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Showing 1 to 15 of 91 results Save | Export
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Ferman Konukman; Andrew Sortwell; Bijen Filiz; Ertan Tüfekçioglu; Murat Erdogan; Emine Büsra Yilmaz – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2025
This article explores the value of teaching walking within the context of PE. It delves into the cognitive, psychomotor, and affective aspects of walking instruction, highlighting its multifaceted benefits for individuals across the lifespan.
Descriptors: Physical Education, Teaching Methods, Physical Activities, Cognitive Processes
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Kathleen Taylor – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2024
The expanding field of affective neuroscience is redefining the role of emotions in cognition, reasoning, and judgment. This contradicts long-standing assumptions about cognition that consider emotions antithetical to learning. Emotions arose early in human brain development as essential to survival by directing the embodied brain toward…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Educational Environment, Adult Education
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Thijs Loonstra; Valentina C. Tassone; Zoë Robaey; Perry den Brok – Environmental Education Research, 2025
While environmental problems are urgent in modern society, they are especially difficult to tackle because of their normative and politically controversial nature. Universities may choose different theoretical paradigms for the teaching of environmental problems. However, limited theoretical and/or practical analysis has been undertaken of the…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Models, Social Problems, Outcomes of Education
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Stein, Sharon – Australian Universities' Review, 2021
Conversations about academic freedom are never just about protecting the intellectual rigour of academic knowledge as an abstract object; they are also about the relational rigour of how, by whom, and to what ends that knowledge is produced, transmitted, circulated, and ultimately impacts both humans and other-than-human beings (Stein, in Lobo et…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Higher Education, Cognitive Processes, College Faculty
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Brewster, Barbara Jane; Miller, Tess – International Electronic Journal of Mathematics Education, 2023
Competency in mathematics is needed to respond to the vast employment opportunities available in the STEM sectors. These employment opportunities all require basic foundational mathematics skills, yet there is a shortfall of mathematics abilities due, in-part, to mathematics anxiety. Mathematics anxiety can surface as fear and avoidance of…
Descriptors: Mathematics Skills, Mathematics Anxiety, Intervention, Cognitive Processes
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Järvelä, Sanna; Gaševic, Dragan; Seppänen, Tapio; Pechenizkiy, Mykola; Kirschner, Paul A. – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2020
Collaborative learning (CL) can be a powerful method for sharing understanding between learners. To this end, strategic regulation of processes, such as cognition and affect (including metacognition, emotion and motivation) is key. Decades of research on self-regulated learning has advanced our understanding about the need for and complexity of…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Man Machine Systems, Affective Behavior, Cognitive Processes
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MacMahon, Stephanie; Leggett, Jack; Carroll, Annemaree – Information and Learning Sciences, 2020
Purpose: In a classroom, the teacher and other students play an important role in regulating individual and group learning. However, the sudden shift to remote and online learning, as a result of social isolation during COVID-19, has created a social disconnect, making these immediate regulatory supports less accessible. A need was identified for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Students, Electronic Learning, Distance Education
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Maura Sincoff – English Journal, 2016
This article examines relationships in the writing process and offers some strategies to address student needs on both the cognitive and affective domains.
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Writing Strategies, Student Needs, Cognitive Processes
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List, Alexandra; Alexander, Patricia A. – Educational Psychologist, 2017
This article introduces the cognitive affective engagement model (CAEM) of multiple source use. The CAEM is presented as a way of unifying cognitive and behaviorally focused models of multiple text engagement with research on the role of affective factors (e.g., interest) in text processing. The CAEM proposes that students' engagement with…
Descriptors: Models, Cognitive Processes, Affective Behavior, Reading Interests
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Bond, Melissa; Bedenlier, Svenja – Journal of Interactive Media in Education, 2019
The concept of student engagement has become somewhat of an enigma for educators and researchers, with ongoing discussions about its nature and complexity, and criticism about the depth and breadth of theorising and operationalisation within empirical research. This equally applies to research conducted in the field of educational technology and…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Learner Engagement, Influence of Technology, Elementary Secondary Education
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Janning, Ruth; Schatten, Carlotta; Schmidt-Thieme, Lars – International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education, 2016
Recognising students' emotion, affect or cognition is a relatively young field and still a challenging task in the area of intelligent tutoring systems. There are several ways to use the output of these recognition tasks within the system. The approach most often mentioned in the literature is using it for giving feedback to the students. The…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Intelligent Tutoring Systems, Technology Uses in Education, Educational Technology
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McKinnon, Merryn; Vos, Judith – International Journal of Science Education, Part B: Communication and Public Engagement, 2015
Science communication and science education have the same overarching aim--to engage their audiences in science--and both disciplines face similar challenges in achieving this aim. Knowing how to effectively engage their "audiences" is fundamental to the success of both. Both disciplines have well-developed research fields identifying…
Descriptors: Science Education, Communications, Scientific Concepts, Participation
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Crossland, John – Primary Science, 2015
Thinking and other non-cognitive skills are becoming more important because the information explosion means less reliance on memorising facts and more on the ability to understand, analyse, apply, evaluate and create. In addition, many learners entering schools today will work in job categories not yet imagined; therefore a teaching focus on fact…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Taxonomy, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
Suchman, Nancy E. – ZERO TO THREE, 2017
Not all mothers who struggle with drug addiction have difficulties parenting, but many of them do. Moreover, evidence-based parenting programs that have proven efficacious with other parent populations often fail with mothers who are fighting chronic substance addiction, perhaps because of the neurobiological changes in neural reward circuitry…
Descriptors: Mothers, Parenting Skills, Drug Abuse, Addictive Behavior
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Garland, Eric L.; Howard, Matthew O. – Research on Social Work Practice, 2014
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders and International Classification of Diseases classify mental health disorders on the basis of their putatively distinct symptom profiles. Although these nosologies are highly influential, they also have been derided as mere "field guides" because they focus solely on the…
Descriptors: Mental Disorders, Classification, Social Work, Caseworkers
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