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Andrew Skourdoumbis; Emma Rowe – Australian Educational Researcher, 2025
The paper studies the rise of neuroscience in initial teacher education, paying attention to the relatively recent Australian Government (2023) report titled 'Strong Beginnings'. In taking up a critical policy sociology lens, we focus on the first priority within the reforms, which is mandating brain science and the 'brain and learning' as core…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Educational Change, Neurosciences, Core Curriculum
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Jorge González Alonso; Pablo Bernabeu; Gabriella Silva; Vincent DeLuca; Claudia Poch; Iva Ivanova; Jason Rothman – International Journal of Multilingualism, 2025
The burgeoning field of third language (L3) acquisition has increasingly focused on intermediate stages of language development, aiming to establish the groundwork for comprehensive models of L3 learning that encompass the entire developmental sequence. This article underscores the importance of a robust epistemological foundation, advocating for…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Artificial Languages, Second Language Learning, Individual Differences
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Minkang Kim; Christopher Duncan; Stanley Yip; Derek Sankey – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
Cognitive load theory (CLT), a construct of instructional psychologist John Sweller, has long been a mainstay of educational psychology and university educational technology courses, regionally and internationally. Although aspects of this cognitivist theory have been severely criticised, including its insistence on direct instruction in…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Educational Philosophy, Short Term Memory, Neurosciences
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Nicholas C. Hindy; Anthony J. Bishara; John R. Pani – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2025
Advances in brain imaging have led to a paradigm shift in neuroscience research, moving from focusing on individual brain structures to investigating neural networks and connections. However, neuroanatomy education still tends to concentrate on discrete brain regions. Two separate experiments in undergraduate neuroscience courses investigated…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Undergraduate Students, Neurosciences, Learning Processes
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Alexandra Remon; Sara Mascheretti; Ivan Voronin; Bei Feng; Isabelle Ouellet-Morin; Mara Brendgen; Frank Vitaro; Philippe Robaey; Till F. M. Andlauer; Michel Boivin; Ginette Dionne – npj Science of Learning, 2025
Reading is a fundamental human capacity that recruits and tunes brain circuitry subserving several neurocognitive skills. Individual differences in reading-related skills are largely influenced by genetic variation. However, the molecular basis of the heritability of reading-related skills remains narrowly replicated. Genome-wide association…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Reading Skills, Brain, Genetics
Youjin Choi; Feng Hou – Statistics Canada, 2025
This study aims to examine STEM graduates' retention in Canada after completing Canadian postsecondary programs. The retention of STEM graduates has improved in the last decade for both Canadian and international students. However, retention varied by educational and demographic characteristics. Canadian STEM graduates generally showed higher…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Foreign Students, STEM Education, Computer Science Education
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Xiang, Wenxi; Li, Tingting; Gao, Tianhang; Wang, Bin – Learning & Memory, 2019
The laterodorsal thalamic nucleus (LD) is believed to play roles in learning and memory, especially spatial tasks. However, the molecular mechanism that underlies the cognitive process in the LD remains unclear and needs to be investigated. So far, there is plenty of evidence indicating that plasticity has been in some of the cortical or…
Descriptors: Animals, Memory, Brain, Learning
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Rosenberg-Lee, Miriam – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2018
The promise of educational neuroscience lies in its potential to uncover mechanistic insights into the science of learning. However, to realize that promise, the field must overcome a fundamental difference between the constituent disciplines: neuroscience is primarily concerned with understanding how the brain works; whereas education attempts to…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Education, Brain, Training
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Tammi R. A. Kral; Diane E. Stodola; Rasmus M. Birn; Jeanette A. Mumford; Enrique Solis; Lisa Flook; Elena G. Patsenko; Craig G. Anderson; Constance Steinkuehler; Richard J. Davidson – npj Science of Learning, 2018
The ability to understand emotional experiences of others, empathy, is a valuable skill for effective social interactions. Various types of training increase empathy in adolescents, but their impact on brain circuits underlying empathy has not been examined. Video games provide a unique medium familiar and engaging to adolescents and can be used…
Descriptors: Empathy, Video Games, Early Adolescents, Brain
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Pletti, Carolina; Decety, Jean; Paulus, Markus – Developmental Science, 2022
Middle childhood seems to be crucial for the emergence of a moral identity, that is, an evaluative stance of how important it is for someone's sense of self to be moral. This study investigates the effects of moral identity on the neural processing of moral content in 10-year-old children. Participants were presented with scenes portraying…
Descriptors: Children, Ethics, Moral Values, Self Concept
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Akremi, Haifa; Hamel, Raphaël; Dumas, Anne; Camden, Chantal; Corriveau, Hélène; Lepage, Jean-Francois – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2022
Evidence-based therapeutic options for children with developmental coordination disorder (DCD) are scarce. This work explored the effects of cerebellar anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (atDCS) on three 48 h-apart motor sequence learning and upper limb coordination sessions in children with DCD. The results revealed that, as compared…
Descriptors: Brain, Developmental Disabilities, Psychomotor Skills, Stimulation
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Suárez-Pellicioni, Macarena; Booth, James R. – Child Development, 2022
Math attitudes are related to achievement, yet we do not know how the brain supports changes in math attitudes. 51 children (54.9% female, 45.1% male; 37.3% White, 33.3% Black, 11.8% Latino, 5.9% Asian, 11.8% Other) solved a multiplication task inside the scanner when they were approximately 11 (time 1; T1) and 13 (time 2; T2) years old (i.e.,…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Student Attitudes, Mathematics Achievement, Multiplication
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Cappellen van Walsum, Anne-Marie van; Henssen, Dylan J. H. A. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2022
Polarized light imaging (PLI) is a new method which quantifies and visualizes nerve fiber direction. In this study, the educational value of PLI sections of the human brainstem were compared to histological sections stained with Luxol fast blue (LFB) using e-learning modules. Mental Rotations Test (MRT) was used to assess the spatial ability.…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Brain, Spatial Ability, Medical Students
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Benedetti, Valentina; Weill-Chounlamountry, Agnès; Pradat-Diehl, Pascale; Villain, Marie – International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 2022
Background: Acquired brain injury (ABI), especially to the right hemisphere, can result in difficulty using or understanding prosodic contours in speech. Prosody is used to convey emotional connotation or linguistic intent and includes pitch, loudness, rate, and voice quality. A disorder in the comprehension or production of prosody is known as…
Descriptors: Head Injuries, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Neurological Impairments, Suprasegmentals
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Zhou, Xinlin; Zeng, Jieying – Infant and Child Development, 2022
There has been a long-standing debate on situational and symbolic mathematics, which is associated with how to design and execute mathematics education for all students. Brain studies can give some clues for how to deal with the debate. There are situational, verbalized, and visuospatial brain networks and the connectivity among the networks,…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Mathematical Concepts, Concept Formation
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