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Yiend, Jenny; Weller, Saranne; Kinchin, Ian – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2014
Teaching observation is widely promoted as a mechanism for developing teaching practice in higher education. Specifically, formative peer observation is considered by many to be a powerful tool for providing feedback to individual teachers, disseminating disciplinary good practice and fostering a local evaluative enhancement culture. Despite its…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Case Studies, Observation, Peer Evaluation
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Martinie, Sherri L. – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2014
How can a simple dot--the decimal point--be the source of such frustration for students and teachers? As the author worked through her own frustrations, she found that her students seemed to fall into groups in terms of misconceptions that they revealed when talking about and working with decimals. When asking students to illustrate their thinking…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Secondary School Mathematics, Middle School Students, Mathematical Concepts
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Kusuma, Krista Dahl; Wyrick, Gabrielle – Journal of Museum Education, 2014
The teen behavior typically exhibited in school visit groups is often read by museum teachers as resistance or disengagement, when the opposite is more likely the case. This paper attempts to dispel some of the myths around teen behavior and serve as a practical guide to museum educators who desire a deeper, more successful engagement with teen…
Descriptors: Museums, Audience Analysis, Adolescent Attitudes, Art Teachers
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Groth, Randall E. – Investigations in Mathematics Learning, 2014
The recommendation to study statistical variation has become prevalent in recent curriculum documents. At the same time, research on teachers' knowledge of variation is in its beginning stages. This study investigated prospective teachers' knowledge in regard to a specific measure of statistical variation that is new to many curriculum documents:…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Knowledge Level, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts
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Masson, Steve; Potvin, Patrice; Riopel, Martin; Foisy, Lorie-Marlène Brault – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2014
Science education studies have revealed that students often have misconceptions about how nature works, but what happens to misconceptions after a conceptual change remains poorly understood. Are misconceptions rejected and replaced by scientific conceptions, or are they still present in students' minds, coexisting with newly acquired…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Expertise, Misconceptions, Scientific Concepts
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Foster, Colin – Canadian Journal of Science, Mathematics and Technology Education, 2014
The frequent misinterpretation of the nature of confidence intervals by students has been well documented. This article examines the problem as an aspect of the learning of mathematical definitions and considers the tension between parroting mathematically rigorous, but essentially uninternalized, statements on the one hand and expressing…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Misconceptions, Computation
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Ensor, Rosie; Devine, Rory T.; Marks, Alex; Hughes, Claire – Child Development, 2014
Mothers' mental-state references predict individual differences in preschoolers' false-belief (FB) understanding; less is known about the origins of corresponding variation in school-age children. To address this gap, 105 children completed observations with their mothers at child ages 2 and 6, three FB tasks and a verbal comprehension…
Descriptors: Mothers, Theory of Mind, Predictor Variables, Preschool Children
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García-Rodicio, Héctor; Sánchez, Emilio – Metacognition and Learning, 2014
When dealing with complex conceptual systems, low-prior- knowledge learners develop fragmentary and incorrect understanding. To learn complex topics deeply, these learners have to (a) monitor understanding to detect flaws and (b) generate explanations to revise and repair the flaws. In this research we explored if the detection of a flaw in…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Prior Learning, Control Groups, Plate Tectonics
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Tran, Mark V.; Weigel, Emily G.; Richmond, Gail – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2014
For biologists, a proper understanding of evolutionary processes is fundamentally important. However, undergraduate biology students often struggle to understand evolutionary processes, replacing factual knowledge with misconceptions on the subject. Classroom discussions can be effective active learning tools used to address these misconceptions…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Biology, Science Instruction, Knowledge Level
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Lange, Karin E.; Booth, Julie L.; Newton, Kristie J. – Mathematics Teacher, 2014
For students to be successful in algebra, they must have a truly conceptual understanding of key algebraic features as well as the procedural skills to complete a problem. One strategy to correct students' misconceptions combines the use of worked example problems in the classroom with student self-explanation. "Self-explanation" is the…
Descriptors: Algebra, Mathematics Instruction, Problem Solving, Mathematics Skills
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Kaplan, Jennifer J.; Gabrosek, John G.; Curtiss, Phyllis; Malone, Chris – Journal of Statistics Education, 2014
Histograms are adept at revealing the distribution of data values, especially the shape of the distribution and any outlier values. They are included in introductory statistics texts, research methods texts, and in the popular press, yet students often have difficulty interpreting the information conveyed by a histogram. This research identifies…
Descriptors: Statistical Distributions, Graphs, Undergraduate Students, Misconceptions
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Gay, A. Susan; Peterson, Ingrid – PRIMUS, 2014
Concept-focused quiz questions required College Algebra students to write about their understanding. The questions can be viewed in three broad categories: a focus on sense-making, a focus on describing a mathematical object such as a graph or an equation, and a focus on understanding vocabulary. Student responses from 10 classes were analyzed.…
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Undergraduate Study, Content Area Writing, Algebra
Nero, Shondel; Ahmad, Dohra – Routledge Research in Education, 2014
This book draws on applied linguistics and literary studies to offer concrete means of engaging with vernacular language and literature in secondary and college classrooms. The authors embrace a language-as-resource orientation, countering the popular narrative of vernaculars as problems in schools. The book is divided into two parts, with the…
Descriptors: Native Language, Applied Linguistics, Case Studies, Higher Education
Seoh, Kah Huat Robin; Ramanathan, Subramaniam; Hoh, Yin Kiong – Australian Association for Research in Education, 2014
Despite the teaching of biological evolution in the classroom for decades, the learning of concepts related to evolution continue to pose difficulties for students, due to their inability to see the relevance of evolution their everyday experiences. In this study, we report the results from questionnaires composed of twelve multiple-choice items…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Grade 12, Evolution, Science Instruction
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Triantafillou, Chrissavgi; Spiliotopoulou, Vasiliki; Potari, Despina – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2014
This study aims to explore how undergraduate students in mathematics and engineering professions make sense out of graphs representing periodic and repeated but non-periodic motions. In this study, making sense out of graphs means interpreting graphical features and describing a situation that could be represented by them. The data was collected…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Graphs, Motion, Mathematics Education
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