A Teacher's Semiotic Mediation of a Whole-Class Conversation about Percents
Shreyar, Sam; Zolkower, Betina; Perez, Silvia – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2010
How does classroom interaction support students' apprenticeship into the ways of speaking, writing, and diagramming that constitute the practice of mathematics? We address this problem through an interpretative analysis of a whole-group conversation about alternative ways of solving a problem involving percent discounts that occurred in a sixth…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Mathematics Instruction, Problem Solving, Grade 6
Sullivan, Caroline C. – Journal of Classroom Interaction, 2011
Socioconstructivism has been established as a prominent and intriguing learning theory, and consequently, pedagogical practice. This study focused on the introduction of constructivist pedagogy to secondary social studies pre-service teachers. Students' engagement with each other and the course instructor was a primary concern to mitigate student…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Constructivism (Learning), Discussion, Classroom Communication
Kuby, Candace R. – Young Children, 2011
Using a critical inquiry curriculum is about teaching children to read the word and the world. Early childhood teachers apply this theory by helping children question events and texts they interact with in their communities. For example, teachers can help children understand why certain events happened, including whose voices may have been…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Teacher Role, Inquiry, Critical Thinking
Coffey, Janet E.; Hammer, David; Levin, Daniel M.; Grant, Terrance – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2011
We raise concerns about the current state of research and development in formative assessment, specifically to argue that in its concentration on "strategies for the teacher", the literature overlooks the "disciplinary substance" of what teachers and students assess. Our argument requires analysis of specific instances in the literature, and so we…
Descriptors: Formative Evaluation, High School Students, Biology, Secondary School Science
Moate, Josephine Marie – European Journal of Teacher Education, 2011
Content and language integrated learning (CLIL) has received significant interest in recent years as a practical means of creating a plurilingual European community. A key feature of CLIL is the non-native speaking teacher responsible for developing learners' content and language knowledge in a foreign language mediated environment. Teachers often…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Interviews, Teacher Attitudes, Second Language Instruction
Fisher, Annie Therese – Language and Education, 2011
This paper examines the continuing "issue" of developing classrooms where talk is used as means of building concepts and understanding. As curriculum guidance increasingly refers to "exploratory talk" and "dialogic talk", it questions why practice seems resistant to change, despite the promotion of social constructivist approaches to learning in…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Graduate Students, Preservice Teacher Education, Psychological Patterns
Banas, John A.; Dunbar, Norah; Rodriguez, Dariela; Liu, Shr-Jie – Communication Education, 2011
The primary goal of this project is to provide a summary of extant research regarding humor in the classroom, with an emphasis on identifying and explaining inconsistencies in research findings and offering new directions for future studies in this area. First, the definitions, functions, and main theories of humor are reviewed. Next, the paper…
Descriptors: Humor, Classroom Communication, Communication Research, Classroom Research
Kozyrev, Fedor – British Journal of Religious Education, 2011
REDCo findings question the ideal of neutrality of the teacher on ethical, epistemological and didactical grounds showing in particular that the exposure of the teacher's personal commitments and beliefs stimulates students to participate in dialogue. The findings support hermeneutical approaches to the empirical studies in education showing that…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Teaching Methods, Qualitative Research, Hermeneutics
Jackson, Robert – British Journal of Religious Education, 2011
This contribution shows how the author's interpretive approach to religious education was used as a theoretical and pedagogical stimulus and an empirical research tool by researchers in the European Commission Framework 6 REDCo (religion, education, dialogue, conflict) project. The origins and development of the interpretive approach, from its…
Descriptors: Research Tools, Research Methodology, Ethnography, Learning Processes
Simpson, James – Linguistics and Education: An International Research Journal, 2011
This paper is about narrative and identity in classes of English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL). ESOL students, adult migrants to the English-dominant West, are positioned by policy and by their institutions primarily as potential employees and as test-takers. The paper considers ways in which ESOL students negotiate and perhaps resist the…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Classroom Communication, Second Language Learning, English (Second Language)
Sophocleous, Andry – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2011
This study investigates the complex interplay between national and local objectives of formal education in the bidialectal context of Cyprus. Even though the state and the Ministry of Education and Culture urge teachers to employ the standard language variety in education, the dialect is often used as a medium of interaction and even instruction…
Descriptors: Dialects, Bilingualism, Foreign Countries, Standard Spoken Usage
Lee, Jin Sook; Hill-Bonnet, Laura; Raley, Jason – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2011
In settings where speakers of two or more different languages coexist, language brokering, the act of interpreting and translating between culturally and linguistically different speakers, is commonly practiced. Yet the examination of language brokering and its implications in classroom settings have not received much attention in the literature.…
Descriptors: Immersion Programs, English (Second Language), Bilingual Education, Second Language Learning
Takeuchi, Miwa – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2015
Guided by sociocultural theory and the theory of multiliteracies, learning is perceived as a shifting participation in practices, which is mediated by multiple physical and symbolic tools. Drawing on the situated multiliteracies approach, which integrates these two theories, the purpose of this ethnographic research is to examine the participation…
Descriptors: English Language Learners, Mathematics Instruction, Classroom Communication, Teaching Methods

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