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Santi Lestari – Research Matters, 2025
The ability to draw visual representations such as diagrams and graphs is considered fundamental to science learning. Science exams therefore often include questions which require students to draw a visual representation, or to augment a partially provided one. The design features of such questions (e.g., layout of diagrams, amount of answer…
Descriptors: Science Education, Secondary Education, Visual Aids, Foreign Countries
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Friederike Grosse – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
Sociolinguistics has seen an emergence of new theoretical perspectives that somehow cater for the, according to Li, 'complex linguistic realities of the twenty-first century' (2017, p.14). Thus 'overwriting' conventional ways of understanding language/language use and its relation to identity construction. Taking these changes as a starting point,…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Community Schools, Sociolinguistics, Language Usage
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Rainford, Jon – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2020
This paper examines two contrasting creative methods; a drawing task and a LEGO building task used in a study exploring the gap between policy and practice in widening participation to higher education across two different types of university in England. These creative methods were used within 16 semi-structured interviews in seven universities to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Creativity, Freehand Drawing
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Everley, Suzanne – Education 3-13, 2020
Much gender research in education reinforces dichotomised expectations. However, it is possible that research itself has limited the way we may explore children's gender because of binaried approaches This study focussed on two concerns: gender in embodied experiences of physical activity of primary school children, and research methods that…
Descriptors: Sex Stereotypes, Gender Differences, Physical Activities, Elementary School Students
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Massey, Simon – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2022
This article considers the implementation of Emojis as responses within survey research, measuring attitudes towards mathematics in children aged eight and nine years old. Participants answered two multi-item scales. The first required them to provide an Emoji to provide their responses to statements, whilst the second additionally required them…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Visual Aids, Nonverbal Communication, Freehand Drawing
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Van Gorp, Angelo; Collelldemont, Eulàlia; Félix, Inês; Grosvenor, Ian; Norlin, Björn; Padrós Tuneu, Núria – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2022
The question "What does this have to do with everything else?" refers to ecological thinking. In this article, we use an ecological approach to explore the interrelationships between the incidence of the influenza pandemic of 1918-19, its trajectories and impacts on education. Our emphasis on children and their environment, as specific…
Descriptors: Pandemics, Communicable Diseases, World History, Social Influences
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Hall, Emese – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2020
The communicative potential of young children's drawings was explored through case studies of 14 children aged four - six (eight girls, six boys) at a rural English school. Informed by socio-cultural theories, the research queried "what" and "how" the children communicated through drawing, as well as "influences" on…
Descriptors: Freehand Drawing, Self Concept, Case Studies, Rural Schools
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Mengardon, Katherine – Primary Science, 2019
Ken Robinson (2006) once suggested that schools kill creativity and it is argued that in England, since the introduction of the most recent iteration of the National Curriculum (2013), creative subjects are in danger of being marginalised in favour of spending time preparing for high-stakes testing in maths and English. Meet Little Inventors! It…
Descriptors: Creativity, Science Instruction, National Curriculum, Teaching Methods
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Rey-Goyeneche, Jennifer A.; Alexander, Patrick – International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education, 2021
By analysing an academic exhibition on the Amazon region made by Year 5 children from an Oxford-based primary school, this qualitative study explores the ways that children perceive a representation of a natural environment geographically distant from their home context. The phenomenographic analysis of written and visual documentary sources…
Descriptors: Environment, Elementary School Students, Student Attitudes, Exhibits
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Andrews, I.; Nikolopoulos, K. – Physics Education, 2018
The development of a workshop using the language, techniques, and processes of visual art to introduce particle physics concepts is described. Innovative delivery methods committed to the interaction and collaboration of different specialist areas are utilised, which--in curriculum terms-- encourages connections to be made between separate…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Visual Arts, Teaching Methods
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Komatsu, Kayoko – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2017
In both England and Japan, art education was viewed as having nothing to do with self-expression, but was considered to be an efficient means for industrial development. In England, it was designed to train the eyes and hands of artisans. The art critic Ruskin has often been referred to in the context of the transition to self-expression in the…
Descriptors: Educational History, Art Education, Foreign Countries, Art
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Brierley, Julie – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2018
The findings from this study suggest that 2-year-old children regularly use mark making as a tool to further support their emergent thoughts and understanding of the world. The qualitative study of three 2-year-old children uses observations and informal interviews to construct narrative stories of their explorations and play both at nursery and…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Futures (of Society), Teaching Methods, Play
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Parrott, Patricia – International Journal of Work-Integrated Learning, 2019
Marketing principles and consumerism are evident in higher education with universities central to the development of fit for purpose graduates. Students are increasingly viewed as consumers of university products and expected to manage self-hood and to promote themselves to the marketplace. This article is drawn from research in an ongoing larger…
Descriptors: Consumer Economics, Commercialization, College Students, Marketing
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Coates, Elizabeth; Coates, Andrew – Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, 2016
This paper sets out to explore the thinking underpinning young children's earliest drawings, often regarded as "scribbling." It questions whether the physical satisfaction of making marks is sufficient reward for this often repeated activity, or whether with each repetition children intend deeper meanings not apparent to the eyes of the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Young Children, Child Development, Imagination
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Shepherd, Gary – Action Learning: Research and Practice, 2016
This account of practice describes how a manufacturing company in the North of England transformed their approach to problem-solving and action through the use of a Critical Reflection Action Learning (CRAL) methodology. The company, who had been in business for over 25 years, experienced problems due to a diminishing customer base and substantial…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Experiential Learning, Reflection, Manufacturing Industry
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