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Showing 1 to 15 of 32 results Save | Export
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Mackenzie S. Rose; Marcus Johnson – Journal of Educational Research and Practice, 2025
Conceptual knowledge encompasses understanding the interrelationships among multiple pieces of information. Misconceptions of these interrelationships illustrate the need for effective educational strategies to facilitate conceptual change, with the goal of facilitating changes in learner understanding to appropriate, accurate, and complete…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Concept Formation, Misconceptions, Technology Uses in Education
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Luc Rousseau – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2024
Despite considerable progress made in educational neuroscience, neuromyths persist in the teaching profession, hampering translational endeavors. The initial wave of interventions designed to dispel educational neuromyths was predominantly directed at preservice teachers. More recent work in the field, reviewed here, has shifted its focus…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Neurosciences, Brain, Inservice Teacher Education
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Albert Weideman – Educational Linguistics, 2024
A process of abstraction initiates the development of a theory of applied linguistics, beginning with the distinction between technical norm and technical fact. Each applied linguistic intervention has a normative dimension and a factual interface with its users. The second step is to abstract the qualifying technical modality of these artefacts,…
Descriptors: Linguistic Theory, Applied Linguistics, Intervention, Language Research
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Sacco, Donna M.; Spies, Tracy; Pfannenstiel, Kathleen – Learning Disabilities Research & Practice, 2022
Eliciting student thinking during mathematics instruction allows teachers to choose tasks with high cognitive demand while also engaging students to use productive struggle to solve mathematical problems, thus increasing their conceptual understanding. Often, students who require intensive intervention in mathematics, in particular, students who…
Descriptors: Intervention, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), English Language Learners, Academic Language
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Higuera-Martínez, Oscar Iván; Corazza, Giovanni Emanuele; Fernández-Samacá, Liliana – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2022
This article presents how Problem- and Project-Based Learning (PBL) in engineering education can exploit the theoretical framework of the Space-Time (ST)-Continuum, according to which educational contexts can be classified in terms of the tightness vs. looseness of the relevant conceptual space S and available time T. By crossing these two…
Descriptors: Problem Based Learning, Engineering Education, Teaching Methods, Intervention
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Coleman, LauraMarie K. – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2020
This article provides an example of how one sixth-grade classroom teacher and an instructional coach built a bridge for students in a grade 6 self-contained classroom to support their conceptual understanding and procedural fluency with dividing fractions. Baseline data showed that most of the students in this class had mastered only the…
Descriptors: Grade 6, Self Contained Classrooms, Fractions, Intervention
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Ruttenberg-Rozen, Robyn – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2020
Mathematical paradoxes often produce awe and wonder in the mathematics classroom. In this classroom episode, I share a paradoxical task, based on Simpson's Paradox, and its power as an intervention for a child diagnosed with ADHD. The Paradox leveraged his strengths to help him build understandings in proportional reasoning.
Descriptors: Intervention, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Task Analysis
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Dood, Amber J.; Dood, John C.; Cruz-Ramírez de Arellano, Daniel; Field, Kimberly B.; Raker, Jeffrey R. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
Two key topics of many second-year organic chemistry courses are substitution and elimination reactions. Predicting and explaining substitution and elimination reactions tends to be a challenging task for students, as documented in the research literature. Motivated by the many documented challenges experienced by students when learning these…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Organic Chemistry, College Science, Undergraduate Study
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Zhou, Yining; Lamberton, Geoffrey – Journal of Education for Business, 2021
This paper reports a teaching intervention based on cognitive load theory designed to improve postgraduate business students' understanding of double-entry bookkeeping. In response to learning difficulties, a simplified scaffolded method of learning was introduced involving: simplifying accounting terminology drawing on familiar non-technical…
Descriptors: Accounting, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Cognitive Ability, Business Administration Education
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Maria Blanton; Angela Murphy Gardiner; Ana Stephens; Rena Stroud; Eric Knuth; Despina Stylianou – Grantee Submission, 2023
We describe here lessons learned in designing an early algebra curriculum to measure early algebra's impact on children's algebra readiness for middle grades. The curriculum was developed to supplement regular mathematics instruction in Grades K-5. Lessons learned centered around the importance of several key factors, including using conceptual…
Descriptors: Mathematics Curriculum, Curriculum Design, Mathematics Instruction, Kindergarten
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Woodcock, Andree; Osmond, Jane; Tovey, Michael; McDonagh, Deana – Design and Technology Education, 2019
Threshold concept models offer a useful way of understanding aspects of design education. A threshold concept represents a gateway, or portal, to a more developed understanding and level of capability (Meyer, Land & Davies, 2008). Passing through a threshold can be transformative, irreversible, integrative and troublesome. Key transformations…
Descriptors: Empathy, Design, Teaching Methods, Engineering Education
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Robertson, Peter J. – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2018
Positive psychology has been an influential movement within psychology in the early years of the twenty-first century. It is now timely to assess the value of its contribution to career education and guidance. This paper provides a critique of this perspective. Positive psychology can enrich approaches to career development. It can provide a…
Descriptors: Career Development, Positive Attitudes, Psychology, Career Education
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Murphy, P. Karen; Greene, Jeffrey A.; Allen, Elizabeth; Baszczewski, Sara; Swearingen, Amanda; Wei, Liwei; Butler, Ana M. – Science Education, 2018
Flourishing in today's global society requires citizens that are both intelligent consumers and producers of scientific understanding. Indeed, the modern world is facing ever-more complex problems that require innovative ways of thinking about, around, and with science. As numerous educational stakeholders have suggested, such skills and abilities…
Descriptors: High School Students, Concept Formation, Persuasive Discourse, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
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Dyson, Nancy I.; Jordan, Nancy C.; Hassinger-Das, Brenna L. – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2015
Kyle, a kindergartner from a low-income family, is shown a set of three black dots on a white mat. His teacher then hides the dots with a small box lid and lays down an additional set of two dots. She pushes the two dots under the cover, one at a time. Kyle must now choose the number of dots "hiding" under the box from a set of four…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Low Income Groups, Mathematics Skills, Computation
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Chen, Der-Thanq; Wang, Yu-Mei; Lee, Wei Ching – Studies in Continuing Education, 2016
Conducting literature review is a complicated, sometimes confusing and laborious process that beginning educational researchers, especially graduate students, often find challenging. However, in the past these challenges were hardly considered, but in more recent times they have been increasingly considered by various faculties and graduate…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Educational Researchers, Educational Research, Novices
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