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Imogen Casebourne; Shengpeng Shi; Michael Hogan; Wayne Holmes; Tore Hoel; Rupert Wegerif; Li Yuan – International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education, 2025
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is increasingly being used in education, but mostly to support individual teaching and learning. However, there are good reasons to think that thinking together and solving problems together, Collective Intelligence (CI), is also a valuable outcome of education. Accordingly, our main research question is: How can AI be…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Intelligence, Outcomes of Education
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Michael J. Hogan; Adam Barton; Alison Twiner; Cynthia James; Farah Ahmed; Imogen Casebourne; Ian Steed; Pamela Hamilton; Shengpeng Shi; Yi Zhao; Owen M. Harney; Rupert Wegerif – Irish Educational Studies, 2025
Collective Intelligence (CI) is important for groups that seek to address shared problems. CI in human groups can be mediated by educational technologies. The current paper presents a framework to support design thinking in relation to CI educational technologies. Our framework is grounded in an organismic-contextualist developmental perspective…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Educational Technology, Problem Solving, Group Behavior
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Nese Dokumaci Sütçü; Tugba Örnek – Journal of Theoretical Educational Science, 2025
The aim of this study was to examine the potential effect of intelligence games on the problem-posing skills of mathematics teachers. The research, in which case study, one of the qualitative research methods, was preferred, was conducted with two mathematics teachers enrolled in the Mathematics Education Master's Program with Thesis at a state…
Descriptors: Game Based Learning, Problem Solving, Mathematics Teachers, Masters Programs
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Angel Blanch; Eduardo Blanco – Educational Psychology, 2025
This study addresses the investment hypothesis of fluid on crystallised abilities onto academic achievement (Gf [right arrow] Gc [right arrow] "Achievement"), which might hold to a greater extent at earlier than at latter educational stages. We compared this prediction with two independent groups of secondary (n = 192, 113 females) and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, College Students, Academic Achievement