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Fadime Ulusoy – RMLE Online: Research in Middle Level Education, 2023
This study examines in-service mathematics teachers' problems on linear relationships that they posed in a semi-structured problem posing situation with a group and their ideas about the factors affecting the quality of the posed problems. Eight groups of 24 teachers participated in the study. Teachers' problems, written group work, and class…
Descriptors: Middle School Teachers, Mathematics Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Problem Solving
Esche, Svana; Weihe, Karsten – IEEE Transactions on Education, 2023
Contribution: Most work on languages in computing education currently focuses on non-native speakers. In contrast, to the best of the authors' knowledge, this article is the first response to the call for research on terms that takes into account the terms used by novices in their language. Background: Terms are key factors in communication,…
Descriptors: Programming Languages, Computer Science Education, Misconceptions, Undergraduate Students
Mertens, Gillian E. – Middle School Journal, 2023
How do students make sense of sources encountered during online inquiry, when the source types can be as varied as the topics themselves? This paper presents findings from a multiple-case study exploring how four 8th grade students evaluated source credibility while engaged in independent research during an inquiry-based information literacy…
Descriptors: Grade 8, Information Sources, Credibility, Information Literacy
Orphan, Cecilia M. – New Directions for Higher Education, 2020
A dominant narrative exists that all regional public universities (RPUs) are striving for prestige and, if given the chance, would readily abandon their missions of facilitating educational access for marginalized students and increase admissions selectivity to privilege elite students. As a result of this dominant narrative, RPUs are largely…
Descriptors: Public Colleges, Universities, Reputation, Institutional Mission
Kekki, Minna-Kerttu – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
In challenging the media-pessimistic phenomenological analyses provided by Hubert Dreyfus and Tanja Staehler, I argue that such analyses have misinterpreted phenomenological theory and have resulted in fallacious arguments. I show that phenomenological theory, as it relates to what constitutes our social experiences, indicates that the core of…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Mass Media, Learning, Misconceptions
Warne, Russell T.; Burton, Jared Z. – Journal for the Education of the Gifted, 2020
Research in educational psychology consistently finds a relationship between intelligence and academic performance. However, in recent decades, educational fields, including gifted education, have resisted intelligence research, and there are some experts who argue that intelligence tests should not be used in identifying giftedness. Hoping to…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Educational Research, Teacher Attitudes, Attitudes
Brown, Jo – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2020
Whenever the word "theory" is used in association with teaching and learning people often react scared. This chapter is an attempt to dispel some myths about using learning theory in health care education in the hope that you will celebrate theory for the fascinating thing it is.
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Learning Experience, Health Education, Misconceptions
Tillson, John – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
In this paper, I offer Brighouse et al some friendly suggestions for expanding the notion of 'educational goods', pose some challenges for their book's decision-making framework and offer an opportunity for them to fill some small, but interesting lacunas. I start by comparing their typology of desirable educational outcomes with alternative…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Models, Classification, Epistemology
Sternberg, Robert J. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2020
Creativity testing as it is now done is often based on a defective assumption that different kinds of creativity can be compressed into a single unidimensional scale. There is no reason to believe that the different kinds of creativity represent, simply, different amounts of a single unidimensional construct. The article shows how three different…
Descriptors: Creativity Tests, Test Validity, Misconceptions, Models
Arielle Leonard Hodges; Sara LaBelle – Communication Education, 2024
This study sought to advance the growing body of research on communication and instruction outside of the college classroom by exploring the rhetorical and relational goals of religious leaders facilitating premarital education about sex (i.e., sexuality, sexual health, and intimacy). Specifically, 47 evangelical Christians who had taught…
Descriptors: Adults, Teachers, Facilitators (Individuals), Christianity
Neil O. Houser – Social Studies, 2024
In addition to the continuing need for citizens who can address the challenges of "human" communities, growing concerns have arisen regarding "all" life on the planet. Indeed, one of our most urgent conditions is the decline of the environment upon which all life depends. Yet, despite our concerns, there remain vastly differing…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Active Learning, Social Studies, Simulation
Erin M. Ball; Robin A. Costello; Cissy J. Ballen; Rita M. Graze; Eric W. Burkholder – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2024
Racial biases, which harm marginalized and excluded communities, may be combatted by clarifying misconceptions about race during biology lessons. We developed a human genetics laboratory activity that challenges the misconception that race is biological (biological essentialism). We assessed the relationship between this activity and student…
Descriptors: Race, Genetics, Misconceptions, Undergraduate Students
Yue Zhang; Zishu Meng; Xiaomei Liu – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2024
The study assessed the relationship between career preparation, beliefs, attitudes, in-service training, and peer communication of primary school mathematics teachers and their knowledge of students' misconceptions. Seven hundred one Chinese teachers were selected for the test and questionnaire survey. The mathematics teacher test paper had good…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Mathematics Teachers, Knowledge Level, Misconceptions
Paige L. Kemp; Alyssa H. Sinclair; R. Alison Adcock; Christopher N. Wahlheim – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2024
Fake news can have enduring effects on memory and beliefs. An ongoing theoretical debate has investigated whether corrections (fact-checks) should include reminders of fake news. The familiarity backfire account proposes that reminders hinder correction (increasing interference), whereas integration-based accounts argue that reminders facilitate…
Descriptors: Misinformation, Deception, Propaganda, Memory
Undergraduate-Level Biology Students' Application of Central Dogma to Understand COVID mRNA Vaccines
Saya Shahoy; Michelle Du; Ola Mostafa; Aliyah Parker; Dylan Martirano; Melinda T. Owens – Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education, 2024
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has underscored the importance of mRNA vaccines. The mechanism for how such vaccines work is related to the core biology topic of the central dogma, which students often misunderstand despite its importance. Therefore, we wanted to know whether students can apply their biology knowledge of central…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Undergraduate Students, Biology, Knowledge Level

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