Publication Date
| In 2026 | 10 |
| Since 2025 | 2190 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 12015 |
| Since 2017 (last 10 years) | 24858 |
| Since 2007 (last 20 years) | 51732 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
| Practitioners | 3195 |
| Teachers | 2301 |
| Researchers | 1658 |
| Policymakers | 883 |
| Administrators | 770 |
| Parents | 384 |
| Students | 345 |
| Counselors | 236 |
| Community | 113 |
| Media Staff | 69 |
| Support Staff | 40 |
| More ▼ | |
Location
| Australia | 2724 |
| United States | 2563 |
| Canada | 2517 |
| China | 2220 |
| United Kingdom | 1844 |
| California | 1458 |
| United Kingdom (England) | 1346 |
| Turkey | 1151 |
| Japan | 923 |
| India | 879 |
| Germany | 878 |
| More ▼ | |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
| Meets WWC Standards without Reservations | 22 |
| Meets WWC Standards with or without Reservations | 29 |
| Does not meet standards | 20 |
Paul Browning – Support for Learning, 2024
This article explores the concept of student agency within the Thrive Co-operative Learning Trust. It details the Trust's journey in developing student voice and influence, using the Lundy Model of Child Participation as a framework. This article highlights the importance of authentic pupil agency and showcases successful initiatives undertaken by…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Students, Cooperative Learning, Student Empowerment
Tyler-Curtis C. Elliott; Andrea M. Zawoyski; Kevin M. Ayres – Journal of Behavioral Education, 2024
When teachers work with students exhibiting academic failure, they may look to factors outside of instruction such as a student's home life or perceived disability as explanations. Placing the locus of control outside of the instructional context becomes a convenient way to escape culpability for unsatisfactory outcomes. A more functional approach…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Environmental Influences, Test Construction, Evaluation Methods
Tasha R. Wyatt; Vinayak Jain; TingLan Ma – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2024
As trainees resist social harm and injustice in medicine, they must navigate the tension between pushing too hard and risking their reputation, or not enough and risking no change at all. We explore the discernment process by examining what trainees attend to moments before and while they are resisting to understand how they manage this tension.…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Educational Environment, Resistance (Psychology), Justice
Catherine A. Marple – Journal of Moral Education, 2024
Philosophers and moral educators have examined the potential for "narrative media" (e.g., novels or films) to influence the development of "practical wisdom" (the forms of perception and reasoning necessary for virtuous living). Interest in studying this relationship using social scientific methodology is growing. One social…
Descriptors: Psychology, Ethics, Mass Media, Story Telling
Brittany Harden Zaccaria – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The flagship professional organization, the American School Counseling Association, emphasizes the need for school counselors to be systems change agents. School counselors also recognize the need to be leaders within their workplace. When they can exercise leadership, school counselors have an opportunity to impact the school's culture and…
Descriptors: School Counselors, Leadership, School Counseling, School Culture
Julien Kloeg; Liesbeth Noordegraaf-Eelens – Educational Theory, 2024
A key aspect of the educator's responsibility as understood by Hannah Arendt is its dual character. Educators are responsible for both the life and development of the child and the continuance of the world, as Arendt puts it in "The Crisis in Education." Moreover, these aspects of responsibility are in tension with each other. Arendt's…
Descriptors: Educational Responsibility, Political Influences, Literary Criticism, Authors
Meegan Brown; Jordie Bowyer; Kerryann Walsh – Journal of Psychologists and Counsellors in Schools, 2024
Within schools, school counsellors are often delegated the responsibility for reporting child maltreatment. In this paper, we present findings of a rapid review of empirical studies investigating what is known about school counsellors' reporting of child maltreatment. Thematic categories identified include school counsellors' training, knowledge,…
Descriptors: School Counselors, Child Abuse, Disclosure, Counselor Training
Kathryn M. Burke; Meghan G. Blaskowitz; Ariana Amaya; Ann Marie Licata; Alia M. Pustorino-Clevenger; Jackson Johnson; McKenna Killion; Nicholas Miller – Journal of Inclusive Postsecondary Education, 2024
Students with intellectual disability should be able to engage in the same robust, authentic college experiences as their peers without disabilities. As opportunities for inclusive postsecondary education (IPSE) for students with intellectual disability have grown, the field has worked to understand the application of evidence-based practices in…
Descriptors: Self Determination, Inclusion, Postsecondary Education, College Students
Reinhard Pekrun – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
In its original version, control-value theory describes and explains achievement emotions. More recently, the theory has been expanded to also explain epistemic, social, and existential emotions. In this article, I outline the development of the theory, from preliminary work in the 1980s to early versions of the theory and the recent generalized…
Descriptors: Theories, Psychological Patterns, Achievement, Taxonomy
Elyse A. Mignone – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Retention of secondary math teachers is a critical issue in the field of K-12 education. This dissertation investigates the internal influences, external influences, and motivators that retain secondary math teachers in the classroom. This study is framed around Bronfenbrenner's Socieoecological Framework, which guided the research questions and…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Secondary School Teachers, Mathematics Teachers, Influences
Kun Yan; Han Wu; Kaiming Bu; Lingli Wu – Higher Education Policy, 2024
To date, no empirical study has focused on understanding the evolution process of China's college admission policies and clarifying its hidden evolution logic. Based on the advocacy coalition framework (ACF), this study determines different advocacy coalitions and their belief systems during the evolution process of independent enrollment policy,…
Descriptors: College Admission, Admission Criteria, Educational Change, Foreign Countries
Virginia Clinton-Lisell; Alexia M. Langowski – Reading Psychology, 2024
It is well known that misinformation's effects on memory linger, referred to as the continued influence effect, even after reading corrections. However, it is uncertain how the reading medium and epistemic emotions (relevant to knowledge construction) relate to the continued influence effect. In this study, college students (N = 84) read about…
Descriptors: College Students, Misinformation, Printed Materials, Electronic Learning
Tutku Öztel; Fuat Balci – Cognitive Science, 2024
One of the most prominent social influences on human decision making is conformity, which is even more prominent when the perceptual information is ambiguous. The Bayes optimal solution to this problem entails weighting the relative reliability of cognitive information and perceptual signals in constructing the percept from self-sourced/endogenous…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Computation, Social Influences, Decision Making
Jonathan S. Lewis; René A. Hernandez – Journal of College Access, 2024
Master and alternative narratives offer a useful framework through which to consider contemporary issues in college access. Implicit and ubiquitous, the master narrative of a linear progression from high school through a residential college toward a fulfilling career has long been dominant. Meanwhile, alternative narratives of fluid, dynamic,…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Postsecondary Education, Cultural Influences, Personal Narratives
Stacy Loeb; Tatiana Sanchez Nolasco; Nataliya Byrne; Laura Allen; Aisha T. Langford; Joseph E. Ravenell; Scarlett Lin Gomez; Samuel L. Washington; Hala T. Borno; Derek M. Griffith; Nickole Criner – Health Education & Behavior, 2024
Black men have a greater risk of prostate cancer as well as worse quality of life and more decisional regret after prostate cancer treatment compared to non-Hispanic White men. Furthermore, patients with prostate cancer who primarily obtain information on the internet have significantly more decisional regret compared to other information sources.…
Descriptors: African Americans, Males, Cancer, Internet

Peer reviewed
Direct link
