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Madrazo, Gerry M., Jr.; Motz, LaMoine L. – Science Educator, 2005
This article deals with brain research. It discusses how a growing understanding of the way the brain functions offers new insights into the minds of students at all stages of development. Brain-based research deals with classroom-relevant concerns, such as sensory perception, attention, memory, and how emotions affect learning. The goals for…
Descriptors: Brain, Learning, Memory, Psychological Patterns
Cleveland-Innes, Martha F.; Emes, Claudia – NASPA Journal, 2005
The nature of interaction in higher education environments impacts not only end outcomes, but also the approach to learning itself. Using a quasi-experimental research design, this empirical study tests the impact of social and academic interaction on student approaches to learning. Findings demonstrate significant correlations between contextual…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Relationship, Higher Education, Interaction, Quasiexperimental Design
Nokes, Timothy J.; Ohlsson, Stellan – Cognitive Science, 2005
Contemporary theories of learning postulate one or at most a small number of different learning mechanisms. However, people are capable of mastering a given task through qualitatively different learning paths such as learning by instruction and learning by doing. We hypothesize that the knowledge acquired through such alternative paths differs…
Descriptors: Mastery Learning, Learning Theories, Laboratory Experiments, Learning Processes
Elton, Lewis – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2004
The classified honours degree has so much prestige and so venerable a tradition that only very serious and systemic changes could justify the question as to whether classification has a future. However, while this paper argues that such changes have indeed taken place in the past 30 years, the main arguments for change are pedagogical. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Practices, Classification, Honors Curriculum
Habgood, M. P. J.; Ainsworth, S. E.; Benford, S. – Simulation & Gaming, 2005
Many people believe that educational games are effective because they motivate children to actively engage in a learning activity as part of playing the game. However, seminal work by Malone, exploring the motivational aspects of digital games, concluded that the educational effectiveness of a digital game depends on the way in which learning…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Fantasy, Instructional Effectiveness, Student Motivation
Van Deur, Penny – International Education Journal, 2004
Gifted students are often described in the literature as being self-regulated, self-directed learners. Ten gifted primary students were interviewed in order to clarify the concept of self-directed learning in students of primary age. The students provided information on their knowledge of self-directed learning, explanations of the self-directed…
Descriptors: Independent Study, Academically Gifted, Learning Strategies, Learning Processes
Moog, Richard S.; Creegan, Frank J.; Hanson, David M.; Spencer, James N.; Straumanis, Andrei R. – Metropolitan Universities, 2006
Recent research indicates that students learn best when they are actively engaged and they construct their own understanding. Process-Oriented Guided Inquiry Learning (POGIL) is a student-centered instructional philosophy based on these concepts in which students work in teams on specially prepared activities that follow a learning cycle paradigm.…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Teaching Methods, Inquiry, Teamwork
Graham, Alan T.; Thomas, Michael O. J. – International Journal for Technology in Mathematics Education, 2005
Statistical data can be represented in a number of qualitatively different ways, the choice depending on the following three conditions: the concepts to be investigated; the nature of the data; and the purpose for which they were collected. This paper begins by setting out frameworks that describe the nature of statistical thinking in schools, and…
Descriptors: Investigations, Statistical Data, Statistics, Mathematics Education
Daghfous, Abdelkader – Learning Organization, 2004
Knowledge-based competition has magnified the importance of learning alliances as a fast and effective mechanism of capability development. This case presents a technology transfer project from a university's engineering research center to a private firm to illuminate learning and knowledge-based determinants of the outcomes of such projects. In…
Descriptors: Organizational Culture, Learning Processes, Knowledge Level, Technology Transfer
Pham, Ngoc Thuy; Swierczek, Fredric William – Learning Organization, 2006
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to determine the influence of organizational factors such as leadership commitment, incentives and interaction on learning outcomes defined as performance improvement and organizational climate. Design/methodology/approach: Different aspects of knowledge acquisition, sharing and utilization were examined,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Organizations (Groups), Learning Processes, Context Effect
Akhurst, Jacqui; Kelly, Kevin – Psychology Teaching Review, 2006
Peer group supervision has had little attention in the research literature, although it is a common form of supervision utilised by psychologists in practice. The development and implementation of a structured peer supervision group (PSG) with nine trainee psychologists, within the training setting of university-based services, is described in…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Psychologists, Focus Groups, Supervision
Garavan, Thomas N.; McGuire, David; O'Donnell, David – Human Resource Development Review, 2004
Levels of analysis perform an important function in framing research and practice in human resource development (HRD). The purpose of this article is to examine the concept of HRD from the individual, organizational, and community-societal levels of analysis. The article highlights both the distinctiveness and usefulness of each level of analysis,…
Descriptors: Labor Force Development, Human Resources, Intervention, Theory Practice Relationship
Russell, Jill; Elton, Lewis; Swinglehurst, Deborah; Greenhalgh, Trisha – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2006
The development of e-learning has opened up new opportunities for innovation in assessment practices in higher education. This descriptive case study draws upon staff and student experiences of teaching and learning on a web-based Masters programme in primary health care to explore how specific features of the online environment can be exploited…
Descriptors: Primary Health Care, Online Courses, Distance Education, Case Studies
Leikin, Mark; Share, David L.; Schwartz, Mila – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2005
The present study examined factors that influence the process of learning to read in a second language. The Hebrew reading comprehension skills of 68 Russian-speaking children (mean age 7 years 6 months) were screened at the start of Grade 2. From this sample, 40 participants were selected: 20 successful learners and 20 unsuccessful learners.…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Russian, Reading Difficulties, Learning Processes
Geraedts, Caspar; Boersma, Kerst Th.; Eijkelhof, Harrie M. C. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2006
The integration of science and technology education has been a topic of worldwide debate. However, the focus of the debate has been too much on the degree of integration of subjects at the expense of such important but related issues as the nature of the constituting disciplines, educational levels (state, school, classroom), and the objects of…
Descriptors: Technology Education, Integrated Curriculum, Science Education, Foreign Countries

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