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Sydney Freeman Jr. – Journal of Research Initiatives, 2018
Certain scholarly activities, such as establishing a journal, are not taught in graduate school. These skills are often learned only by shadowing and being mentored by an experienced editor or perhaps slowly and painfully learning by doing. There is a "hidden curriculum" of implicit expectations and rules to which editors must negotiate…
Descriptors: Hidden Curriculum, Periodicals, Electronic Publishing, Editing
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Simpson, Zach; Inglis, Helen; Sandrock, Carl – Africa Education Review, 2020
The notion of "resources" is often framed in an economic sense: money, time, equipment and the like. The authors reconceptualise this notion, situating resources as embedded in curricular frameworks, teacher practice and student experience. This leads them to define resources as "the potential to participate in socio-cultural…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Learning Processes, Engineering Education, Creativity
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Hayes, David – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2015
Critical thinking pedagogy is misguided. Ostensibly a cure for narrowness of thought, by using the emotions appropriate to conflict, it names only one mode of relation to material among many others. Ostensibly a cure for fallacies, critical thinking tends to dishonesty in practice because it habitually leaps to premature ideas of what the object…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Teaching Methods, Beliefs, Misconceptions
Miller, Donna L. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2013
Although the human mind resists confusion, this feeling of disequilibrium nurtures learning. Newkirk, the author quotes, says intelligence is not a matter of being smart--it is the capacity to view difficulty as an opportunity to stop, reassess, and employ strategies for making sense of problems. These same habits of mind define reflection, a…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Problem Solving, Reflection, Attitudes
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Wide, Sverre – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2009
This essay attempts to distinguish and discuss the importance and limitations of different ways of being wrong. At first it is argued that strictly falsifiable knowledge is concerned with simple (instrumental) mistakes only, and thus is incapable of understanding more complex errors (and truths). In order to gain a deeper understanding of mistakes…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Misconceptions, Ethics, Credibility