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Tse, Chi-Shing; Altarriba, Jeanette – Psychological Record, 2012
English speakers use horizontal spatial metaphors (e.g., before/after) to talk about time relative to vertical spatial metaphors (e.g., up/down), so they may be faster in verifying temporal targets (e.g., June comes after April) that are preceded by primes that activate horizontal, relative to vertical, spatial metaphors. We examined this…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Spatial Ability, Time, Comprehension
Jackson, Micah T. J. – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Throughout history, preachers have used various models to understand the relationship between the preacher and the hearers of sermons. In recent years, homileticians have responded to the challenges of postmodernism by exploring the metaphor of conversation as a way to develop less hierarchical or authoritarian conceptions of role and authority.…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Language Research, Pragmatics, Persuasive Discourse
Langer, Nieli – Educational Gerontology, 2012
The popular book, Who Moved My Cheese? (Johnson, 1998) is a metaphor for change. This parable-like story has particular resonance with older adults who face many potential life-altering changes. The four characters in the book are looking for their cheese in a maze. Cheese represents whatever makes people happy. How each character adjusts to the…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Personality, Aging (Individuals), Behavior Change
Lacey, Simon; Stilla, Randall; Sathian, K. – Brain and Language, 2012
Conceptual metaphor theory suggests that knowledge is structured around metaphorical mappings derived from physical experience. Segregated processing of object properties in sensory cortex allows testing of the hypothesis that metaphor processing recruits activity in domain-specific sensory cortex. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging…
Descriptors: Sentences, Figurative Language, Neurology, Diagnostic Tests
Roscoe, Matt B. – Mathematics Teacher, 2012
Learning to play tennis is difficult. It takes practice, but it also helps to have a coach--someone who gives tips and pointers but allows the freedom to play the game on one's own. Learning to act like a mathematician is a similar process. Students report that the process of proving the inscribed angle theorem is challenging and, at times,…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Mathematical Logic, Mathematics Instruction, Learning Processes
van Swet, Jacqueline; Armstrong, Ann Cheryl; Lloyd, Christine – Professional Development in Education, 2012
The scope of policies within universities and professional practices is becoming increasingly global and more and more networks of professionals and researchers are conducting collaborative programmes and research projects. Translating these collaborations into flourishing practices is often more challenging than initially anticipated, especially…
Descriptors: Educational Psychology, International Cooperation, Cultural Differences, Educational Change
Applegarth, Risa – College Composition and Communication, 2012
This study examines how changes in a key scientific genre supported anthropology's early twentieth-century bid for scientific status. Combining spatial theories of genre with inflections from the register of economics, I develop the concept of "rhetorical scarcity" to characterize this genre change not as evolution but as manipulation that…
Descriptors: Anthropology, Epistemology, Science Education, Figurative Language
Bamwesiga, Penelope Mbabazi; Dahlgren, Lars-Owe; Fejes, Andreas – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2012
In this study, we aim to explore and thematically analyze higher education teachers' notions about the most important problems related to students' learning, including the teachers' notions about the approaches to learning adopted by students. The study was carried out in Rwanda with 25 university teachers engaged in group interviews. Inspired by…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Learning Problems, Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods
Kinard, Timothy – Children's Literature in Education, 2012
This article is an attempt to contribute to the conversation about "go[ing] beyond all kinds of binary thinking" (Lenz Taguchi, "Going beyond the theory/practice divide in early childhood education: introducing an intra-active pedagogy," 2010, p. 50), especially the binary which positions "adults" and "children" as being powerful and powerless,…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Children, Figurative Language, Infants
Payne, Monica A. – Journal of Adolescent Research, 2012
Stanley Hall's (1904) description of adolescence as a time "suggestive of some ancient period of storm and stress when old moorings were broken and a higher level attained" is arguably one of developmental psychology's most vivid and powerful metaphors. Its relatively insignificant contribution to Hall's treatise (Arnett, 2006), the early demise…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Developmental Psychology, Stereotypes, Adolescents
Alexander, Joy – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2011
This article reviews and discusses how metaphor as a trope has been regarded as an essential element in rhetorical approaches to reading and to writing. In addition it considers the extent to which, while metaphor-making is a fundamental cognitive capacity, a metaphorizing habit of mind may be especially pertinent to some aspects of aesthetic…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, English Instruction, Aesthetics, Rhetoric
Mansson, Niclas; Langmann, Elisabet – Ethics and Education, 2011
This article explores how our understanding of ambivalence would shift if we saw it as an inherent and essential part of the ordinary work of education. Following Bauman's sociology of the stranger and Derrida's deconstructions of hospitality, the article unfolds in three parts. In the first part we discuss the preconditions of modern education…
Descriptors: Role of Education, Figurative Language, Stranger Reactions, Prosocial Behavior
Killingsworth, M. Jimmie – College English, 2011
Reflection in its most general sense just means thinking, so that a reflection upon nature amounts to thinking about the more-than-human world. Implied, however, is a particular kind of thinking, first and foremost a product of philosophical idealism and the analogical or mimetic imagination. This implication goes largely unexplored in…
Descriptors: Physical Environment, Poetry, Writing (Composition), Figurative Language
Seymour, Daniel – About Campus, 2011
In this article, the author discusses how to make strategic planning a more valuable tool for higher education in today's tough times. Strategic planning is really the answer to five straightforward questions. The first three represent the plan itself, while the last two are what makes the plan vital and dynamic: (1) Why do we exist?; (2) What do…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Strategic Planning, Economic Climate, Educational Finance
Webster, Jennica R.; Beehr, Terry A.; Love, Kevin – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2011
Interest regarding the challenge-hindrance occupational stress model has increased in recent years, however its theoretical foundation has not been tested. Drawing from the transactional theory of stress, this study tests the assumptions made in past research (1) that workload and responsibility are appraised as challenges and role ambiguity and…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Role Conflict, Figurative Language, Stress Variables

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