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Katherine Rehner; John Ippolito; Ivan Lasan; Gabrielle Forget; Claire Gouveia; Sarah Jones; Yifan Liu – Canadian Modern Language Review, 2025
This study explores adult migrants' formal and informal opportunities for learning their host country's dominant language: specifically, the availability, accessibility, and effects of these opportunities on the migrants' social integration. It prioritizes the migrants' experience by reporting findings obtained from analyses of questionnaire data…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Migrants, Adults, Informal Education
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Richard Sheldrake; Nicola Walshe; Eleanore Hargreaves – Environmental Education Research, 2025
To support young people and their futures, sustainability education is increasingly framed around enhancing young people's agency. In England, however, sustainability is not a formal subject within the National Curriculum and teachers may have different understandings of what sustainability education involves. New insights were revealed through…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Teachers, Sustainability, Environmental Education
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Jose Antonio Gordillo Martorell – Journal of Museum Education, 2025
What are children's perceptions of what a museum is and what it should be? Is there a discrepancy between the two, and if so, in what sense? To address these questions, a collaboration between Cultural Inquiry, Fondation Lascaux, Brüttisellen, and the Bifang Primary School in Olten, Switzerland has established a series of experimental atelier…
Descriptors: Museums, Elementary School Students, Student Attitudes, Foreign Countries
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Mintasih Indriayu – Educational Process: International Journal, 2025
Background/purpose: Higher education necessitates learner autonomy and active participation for deep engagement in learning. However, significant challenges limited classroom involvement and low student learning autonomy. Infrequent peer discussion further hinders knowledge retention and conceptual mastery. Many lecturers dominate learning in…
Descriptors: Peer Teaching, Personal Autonomy, Learner Engagement, College Students
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Na-Rae Kim – International Journal for Educational and Vocational Guidance, 2025
The present study aimed to examine the mediating effect of career decision-making self-efficacy (CDSE) (cognitive variable) and career engagement (behavioral variable) on the relationship between work volition and career satisfaction among South Korean university students. In the era of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), a sample of 315 third-…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Career Choice, Decision Making
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Cara Cahalan Laitusis; Meagan Karvonen – Educational Measurement: Issues and Practice, 2025
The 2014 "Standards for Educational and Psychological Testing" describe universal design as an approach that offers promise for improving the fairness of educational assessments. As the field reconsiders questions of fairness in assessments, we propose a new framework that addresses the entire assessment lifecycle: universal design of…
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Access to Education, Systems Approach, Psychological Needs
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Tin T. Dang – rEFLections, 2025
Learner autonomy has been considered an essential goal of English as a Foreign Language (EFL) education. This capacity empowers students to actively engage in learning activities and gives them greater control over their learning environment. Existing research on learner autonomy has proposed six conceptual models, yet these frameworks have…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Personal Autonomy, Measures (Individuals)
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Hua Yu; Haowei Luo – Educational Review, 2025
How will high-achieving learners' identity be shaped by exam-oriented assessment? Through critical narrative inquiry, we explore how high-achieving students regulate their learning practices and negotiate their identity in China's climate of exam-oriented assessment. Based on their narratives from autoethnographic writing and life history…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Student Evaluation, High Achievement, Student Attitudes
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Steven A. Stolz – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2024
From a "prima facie" point of view, Nietzsche's use of virtue may appear to be a form of virtue ethics. Certainly, this is one position that has been established within the secondary literature; however, I argue that a more fruitful philosophical reading is to view his use of virtue as a part of his "drive" psychology. Indeed,…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Ethics, Moral Values, Christianity
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Iikka Oinonen; Tuija Seppälä; Riikka Paloniemi – Environmental Education Research, 2024
How to support young people's agency is a key question of sustainability education. Action competence for sustainability is suggested covering the essential components of youth's readiness to act both individually and collectively, but empirical tests of these associations are scarce. Therefore, this study explores the relationship between action…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Sustainability, Environmental Education, Competence
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Wilfried Admiraal; Ditte Lockhorst; Lysanne Post; Liesbeth Kester – International Journal of Research in Education and Science, 2024
Providing students with autonomy over their learning process can support the development of their self-regulation skills. This study aimed to examine the effects of autonomy-support interventions on students' self-regulated learning strategies. The participants were 432 students from three secondary schools in the Netherlands. In each school, a…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Learning Strategies, Field Studies, Self Efficacy
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Piyanud Treesattayanmunee; Siti Mastura Baharudin – LEARN Journal: Language Education and Acquisition Research Network, 2024
This study explored the learner autonomy of Thai EFL undergraduates in English language learning and the extent to which they conducted learner-learner interaction, learnerinstructor interaction, learner-content interaction, and overall interaction. Moreover, the study investigated whether there was a significant difference in overall interaction…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Foreign Countries
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Sara Carlbaum; Linda Rönnberg – Education Inquiry, 2024
This study targets hitherto largely understudied empirical processes and activities through which certain ideas and imaginaries are being commercialised and used by corporate actors in the global Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) industry. The aim is to analyse and critically discuss representations of the Scandinavian ECEC regime in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Documentation, Corporate Education, Early Childhood Education
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Heather Lindenman; Dana Lynn Driscoll; Andrea Efthymiou; Matthew Pavesich; Jennifer Reid – Written Communication, 2024
This essay takes as its focus the everyday writing that people compose: the self-sponsored, nonobligatory texts that people write mainly outside of work and school. Through analysis of 713 survey responses and 27 interviews with accompanying writing samples, this study provides a panoramic view of the functions of self-sponsored writing and…
Descriptors: Adults, Writing (Composition), Personal Autonomy, Well Being
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Peter W. Cardon; Bryan Marshall – Business and Professional Communication Quarterly, 2024
The purpose of this research was to identify the comfort levels of professionals with AI in various humanlike roles. A survey of 787 full-time working adults showed that more active AI users are comfortable with AI in many humanlike roles, such as a teammate or a performance coach. Less active AI users, however, are uncomfortable with AI in these…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Employee Attitudes, Technology Integration, Staff Role
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