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Egan, Kieran – Phi Delta Kappan, 2003
Argues that learning should begin with a student's imagination rather than starting with what he or she already knows. Does not suggest abandoning a student's prior knowledge, however. (PKP)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Imagination, Learning Theories
Zemke, Ron – Training, 1995
Accelerated learning methods have evolved into a variety of holistic techniques that involve participants in the learning process and overcome negative attitudes about learning. These components are part of the mix: the brain, learning environment, music, imaginative activities, suggestion, positive mental state, the arts, multiple intelligences,…
Descriptors: Instructional Effectiveness, Learning Theories, Suggestopedia, Training
Peer reviewedBoucouvalas, Marcie – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 1993
A framework of the levels, states, and structures of consciousness suggest other ways of knowing than the rational and analytical. Modern science and ancient wisdom are complementary knowledge sources. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Cognitive Structures, Learning Theories
Weiss, Palumbo Ruth – Training & Development, 2000
The more neuroscientists explore how the brain processes, stores, and retrieves information, the more evident is the connection between emotion and reason. Scientists have discovered that the same areas of the brain that are involved in processing emotion are involved in processing memory. (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Brain, Cognitive Processes, Learning Theories
Peer reviewedDavson-Galle, Peter – Science and Education, 2000
Responds to Jim Garrison's 1997 paper in this journal on Deweyan social constructivism. Argues that key elements of Garrison's complaints are misguided and that his preferred Deweyan social constructivism is a theoretical framework without apparent superiority and with enough flaws that it is at best eschewed by science educators. (Author/SAH)
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Learning Theories, Science Education
Peer reviewedGarrison, Jim – Science and Education, 2000
Responds to Davson-Galle's November 2000 response to Garrison's 1997 paper in this journal on Garrison's view of Deweyan constructivism. (Author/SAH)
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Learning Theories, Science Education
Peer reviewedMiettinen, Reijo – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2000
Studies Kolb's eclectic method of constructing a model of experiential learning, comparing his interpretation of Dewey's ideas to Dewey's concepts of reflective thought and action. Concludes that Kolb's notion of immediate concrete experience is epistemologically problematic. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Experiential Learning, Learning Theories
Peer reviewedSpector, J. Michael – Instructional Science, 2001
Discuses the relationship between philosophy and learning theory and explores implications for instructional design. Highlights include epistemology and ontology; historical trends in philosophy; philosophy and instructional science; and a philosophically grounded instructional design model. (Contains 51 references.) (Author/LRW)
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Learning Theories, Models, Philosophy
Lipponen, Lasse; Lallimo, Jiri – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2004
The continually increasing number of applications said to facilitate collaboration makes it very difficult for educators to identify and evaluate the ones that are suitable for educational purposes. In this paper we argue that from the educational point of view, it is meaningful to make a distinction between collaboratively usable applications and…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Educational Technology, Cooperation, Internet
Ashworth, Peter – Teaching in Higher Education, 2004
The conventional image is that we (and other students) reach an understanding of something after a period of puzzled wrestling with the material. Understanding is the end-point of learning. However, there is an important sense in which understanding (of a rudimentary kind) precedes effective learning. Trying to develop this conceptually, I draw on…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Hermeneutics, Higher Education, Students
Tribus, Myron – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2004
Merker hypothesized that because mobile creatures move around and must constantly readjust their map of the world and because the demands are so great for continually processing information for a map of the world, evolution has created a space in the brain where such preprocessing has been eliminated. This space he calls consciousness with the…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Cognitive Processes, Brain, Models
Ottewill, Roger; Macfarlane, Bruce – Quality in Higher Education, 2004
This paper examines some of the ways in which subject review can contribute to the scholarship of teaching. Subject review was a quality assessment process conducted under the auspices of the UK's Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education. A preliminary discussion considers the potential and pitfalls of using subject review as a basis for…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Quality Control, Higher Education
Huzzard, Tony – Journal of Workplace Learning, 2004
In identifying a bias within situated learning theory towards routine work practices, this paper develops a theoretical framework for assessing the relationships between learning, sensemaking and power in the non-routine practices of temporary organising. The paper locates processes of sensemaking and learning in a model of organisational change…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Organizational Change, Models, Administration
Harlow, Steve; Cummings, Rhoda; Aberasturi, Suzanne M. – Educational Forum, 2006
The current faddish use of the term constructivism has taken on as many different definitions as the number of people attempting to define it. This essay clarifies the meaning of constructivism through an examination of Karl Popper's and Jean Piaget's theories. The authors provide a rationale for the use of Popper's paradigm of "Three Worlds" and…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Piagetian Theory, Learning Theories
Willis, Verna J. – Action Learning: Research and Practice, 2004
A purposive sampling and analysis of ten case histories of action learning in the US suggests that applications tend to be partial, hierarchical, and leader controlled, thus running counter in several significant ways to the gold standard of Revans' action learning theory and egalitarian rules of engagement. Using critical markers to inspect the…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Experiential Learning, Intervention, Evaluation

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