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Rawson, Katherine A. – Educational Psychology Review, 2015
The target articles in the special issue address a timely and important question concerning whether practice tests enhance learning of complex materials. The consensus conclusion from these articles is that the testing effect does not obtain for complex materials. In this commentary, I discuss why this conclusion is not warranted either by the…
Descriptors: Testing, Learning, Difficulty Level, Instructional Materials
Thomas, Ruthann C.; Finn, Bridgid; Jacoby, Larry L. – Metacognition and Learning, 2016
Most metacognition research has focused on aggregate judgments of overall performance or item-level judgments about performance on particular questions. However, metacognitive judgments at the category level, which have not been as extensively explored, also play a role in students' study strategies, for example, when students determine what…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Metacognition, Study Skills, Study Habits
Alvermann, Donna E.; Price, LaTasha Hutcherson; Jackson, A. J. – Journal of Education, 2016
By definition, an epilogue is a concluding segment of a literary work that often describes the futures of its main characters. It can also be a short speech at the end of a play or musical interlude that addresses the audience directly. Leaning in the direction of the latter, we propose as writers of this epilogue to engage in a bit of poetic…
Descriptors: Periodicals, Literacy Education, Learning Modalities, Reading Instruction
Verwoord, Roselynn; Poole, Gary – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2016
Drawing on the concepts of emergent and appointed leadership, this article expands on the role of social networks in SoTL (Roxå and Mårtensson 2009, 2012); Williams et al. [Williams, et al. 2013) by examining the nature of these networks, relationships between these networks, and support for them, in order to theorize how institutions can foster…
Descriptors: Social Networks, Scholarship, Instruction, Learning
Pallotti, Gabriele – Applied Linguistics, 2016
The article presents a typology of statements that can be made about discourse data. The classification is based on two parameters: level of generality and level of interpretation. Each of these is operationalized into three discrete levels, to yield a nine-cell table containing types of statements going from the presentation of a single case to…
Descriptors: Classification, Generalization, Children, Discourse Analysis
Duarte, Eduardo – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2016
This article is one in a series of attempts to clear discursive space for speculative thinking in education. The impulse to move toward another form of "philosophy of education" is inspired by ongoing conversation with Heidegger, whose later work, in particular, indicated the possibility of a poetic thinking that could express the state…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Learning Processes, Futures (of Society), Poetry
Thomson, Iain – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2016
This article develops Thomson's post-Heideggerian view that ontological education is centrally concerned with disclosing being creatively and responsibly. To disclose being creatively and responsibly is to realize the meaning of being, developing our historical understanding of what being means along with our consequent understanding of what it…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Postmodernism, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes
Bodor, Sarah – Geography Teacher, 2016
Environmental education teaches children and adults how to learn about and investigate their environment and to make intelligent, informed decisions about how they can take care of it. It is taught in traditional classrooms, in communities, and in settings like nature centers, museums, parks, and zoos. Learning about the environment involves many…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Global Education, Educational Practices, Educational Resources
Visone, Jeremy D. – Kappa Delta Pi Record, 2016
This article shares a promising practice: collegial visits. During collegial visits, educators watch a colleague teach a lesson about a predetermined focus as a form of professional development. Educators, including the host teacher, debrief after the lesson. These visits are part of a cycle of learning that moves from theory to practice, and the…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Collegiality, Faculty Development, Observational Learning
Hesseg, Rinatia Maaravi; Gal, Carmit; Karni, Avi – Learning & Memory, 2016
We tested the notion that action observation engages learning processes and mnemonic representations overlapping with those engaged in actual performance. An identical number of training instances, actual performance, or observation, was afforded on a finger opposition sequence task. Both training modes resulted in immediate gains in performance,…
Descriptors: Observation, Learning Processes, Mnemonics, Training
Goodman, Bradley; Linton, Frank; Gaimari, Robert – International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education, 2016
Our 1998 paper "Encouraging Student Reflection and Articulation using a Learning Companion" (Goodman et al. 1998) was a stepping stone in the progression of learning companions for intelligent tutoring systems (ITS). A simulated learning companion, acting as a peer in an intelligent tutoring environment ensures the availability of a…
Descriptors: Simulation, Cooperative Learning, Educational Benefits, Artificial Intelligence
Engin, Marion – International Journal for Academic Development, 2016
In this Reflection on Practice I argue the case for using the principles of scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) to serve as a framework for evaluating and designing peer observation programmes in higher education contexts. I suggest that for peer observation to be an activity worthy of SoTL, it should be systematic, collaborative,…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Observation, Scholarship, Instruction
Lembke, Ronald S. – Decision Sciences Journal of Innovative Education, 2016
In this short, in-class activity, students use fun size packages of M&Ms to study process variability, including a real-world application of C[subscript pk]. How process variability and legal requirements force the company to put "Not Labeled for Individual Retail Sale" on each fun size package is discussed, as is the economics of…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Production Techniques, Experiential Learning, Retailing
Sloan, Dendy; Norrgran, Cynthia – Chemical Engineering Education, 2016
We briefly discuss memory types and three modern principles of neuroscience: 1) Protein growth at the synapse, 2) the three-brain theory, and 3) the interplay of the hippocampus, the neocortex, and the prefrontal cortex. To illustrate the potential of this perspective, four applications of these principles are provided.
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Memory, Theories
Kalyuga, Slava; Singh, Anne-Marie – Educational Psychology Review, 2016
In the traditional framework of cognitive load theory, it is assumed that the acquisition of domain-specific knowledge structures (or schemas) is the only instructional goal, and therefore, the theory is applicable to any instructional task. Accordingly, the basic concepts of intrinsic (productive) and extraneous (unproductive) types of cognitive…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Teaching Methods, Schemata (Cognition)

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