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Showing 1 to 15 of 32 results Save | Export
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Samuel Ronfard; Brandon W. Goulding; Jonathan D. Lane – Child Development Perspectives, 2025
Unlike adults, young children think that many weird and unlikely events are impossible. Existing theories have argued that this developmental shift is driven primarily by age-related changes in knowledge as well as an increasing ability to reflect on one's modal intuitions. However, this intuition + reflection model fails to explain…
Descriptors: Young Children, Childrens Attitudes, Cognitive Development, Child Development
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Sam Morris; Kie Yamamoto; Jim King – Journal for the Psychology of Language Learning, 2023
Practitioner researchers have much to gain from using stimulated recall, a powerful data collection method whereby structured observations are followed by introspectively focused interviews. The close insider positions that practitioner researchers maintain, however, mean that they are liable to very powerful intuitions. Working under the…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Intuition, Teacher Researchers, Reflection
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Alexander, Patricia A. – Educational Psychology Review, 2023
The goals of this article are three-pronged. The first is to consider the perspectives and insights collectively offered by the four contributions to this special issue dealing with higher-order, critical, and critical-analytic thinking. The second is to build on the content of those contributions and on the literature from philosophy and…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Critical Thinking, Educational Philosophy, Educational Psychology
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Ema Ushioda – Journal for the Psychology of Language Learning, 2023
In this conceptual paper I discuss some ethical complexities in conducting classroom practitioner research on the psychology of language learning and I analyse the potential role of intuition in handling these complexities. I begin by developing the ethical argument for taking a "person-focused" rather than "systems-based"…
Descriptors: Teacher Researchers, Intuition, Decision Making, Ethics
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Elizabeth Bifuh-Ambe – Thresholds in Education, 2024
This article describes how a secularized version of Lectio Divina is used within the classroom as a model for engaging in anti-racism and social justice discussions. Lectio Divina is an ancient tool for understanding texts. From its religious beginnings, it has been adapted to its secular forms for critical contemplative practice in twenty…
Descriptors: Racism, Social Justice, Empowerment, Advocacy
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Sahadevan, Salil – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2022
Rationality is the cornerstone of our mainstream education. However, in varying degrees, we use intuition in our daily lives. According to Carl Jung (1921/2016), intuition is one of four major functions of the human mind, along with sensation, thinking, and feeling. If there is a domain of intuition, education should develop it as a complementary…
Descriptors: Intuition, College Students, Skill Development, Thinking Skills
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Shtulman, Andrew; Young, Andrew G. – Child Development Perspectives, 2023
What do cows drink? The correct answer is water, but many are tempted to say milk. The disposition to override an intuitive response (milk) with a more analytic response (water) is known as "cognitive reflection." Tests of cognitive reflection predict a wide range of skills and abilities in adults. In this article, we discuss the…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Thinking Skills, Prediction
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Anne Feryok – Journal for the Psychology of Language Learning, 2023
Our everyday language use is mostly intuitive (Lieberman, 2000), in the sense of tacit and automatic, and it reveals ourselves in what we say and how we say it. In this study I use the interaction order--the idea that social facts such as identity are constituted by social interaction--to interpret a research interview that was threatened by my…
Descriptors: Intuition, Self Concept, Failure, Reflection
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van Kampen, Saskia – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2019
Tacit knowledge, intuitive responses, empirical research -- how can design elevate itself as a discipline when its main forms of knowledge gathering and generation are still believed to be less valuable than those in traditional academia? Beginning design students must learn to put words to their actions, to understand their processes and to be…
Descriptors: Intuition, Experiential Learning, Design, Reflection
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Gette, Cody R.; Kryjevskaia, Mila – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2019
After targeted instruction designed to improve student conceptual understanding of physics, a significant fraction of students are not able to answer many questions in a consistent manner. Prior research suggests that even those students who demonstrate that they acquired the relevant knowledge and skills (i.e., possess the requisite…
Descriptors: Physics, Reflection, Intuition, Cognitive Processes
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Blomgren, Henriette – Educational Action Research, 2020
This article examines aesthetically sensitive pathways to knowledge in and through action research with artists and pedagogues in Danish kindergartens. The action research process took place from January 2016 through June 2017 and involved collaboration between artists and pedagogues ("paedagoger" in Danish). Artists and pedagogues…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Young Children, Action Research, Aesthetics
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Lewton, Marcus; Ashwin, Chris; Brosnan, Mark – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2019
Recent theories of autism have emphasised the cognitive strengths and weaknesses in those with autism, which are also seen to some degree in non-clinical samples with higher autistic-like traits. The dual process theory of autism proposes that people with autism and non-clinical people with a higher degree of autistic-like traits have a propensity…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Logical Thinking, Bias
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Dieleman, Hans – Issues in Interdisciplinary Studies, 2017
This article explores the concept of transdisciplinarity as a cultural endeavor. It centers on the concept of transdisciplinary hermeneutics, as a form of contextualizing science in the framework of cultural ideas, subjective experiences of the researchers involved in the research process, and of imagination and the artful creation of possible new…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Hermeneutics, Teamwork, World Views
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Brosnan, Mark; Ashwin, Chris; Lewton, Marcus – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2017
Dual Process Theory has recently been applied to Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) to suggest that reasoning by people with ASD and people with higher levels of ASD-like traits can be characterised by reduced intuitive and greater reflective processing. 26 adolescents and adults with ASD and 22 adolescent and adult controls completed an assessment of…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Intuition, Reflection
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Tee, Kiew Nee; Leong, Kwan Eu; Rahim, Suzieleez Syrene Abdul – International Journal of Research in Education and Science, 2019
This study aimed at exploring causal relationships between two affective factors, self-confidence and positive emotion, and two metacognitive factors, selfreflection and insight components on high school students' mathematics achievement that assessed by formative and summative assessments. The study applied partial least squares based structural…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Grade 11, Secondary School Mathematics, Mathematics Achievement
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