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Ee-Seul Yoon – Critical Education, 2024
This article examines a popularized term, the Global Education Reform Movement (GERM), and its underlying paradigm of neoliberalism. It elucidates neoliberalism's maddening effects on the education sector, especially public education. To analyze these effects, I draw from and adapt Michel Foucault's analytical approach to madness. My analysis…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Educational Change, Neoliberalism, Criticism
Brady Anthony Tyburski – ProQuest LLC, 2024
A common educational assumption is that coherence is a pre-requisite for a "good" curriculum. Indeed, in mathematics education this perspective has persisted both nationally and internationally as a foundational principle for curriculum design, reform, and evaluation. While curricular coherence is often unquestioningly accepted as…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Figurative Language, Student Attitudes
Chungseo Kang; Hyunmyung Jo; Seong Won Han; Lois Weis – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2025
Investigations into fostering gender parity in STEM have proliferated, yet the specific situation of Asian American women has been largely overlooked. Harnessing data from the High School Longitudinal Study of 2009 (HSLS:09), the analysis scrutinizes gender disparities in STEM major selections within distinct Asian American ethnic cohorts,…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, STEM Education, Asian Americans, Ethnicity
Yael Rozenblum; Keren Dalyot; Ayelet Baram-Tsabari – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2025
Recent research has highlighted the role of science education in reducing beliefs in science-related misinformation and stressed its potential positive impact on decision-making and behavior. This study implemented the Elaboration Likelihood Model to explore how individuals' abilities and motivation interact with the type of processing of…
Descriptors: Science Education, Misconceptions, Beliefs, Decision Making
Bandar Marzoog Almutairi – Educational Process: International Journal, 2025
Background/purpose: This study addresses the lack of statistical thinking skills among Applied College students, a key requirement for professional success. Traditional statistics education focuses on procedural and computational methods rather than conceptual understanding, leading to misconceptions and difficulties in data organization,…
Descriptors: Statistics Education, Computer Software, Spreadsheets, Thinking Skills
Frank Feudel; Alexander Unger – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2025
In tertiary mathematics courses, students often have difficulties acquiring an understanding of the mathematical concepts covered. One approach to address this problem is to implement so-called Concept-Tests. These are multiple-choice questions whose distractors represent common problems and misconceptions related to the concepts. While there…
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Concept Formation
Bierdz, Brad – Power and Education, 2021
This exploration takes a look at how students in higher education are disempowered through regimes of social power that are always already extant and ubiquitous within educational regimes. Moreover, this exploration pays particular interest and attention to students in higher education because in many cases throughout relevant research, these…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Empowerment, Power Structure, Philosophy
Nichols, T. Philip; LeBlanc, Robert Jean – Curriculum Inquiry, 2021
Recently, talk of "fake news" -- and its relation to wider epistemic crises, from climate denialism to the creep of global ethno-nationalism -- has renewed attention to media literacy in education. For some, revived discussions of media literacy offer protection (e.g., strategies for identifying and critiquing media bias and…
Descriptors: Media Literacy, Misconceptions, Epistemology, Literacy Education
Miller, Alyssa L.; Wissman, Kathryn T.; Peterson, Daniel J. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Research suggests exposure to misinformation continues to impact belief and reasoning, even if that misinformation has been corrected (referred to as the "Continued Influence Effect, CIE"). The proposed experiment explores two potentially important factors that may impact the effect: (a) learner age and (b) length of delay between…
Descriptors: Inferences, Thinking Skills, Age Differences, Misconceptions
Salovich, Nikita A.; Rapp, David N. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
The current study investigated the role of metacognition with respect to the consequences of exposures to inaccurate information. Previous work has consistently demonstrated that exposures to inaccuracies can confuse people and even encourage reliance on the falsehoods. We specifically examined whether people are aware of their likelihood of being…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Metacognition, Influences, Resistance (Psychology)
Wilson, Marcus T. – Physics Teacher, 2021
Many high school and first-year university courses include discussion of the magnetic effect of currents. Frequently discussed textbook examples include long, straight wires, circular current loops, and solenoids, partly because these examples are tractable mathematically. The solenoid naturally leads to discussion on magnetic materials since it…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Science Education, Magnets, Secondary School Science
Ioannidou, Olga; Erduran, Sibel – Science & Education, 2021
Recent reforms in science education have promoted students' understanding of how science works, including the methodological approaches used by scientists. Given that teachers are expected to teach and promote methodological pluralism, it is worth examining how teachers understand and view scientific methods, particularly when scientific methods…
Descriptors: Scientific Methodology, Science Education, Science Teachers, Knowledge Level
Darcy, Clay – Irish Educational Studies, 2021
Set against a backdrop of diminished interest in drug education outside of school settings in Ireland, this paper draws from 10 years of professional practice in the field of drug education and prevention, to reflect on illicit drug use in Ireland and on the lay understandings of illicit drug use encountered by this practitioner. This paper sets…
Descriptors: Drug Education, Drug Use, Foreign Countries, Misconceptions
Esterson, Rebecca K. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2021
When studying the reception history of the Bible, should students be asked to suspend judgment on a particular interpretation for the sake of the pedagogical goals of the course? Or is their judgment essential to the process of learning and understanding? This essay explores the pedagogical puzzle of right interpretation and wrong interpretation…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Biblical Literature, Content Analysis, Reading Comprehension
ZuHone, John – Electronic Journal for Research in Science & Mathematics Education, 2021
Many people with strong religious beliefs in the United States struggle with trusting the pronouncements of scientists. This is primarily because they have come to believe that science offers a perspective on ultimate questions such as origins and life after death that conflicts with their own. Education and public outreach efforts by scientists…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Misconceptions, Science Education, Religious Factors