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Graham F. Hunter – College Student Affairs Journal, 2025
This basic interpretive qualitative study explores the multiple levels of context in which Higher Education and Student Affairs (HESA) Master's programs exist and how those levels of context influence curriculum development and teaching. Utilizing interviews with 44 HESA faculty members across the United States and Canada, findings illustrate how…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Student Personnel Services, Masters Programs, Curriculum Development
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Luijim Jose – Educational Process: International Journal, 2025
Background/purpose: The persistent risk of semantic anachronism challenges both literary interpretation and pedagogy, as modern readers frequently impose contemporary meanings onto historically charged vocabulary. This study introduces the Contextual Diachronic Semantic Framework (CDSF), a five-layered analytical model designed to trace the…
Descriptors: Literature, Language Usage, Diachronic Linguistics, Language Research
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Tiana M. Cowan; Emily Lund; Krystal Werfel – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2025
Purpose: Speech-language pathologists tailor language sample elicitation methods to the goals of the assessment and the needs of each child. In school-age children, narrative retell and expository contexts elicit more complex language than conversational contexts. However, the impact of elicitation context on younger children has been less…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Deafness, Hard of Hearing, Assistive Technology
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Roslyn Wong; Aaron Veldre; Sally Andrews – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Evidence of processing costs for unexpected words presented in place of a more expected completion remains elusive in the eye-movement literature. The current study investigated whether such prediction error costs depend on the source of constraint violation provided by the prior context. Participants' eye movements were recorded as they read…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Eye Movements, Prediction, Probability
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Linnea Bodén – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2024
The performance of standardized tests is an ongoing matter of concern for childhood researchers. Standardized tests are often described as neglecting the ethical complexities of doing research with young children. However, this critique is primarily presented in general terms, and does not attend to the locality and specificity of particular test…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Standardized Tests, Preschool Children, Interpersonal Relationship
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Colin Muething; Carolyn M. Ritchey; Nathan A. Call; Alexandra M. Hardee; Courtney R. Mauzy IV; Tracy Argueta; Meara X. H. McMahon; Christopher A. Podlesnik – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2024
Functional communication training (FCT) is an evidence-based treatment for behavior targeted for reduction that often combines extinction for target responses and arranges functionally equivalent reinforcement for alternative behavior. Long-term effectiveness of FCT can become compromised when transitioning from clinic to nonclinic contexts or…
Descriptors: Evidence Based Practice, Behavior Modification, Reinforcement, Clinics
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Bronwen Maxwell; Kinga Káplár-Kodácsy; Andrew J. Hobson; Eleanor Hotham – International Journal of Mentoring and Coaching in Education, 2024
Purpose: This paper synthesises international research on effective mentor training, education and development (MTED). Design/methodology/approach: An adaptive theory methodology (Layder, 1998), combining deductive and inductive methods, was deployed in a qualitative meta-synthesis of thematic findings generated in three studies: a systematic…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Meta Analysis, Mentors, Coaching (Performance)
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Anne N. Rinn – Journal for the Education of the Gifted, 2024
The study of psychosocial skills is conceptualized in the field of gifted education as part of the talent development paradigm, and most terminology associated with the study of psychosocial skills is done within the framework of the talent development megamodel. Although critically important in the development of talent, empirical research on…
Descriptors: Individual Development, Interpersonal Competence, Gifted Education, Talent Development
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Miglena Asenova – Mathematics Education Research Journal, 2024
In Mathematics Education (ME), research dealing with topic-specific (TS) issues (e.g., what levels of development exist in learning fractions) produces usually local results and is considered less fashionable and attractive for innovative research projects than research dealing with context-specific (CS) issues that have more general and abstract…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Educational Research, Objectives, Ethics
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Panos Athanasopoulos; Rui Su – Language Learning, 2024
The temporal focus hypothesis (TFH) entails that individuals who value the past tend to conceptualize it in front, whereas individuals who value the future tend to map the future in front instead (de la Fuente et al., 2014). This varies as a function of culture, individual differences, and context. Here, we extend this line of inquiry by testing a…
Descriptors: Time, COVID-19, Pandemics, Individual Differences
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Fynn R. Dobler; Malte R. Henningsen-Schomers; Friedemann Pulvermüller – Language Learning, 2024
Concrete symbols (e.g., "sun," "run") can be learned in the context of objects and actions, thereby grounding their meaning in the world. However, it is controversial whether a comparable avenue to semantic learning exists for abstract symbols (e.g., "democracy"). When we simulated the putative brain mechanisms of…
Descriptors: Semantics, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Concept Formation, Abstract Reasoning
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Stefan Arora-Jonsson; Ema Kristina Demir; Axel Norgren; Karl Wennberg – School Effectiveness and School Improvement, 2024
Research on school improvement has accumulated an extensive list of factors that facilitate turnarounds at underperforming schools. Given that context or resource constraints may limit the possibilities of putting all of these factors in place, an important question is what is necessary and sufficient to turn a school around. We use qualitative…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Turnaround, Context Effect, Educational Improvement
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Yafit Gabay; Eva Reinisch; Dana Even; Nahal Binur; Bat-Sheva Hadad – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2024
Current theories of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) suggest atypical use of context in ASD, but little is known about how these atypicalities influence speech perception. We examined the influence of contextual information (lexical, spectral, and temporal) on phoneme categorization of people with ASD and in typically developed (TD) people. Across…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Auditory Perception, Speech Communication, Context Effect
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Jeffrey C. Valentine – Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2024
Published studies of intervention effects probably report effect sizes that are larger than the true effect size. There are probably many reasons for this, but one can be thought of as a "winner's curse." In this essay, I discuss evidence from two recent studies that highlight how evidence clearinghouses might inadvertently expose…
Descriptors: Clearinghouses, Evidence, Evaluation Criteria, Replication (Evaluation)
Brian Fleming – Peter Lang Publishing Group, 2024
Books on school leadership are usually written from a theoretical viewpoint. The insights that emerge, whilst very valuable, are based on an imaginary school, devoid of distinctive human agency, and located in a context-free setting. However, in the real world leadership is not enacted in a vacuum. This study is set in a school where the author…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Context Effect, Administrator Role, Principals
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