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Baker, Vicki L.; Pifer, Meghan J.; Lunsford, Laura Gail – Higher Education Research and Development, 2018
This research explores faculty development through the lens of academic division as an important, career defining characteristic of the professoriate. Relying on data from a longitudinal, mixed-methods study, the authors examined faculty development trends and needed supports in a consortium of 13 liberal arts colleges (LACs). As part of this…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Faculty Development, Liberal Arts, Educational Trends
Roden, Julie A.; Jakob, Susanne; Roehrig, Casey; Brenner, Tamara J. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2018
In the past ten years, increasing evidence has demonstrated that scientific teaching and active learning improve student retention and learning gains in the sciences. Graduate teaching assistants (GTAs), who play an important role in undergraduate education at many universities, require training in these methods to encourage implementation,…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Teaching Assistants, Workshops, Training
Harris, Emily; Winterbottom, Mark – Journal of Biological Education, 2018
Research into how and what families learn in science museums and other informal science learning settings suggests that parent-child interactions play an important role in shaping children's learning experiences. Our exploratory case study set out to discover and analyse learning happening within family groups during a visit to a traditional…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Museums, Informal Education, Parent Child Relationship
Casanova, Diogo; Di Napoli, Roberto; Leijon, Marie – Teaching in Higher Education, 2018
To date, learning spaces in higher education have been designed with little engagement on the part of their most important users: students and teachers. In this paper, we present the results of research carried out in a UK university. The research aimed to understand how students and teachers conceptualise learning spaces when they are given the…
Descriptors: Space Utilization, Higher Education, Educational Environment, Classroom Design
Benson, Koni – Education as Change, 2018
This article engages the dilemmas and challenges of writing histories of the recent past, and of the political agendas of intervening in those histories in the present. This is done through producing an archive of documentation and oral histories of the Gender Education Training Network, GETNET. GETNET was a feminist political education…
Descriptors: Feminism, Educational History, Training, Gender Issues
Nkoma, Elliott – Psychology in the Schools, 2018
The study used focus group interviews at three administrative offices (provinces) that house trainee/educational psychologists in order to explore their experiences on how they learn about their support roles and responsibilities regarding the implementation of inclusive education. 13 trainee/educational psychologists from these provinces…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Focus Groups, Psychologists, Educational Psychology
Blei, Micaela – ProQuest LLC, 2018
Researchers and policy makers alike have acknowledged the need for teachers to reflect on experience and to experience agency in and out of the classroom (Beauchamp, 2015; Chen et al., 2012; Elbaz-Lewisch, 2010). In order to contribute to discussions of innovative strategies of teacher development, this interpretive case study explored the…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Faculty Development, Workshops
Weeby, Jason – Bellwether Education Partners, 2018
Human-centered design is an approach to creating solutions for problems and opportunities through a focus on the needs, contexts, behaviors, and emotions of the people that the solutions will serve. More recently, public agencies have begun to use human-centered design methods to define problems, generate solutions, and test them to improve the…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Educational Policy, Delivery Systems, Instructional Design
Quay, Mandi Eggenberger – ProQuest LLC, 2018
Dramatic rises in levels of anxiety, stress, and depression in college students have been observed over the past decade and is so pervasive that it has been deemed the College Student Mental Health Crisis (CSMHC). A number of experts have argued that much of this crisis can be attributed to students' overall lack of basic knowledge of emotions and…
Descriptors: College Students, Relaxation Training, Workshops, Stress Management
Rybska, Eliza – Contributions from Science Education Research, 2018
Inquiry-based science education (IBSE) is a pedagogic strategy that combines scientific experimentation, observation and sense-making through collaborative learning. This chapter reports on the use of live snails to explore the extent to which hosting living organisms in the classroom might provide a productive context for promoting IBSE. Even…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Science Education, Cooperative Learning, Animals
Case, Rosalind Jane Leamy; Starkey, Nicola J.; Jones, Kelly; Barker-Collo, Suzanne; Feigin, Valery – New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 2017
This two-phase study investigated New Zealand primary school teachers' knowledge and perceptions of childhood mild Traumatic Brain Injury (mTBI), and evaluated the effectiveness of a professional development workshop for enhancing teacher knowledge regarding mTBI. In phase one, 19 teachers from schools in the Waikato and Bay of Plenty engaged in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Knowledge Level, Children
Lucey, Thomas; Meyers, Derek J. H.; Smith, Ryan – Citizenship, Social and Economics Education, 2017
The authors describe a project that compared the effects of three interventions on the retirement investment knowledge of public school teachers in the Midwest. They interpret outcomes from three different interventions (online training, site-based workshop, and hybrid of online and site-based). While the study results indicate that program…
Descriptors: Public School Teachers, Teacher Education, Teacher Retirement, Intervention
Bower, Matt; Wood, Leigh N.; Lai, Jennifer W. M.; Howe, Cathie; Lister, Raymond; Mason, Raina; Highfield, Kate; Veal, Jennifer – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2017
The idea of computational thinking as skills and universal competence which every child should possess emerged last decade and has been gaining traction ever since. This raises a number of questions, including how to integrate computational thinking into the curriculum, whether teachers have computational thinking pedagogical capabilities to teach…
Descriptors: Computation, Thinking Skills, Foreign Countries, Grade 7
Seidl, Tobias – International Journal of Game-Based Learning, 2017
Teamwork and cooperation are important 21st century skills and therefore important parts of the higher education curriculum. Following Kolb's "experiential learning cycle" model a combination of project work and moderated reflection can help students to acquire these skills. This article elaborates how LEGO® Serious Play® (LSP) can be…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Educational Games, Teamwork, Cooperative Learning
May, Shaun – Research in Drama Education, 2017
This paper discusses a project that used comedy workshops to explore the humour of autistic teenagers, focusing the discussion around three traits often -- and negatively -- associated with autism. The paper will then point to ways of rethinking these traits, and argue that doing so opens up a space for considering the aesthetics of comedy on the…
Descriptors: Autism, Humor, Workshops, Aesthetics

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