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Christopher DeLuca; Michael Holden; Nathan Rickey – British Educational Research Journal, 2025
We are at a critical moment for assessment in schools. Teachers are called to navigate advances in classroom assessment research, top-down assessment policies, and lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on teaching and learning. Embedded in this context are also systemic challenges to teachers' assessment practice. This paper analyses these…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Educational Innovation, Foreign Countries, Psychological Patterns
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Trudy Keil – Critical Education, 2025
Amid the global neoliberal assault on public education, teachers and their unions are called upon to resist detrimental educational reforms. Employing photo-elicitation focus groups, this paper explored ten Saskatchewan teacher activists' perceptions of their political resistance to neoliberalism both within their union and beyond. Utilizing a…
Descriptors: Activism, Unions, Resistance (Psychology), Neoliberalism
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Virginia M. C. Tze; Vanessa L. Rilkoff; Lia M. Daniels; Patti C. Parker – Canadian Journal of School Psychology, 2024
Boredom is a commonly experienced emotion that is detrimental to student performance. This study piloted Phase 2 of the Boredom Intervention Training (BIT) program which used cognitive restructuring to alter students' boredom misbeliefs. The sample consisted of 149 students from a midwestern Canadian University. We identified participants' boredom…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Psychological Patterns, Cognitive Restructuring
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Gergana Sakarski – Bulgarian Comparative Education Society, 2024
Homeschooling, as a controversial educational practice, raises many questions about its outcomes, which still remain unanswered. The homeschooling population has been growing over the past years, as has interest in this educational paradigm. The increased accessibility and use of emerging information technologies also hold significance in…
Descriptors: Home Schooling, Experience, Educational Experience, Attitudes
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Jackson M. A. Hewitt; Bita Zareian; Joelle LeMoult – Journal of Early Adolescence, 2024
Adolescent anhedonia is a multidimensional construct defined as the loss of enjoyment or pleasure across multiple domains of life. Anhedonia is concurrently associated with substantial impairment and distress, and it prospectively predicts the onset, severity, and treatment of depression. Despite its demonstrated importance, a limited number of…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Depression (Psychology), Adolescents, Test Validity
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Caroline Kassee; Patrick Jachyra; Vijitha Mahalingam; Ami Tint; Hsiang-Yuan Lin; Stephanie H. Ameis; Adriana Di Martino; Yona Lunsky; Meng-Chuan Lai – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2024
Purpose: Understanding the experiences of people with developmental disabilities during the initial period of COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: Individuals with developmental disabilities and their caregivers completed baseline and up to five follow-up online surveys using the CRISIS-AFAR measures, between July 2020 and September 2021. We used…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Developmental Disabilities
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Anamaria Bodea; Pavel Trofimovich – Language Learning Journal, 2024
This study explored the notion of flow, which refers to a person's sense of being completely absorbed in a task, as it applies to second language (L2) learning and use. Previously, flow has been mainly examined through researcher-generated descriptions to which learners reacted using Likert-type scales. In this study, we examined flow through the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Second Language Learning, Student Attitudes, French
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Lisa Farley; Julie Garlen; Sandra Chang-Kredl; Debbie Sonu – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2024
This article examines how participants enrolled in teacher education and childhood studies courses represented their understandings of childhood through a selection of artefacts discussed in focus groups at four sites: Montréal, New York City, Ottawa, and Toronto. To situate our inquiry, we theorise nostalgia in relationship to the construction of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Memory, Psychological Patterns, Preservice Teachers
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Donovan Seidel; John D. McLennan – Journal of Mental Health Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2024
Introduction: As little is known about who uses specialty mental health clinics for persons with intellectual disabilities, this study aimed to identified caregiver concerns, clinical characteristics, and the relationship between these two constructs for referrals to such a clinic. Methods: Qualitative and quantitative analyses were applied to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mental Health, Clinics, Intellectual Disability
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Benjamin Kutsyuruba; Nadia Arghash; Terry Kharyat; John Bosica – Canadian Journal of Educational Administration and Policy, 2024
With research pointing to increased levels of stress and work demands on school leaders, attention has turned to examining the factors that contribute to their well-being. Studies have also shown that many school administrators not just survive but also thrive in their work and succeed despite work-related challenges. Furthermore, some principals…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Principals, Administrator Attitudes, Resilience (Psychology)
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Bruce M. Shore – Roeper Review, 2025
In a national survey of U.S. adults, the number of close friends increased with age and 76% reported having three or more. However, 8% reported having none. There are limited parallel data for gifted learners but the survey provided an opportunity to compare the two groups. The numbers of close friends for gifted learners appears to increase from…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Friendship, Age Differences, Peer Relationship
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Amanda Cox; Sarah L. Boyle; Elissa Newby-Clark; Margaret N. Lumley – Journal of College Student Development, 2025
Sixty percent of students experience the death of a close person at some point in their post-secondary studies. This life stage is characterized by cognitive, academic, social, physical, emotional, and identity-related stressors which together may also intensify grief. Importantly, post-secondary students' unique needs may not be addressed by…
Descriptors: Death, Grief, College Students, Coping
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Lia M. Daniels; Kendra Wells – Teacher Educator, 2024
Students feel epistemic emotions like surprise or frustration when they encounter content that conflicts with their beliefs or previous knowledge in a way that can facilitate or hinder learning. Pre-service teachers may find that professional perspectives on assessment conflict with their previous knowledge of assessment, creating epistemic…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Preservice Teachers, Foreign Countries, Beliefs
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Thomas Falkenberg; Rebeca Heringer – in education, 2024
This article reports on a knowledge synthesis study of three questions around Canadian K-12 students' sense of loneliness and belonging: What are the lived experiences of Canadian students with loneliness and belonging? What factors contribute to students' sense of loneliness and belonging in Canadian school contexts? What school educational…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Students, Secondary School Students, Psychological Patterns
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Farhana Yeasmin – Cogent Education, 2024
The study systematically assesses the determinants impacting Ph.D. success, amalgamating insights from 38 meticulously curated studies. Through the integration of PRISMA, TCCM, and an 8-step process, it delineates crucial findings and factors influencing successful Ph.D. completion. The PRISMA diagram intricately outlines the data retrieval…
Descriptors: Influences, Success, Doctoral Students, Academic Persistence
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