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Camille S. Burnett – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2023
The study discussed here aims to describe students' understandings of the definition of a mathematical function, which was achieved through a pilot case study of clinical interviews with four participants -- two ninth graders and two twelfth graders. The participants were recruited from the same urban public high school in the northeast of the…
Descriptors: Secondary School Mathematics, Mathematics Skills, Thinking Skills, Algebra
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Benn, Caroline – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2021
This short piece from the Forum archive introduces Caroline Benn's detailed critique of 'The myth of giftedness'. Her starting point is the need to define and then demand comprehensive education as a basic educational right, set alongside a mapping of the modern giftedness movement in the 1960s and 1970s.
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Gifted, Criticism, Civil Rights
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Golob, Sacha – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2021
This paper addresses a central aspect of Kant's theory of moral progress and its links to both political violence and pedagogy. Kant claims in the "Conflict of the Faculties" that the reaction to the French Revolution demonstrates that the 'human race has always progressed and will further progress toward the better'. It thus constitutes…
Descriptors: Moral Development, Moral Values, Values Education, Educational Philosophy
Wineburg, Sam – Phi Delta Kappan, 2021
History textbooks are less likely to be complete renderings of the truth than a series of stories textbook authors (and the many stakeholders who influence them) consider beneficial. Sam Wineburg describes how the process of writing history textbooks often leads to sanitized and inaccurate versions of history. As an example, he describes how the…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Misconceptions, Textbooks, Textbook Content
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Mu, Guanglun Michael – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2021
This paper intends to develop a sociological thinking of child and youth resilience through recourse to Bourdieu. The paper starts by problematising the misconceptualisation that equates resilience with adaptation. It then marks a clear conceptual boundary between the two notions. This is followed by a review of conceptualisations of resilience…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Children, Youth, Adjustment (to Environment)
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Clarke, Rachel Ivy; Bell, Steven J. – Journal of Education for Library and Information Science, 2021
This study aims to understand educators'--specifically those in positions of authority in graduate-level library education programs--perceptions of and attitudes toward design thinking and methods in graduate-level library curricula by investigating the following research questions: What is the current landscape for the integration of design into…
Descriptors: Graduate Study, Library Education, Competence, Administrator Attitudes
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Schmank, Christopher J.; Goring, Sara Anne; Kovacs, Kristof; Conway, Andrew R. A. – Journal of Intelligence, 2021
In a recent publication in the Journal of Intelligence, Dennis McFarland mischaracterized previous research using latent variable and psychometric network modeling to investigate the structure of intelligence. Misconceptions presented by McFarland are identified and discussed. We reiterate and clarify the goal of our previous research on network…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Psychometrics, Cognitive Structures, Structural Equation Models
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Torsney, Benjamin M.; Korstange, Ryan; Symonds, Jennifer E. – Psychology in the Schools, 2021
The current study investigated whether a brief refutation text intervention could change college students' misconceptions about the malleability of their intelligence and abilities. Students from a 2-year college and a 4-year university in a large urban city in the Northeastern United States participated in experimental and control conditions. A…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Ability, Intelligence, Cognitive Structures
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Leysen, Joyce – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
The interest to connect results of neuroscientific research to educational contexts has increasingly grown in recent years. Actors from neuroscience and education show the explicit intention to approach each other. Still, issues and debates exist in the relation between them. This paper aims to bring to the fore one such specific issue that is not…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Scientific Research, Teaching Methods, Professionalism
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Šrol, Jakub; Ballová Mikušková, Eva; Cavojová, Vladimíra – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Societal crises and stressful events are associated with an upsurge of conspiracy beliefs that may help people to tackle feelings of lack of control. In our study (N = 783), we examined whether people with higher feelings of anxiety and lack of control early in the COVID-19 pandemic endorse more conspiracy theories. Our results show that a higher…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Locus of Control, Misconceptions, Beliefs
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Shaw, Steven R. – Canadian Journal of School Psychology, 2021
The scientist-practitioner model of practice is the most common approach to the profession of school psychology and embraces evidence-based practices as foundations of clinical practice. The focus on evidence-based practices involves not only using the preponderance of research to determine what works, but also how to implement these practices…
Descriptors: Program Implementation, Evidence Based Practice, School Psychology, Program Effectiveness
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Ostwald Kawamura, Naomi; Hawkins, Callie; Paynter, Braden – Journal of Museum Education, 2021
Dr. Joanne Cacciatore is a research professor at Arizona State University, a bereavement educator, and the founder of the MISS Foundation. Her research focuses on traumatic grief and loss. In this interview, Dr. Cacciatore offers her thoughts on grief, some misconceptions, and her notion of fierce compassion. The interviewers and Dr. Cacciatore…
Descriptors: Grief, Coping, Museums, Trauma
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Prinz, Anja; Golke, Stefanie; Wittwer, Jörg – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2021
Previous research has shown that misconceptions impair not only learners' text comprehension and knowledge transfer but also the accuracy with which they predict their comprehension and transfer. In the present experiment with N = 92 university students, we investigated to what extent reading a refutation text or completing a think sheet compared…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Reading Comprehension, Accuracy, College Students
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Eyceyurt-Türk, Gülseda; Tüzün, Ümmüye Nur – Educational Policy Analysis and Strategic Research, 2021
Determining pre-service teachers' images and removing their misconceptions with scientifically true ones are very important so that these teachers could bring up students without misconceptions. In the current study, it was aimed to highlight pre-service science teachers' images and misconceptions about chemical equilibrium together and in detail.…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Misconceptions, Chemistry, Foreign Countries
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Dolores-Flores, Crisólogo; Rivera-López, Martha Iris; Tlalmanalco-Ramírez, Adán – EURASIA Journal of Mathematics, Science and Technology Education, 2021
This paper reports the results of research in which the objective was to explore the preconceptions of slope in seventh-grade students. Preconceptions are understood as students' knowledge prior to the formal teaching of a certain concept. For data collection, task-based interviews composed of ten tasks applied to 21 Mexican students were used.…
Descriptors: Grade 7, Mathematical Concepts, Middle School Students, Knowledge Level
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