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Promoting Critical Empathy, Civic Change in Middle Classrooms through Anonymous Narrative Reflection
Layne Elise Ilderton – Voices from the Middle, 2024
Communities have their own set of cultural values that make their way into their classrooms and serve as criteria for the labeling of "insider" or "outsider." This article describes how critical empathy can allow the barriers between these constructs to be broken down as students are given the chance not only to listen but to…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Empathy, Listening, Perspective Taking
Nathaniel Woodward – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
The composer, author, and teacher, John Cage, was exercised by our 'inability' to truly listen when approaching sound. In exploring the influences on Cage's avant-garde style, specifically the spiritual discipline found in both Zen Buddhism and Chance operations, this paper attempts to distinguish his philosophy (and use) of "silence"…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Educational Philosophy, Buddhism, Educational Theories
Semanur Cömert; Saide Özbey – Hungarian Educational Research Journal, 2024
This study aimed to examine the effect of Turkish Music, which is played in the background in preschool education environments, on the intrinsic motivation levels of children in the preschool period. The study used a "quasi-experimental pretest-posttest control group design with retention test", one of the quantitative research models.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Music, Preschool Children, Educational Environment
Ursula Crickmay – Music Education Research, 2024
Posthumanism points towards a relational understanding of embodied processes of becoming musical in and with the world which readily combine with existing aspects of early years music practice. In this article I describe the potential of this resonant encounter to develop alternative approaches to listening, opening further possibilities for both…
Descriptors: Music Education, Humanism, Listening, Children
Shangchao Min; Kyoungwon Bishop – Language Testing, 2024
This paper evaluates the multistage adaptive test (MST) design of a large-scale academic language assessment (ACCESS) for Grades 1-12, with an aim to simplify the current MST design, using both operational and simulated test data. Study 1 explored the operational population data (1,456,287 test-takers) of the listening and reading tests of MST…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Test Construction, Language Tests, English Language Learners
Yao, Shu-Nung; Liang, Chaoyun – IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies, 2023
Image processing-based augmented reality (AR) is widely used in several fields. However, audio content is also crucial in certain cases, for example, focusing on appreciating artwork in a museum, rather than a virtually synthesized image. In this study, an attempt was made to provide ubiquitous learning (u-learning) services by using audio AR for…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Electronic Learning, Audio Equipment, Educational Technology
Cohn, Michelle; Barreda, Santiago; Zellou, Georgia – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2023
Purpose: This study investigates the debate that musicians have an advantage in speech-in-noise perception from years of targeted auditory training. We also consider the effect of age on any such advantage, comparing musicians and nonmusicians (age range: 18-66 years), all of whom had normal hearing. We manipulate the degree of fundamental…
Descriptors: Musicians, Auditory Perception, Acoustics, Age Differences
Llewellyn, Kristina R.; Llewellyn, Jennifer J.; Roberts-Smith, Jennifer – Research in Dance Education, 2023
Central to restorative justice is a commitment to sharing and listening to first voice. This is required for the work of transitioning to just relations. The Restorative Inquiry for the Nova Scotia Home for Colored Children (The Home), and its Digital Oral Histories for Reconciliation (DOHR) project, offers a significant example of the power of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Dance Education, Social Justice, Oral History
Steindorf, Lena; Pink, Sebastian; Rummel, Jan; Smallwood, Jonathan – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2023
We investigated whether increased perceptual processing difficulty during reading or listening to a Sherlock Holmes novella impacts mind wandering as well as text comprehension. We presented 175 participants with a novella in either a visual or an auditory presentation format and probed their thoughts and motivational states from time to time…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Reading Comprehension, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level
Kim, Ji Young; Frank, Madeline R.; Fienup, Daniel M. – Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 2020
Fluent listener behavior is a fundamental repertoire that affects the learning and development of speaker repertoires. We used a concurrent multiple-baseline design across 3 preschool-aged participants with disabilities to evaluate the effectiveness of a listener emersion protocol on increasing listener fluency. Prior to intervention, the…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Students with Disabilities, Listening Comprehension, Listening Skills
Jessica Rivera-Mueller – Journal on Empowering Teaching Excellence, 2020
Many educators assign course readings to purposefully enlarge students' perspectives. In doing so, though, educators may face a range of behaviors--reluctance, resistance, avoidance, disengagement--from students who feel that such readings negatively press upon their prior knowledge, belief systems, or educational goals. This teaching challenge is…
Descriptors: Reading Materials, Difficulty Level, Rhetoric, Listening
Neal, Makena – American Association for Adult and Continuing Education, 2022
The literature on teaching centers and faculty development increasingly recognizes teaching centers are well-positioned to support institutional effectiveness activities. There is critical importance in collaborating with educators to establish topics of engagement, positioning, and partnership including the importance of stakeholder buy-in, which…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Faculty Development, Educational Facilities, Design
Clinton-Lisell, Virginia – Review of Educational Research, 2022
In this study, a meta-analysis of reading and listening comprehension comparisons across age groups was conducted. Based on robust variance estimation (46 studies; N = 4,687), the overall difference between reading and listening comprehension was not reliably different (g = 0.07, p = 0.23). Reading was beneficial over listening when the reading…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Listening Comprehension, Reading Comprehension, Comparative Analysis
Eddolls, Morgan S.; Molis, Michelle R.; Reiss, Lina A. J. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2022
Purpose: The effect of onset asynchrony on dichotic vowel segregation and identification in normal-hearing (NH) and hearing-impaired (HI) listeners was examined. We hypothesized that fusion would decrease and identification performance would improve with increasing onset asynchrony. Additionally, we hypothesized that HI listeners would gain more…
Descriptors: Hearing Impairments, Auditory Perception, Vowels, Listening
Alexandra Bradshaw-Yerby; Adele Nickel – Journal of Dance Education, 2025
This article explores the relevance of Polyvagal Theory (PVT) to somatically-informed dance teaching methodologies. It aims to provide a neurophysiological basis for understanding the effectiveness of these teaching approaches and offer practical suggestions for how dance educators can incorporate concepts of PVT into their classroom experiences.
Descriptors: Dance Education, Teaching Methods, Neurological Organization, Neurology

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