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Showing 1 to 15 of 52 results Save | Export
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Paige V. Banaji; Kathryn Comer – Composition Forum, 2025
The habits of mind (HOM) in the "Framework for Success in Postsecondary Writing" offer a useful bridge between high school and college writing instruction. As the field evaluates the benefits and drawbacks of the HOM, we would be well served to listen to students' perspectives. This article presents insights from 330 first-year students…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Student Attitudes, Reflection, Undergraduate Students
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Sarah A. Nagro – Journal of Special Education Preparation, 2022
Video-based reflection activities, common to teacher preparation, serve as a bridge between theory and practice and support teacher candidate professional growth overall. Without the necessary guidance on how to reflect, many teacher candidates lack the ability to critically review, analyze, and evaluate their teaching to learn from and apply new…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Teacher Education, Video Technology, Reflection
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Lawson, Christie A.; McGuire, Stephanie; Hodges, Russ; Gray, Rosianna; McGuire, Saundra Y.; Killingbeck, Mark; Segovia, Jawn – Learning Assistance Review, 2021
The decision to explicitly teach students learning strategies and skills and how to think reflectively about their learning process is framed theoretically by the literature on self-regulation, metacognition, and social-cognitive theory. Interventions for self-regulation and metacognitive strategies can optimize the student learning process and…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Reflection, Learning Strategies, Study Skills
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Frank Bird – Taboo: The Journal of Culture and Education, 2024
More than fifty years ago, an idea took hold in Georgia. Eventually called the Foxfire Approach, its main idea is centered around a view of a democratic classroom. Following a general sense of John Dewey's pragmatism, Eliot Wigginton invested his energy and skills into his English classroom to propel students to choose worthwhile activities. This…
Descriptors: English Curriculum, Student Centered Learning, Teachers, Story Telling
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Padmanabha, C. H. – Journal on Educational Psychology, 2020
Metacognition is an essential, but habitually ignored element of 21st century education, which aims to teach students how to learn. 'Meta' is a Greek word meaning 'after', 'behind' or 'beyond'; 'meta' is added to terms such as meta memory, meta comprehension, and metacognition. The lack of consciousness is cognitive self-regulation activities…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Reflection, Problem Solving, Taxonomy
Boser, Ulrich – Educational Leadership, 2019
Although mastering the art of learning how to learn is considered one of the most important skills for young people, few teens know the basics of how to best learn something. And teachers rarely receive training in how to helps students become successful learners. The author describes seven well-supported techniques for learning anything that…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Learning Strategies, Active Learning, Attention
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Brooks, Ben; Schaab, Katharine; Chapman, Natasha H. – Issues in Interdisciplinary Studies, 2019
One of the great challenges interdisciplinary programs face is fguring out how to get students to engage subject matter in a truly integrative way. To accomplish integration, students do not need to become experts in multiple felds, but they do need to understand how multiple modes of thinking, theoretical lenses, and content knowledge can be…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Capacity Building, Learning Strategies, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Mary Anne Peabody; Susan Noyes; Mary Anderson – Journal of Occupational Therapy Education, 2022
Reflective practice is considered a highly valued graduate attribute in the field of occupational therapy. Occupational therapy educators influence and shape how students develop into reflective practitioners. Reflective practice requires a set of complex thinking skills that are typically focused on personal experiences and can be broken down…
Descriptors: Occupational Therapy, Graduate Students, College Faculty, Reflection
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Schmidt, Henk G.; Mamede, Silvia – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2020
In this article, the contributions of cognitive psychology to research and development of medical education are assessed. The cognitive psychology of learning consists of activation of prior knowledge while processing new information and elaboration on the resulting new knowledge to facilitate storing in long-term memory. This process is limited…
Descriptors: Cognitive Psychology, Medical Education, Educational Research, Educational Change
Cutler, Kay M.; Moeller, Mary R. – Educational Leadership, 2017
"In many ways, images are the vehicle of comprehension, thought, and action. We integrate parts of images, we remember images, we manipulate images." This quote from James E. Zull clarifies the rationale for a discussion protocol called Visual Thinking Strategies (VTS), in which teachers focus students' attention on an image and ask…
Descriptors: Visual Learning, Thinking Skills, Learning Strategies, Teaching Methods
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Kniffin, Lori E.; Priest, Kerry L.; Clayton, Patti H. – Journal of Applied Learning in Higher Education, 2017
Experiential learning in and out of the classroom provides students with opportunities to learn from reflecting critically on concrete experiences. This article introduces Case-in-Point (CIP), an experiential teaching and learning strategy that uses critical reflection-in-action within the context of the classroom environment to modify behaviors…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Capacity Building, Learning Strategies, Experiential Learning
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Nagaoka, Jenny – Journal of Staff Development, 2016
Succeeding at learning, and at life, takes more than academic ability. Studies on the importance of qualities like "grit" grabbing headlines, help to foster a growing conviction that encouraging the right mindsets and social-emotional skills in students will lead to better school achievement and post-secondary success. Policymakers are…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Individual Characteristics, Adults, Student Development
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Knox, Heather – Gifted Child Today, 2017
Metacognition is vital for a student's academic success. Gifted learners are no exception. By enhancing metacognition, gifted learners can identify multiple strategies to use in a situation, evaluate those strategies, and determine the most effective given the scenario. Increased metacognitive ability can prove useful for gifted learners in the…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Metacognition, Learning Strategies, Mathematics Instruction
Millis, Barbara J. – IDEA Center, Inc., 2016
Metacognition has increasingly been recognized as essential for learning. This paper defines metacognition, discusses its importance, and specifies how faculty can nurture it in students to promote positive learning outcomes. The paper then offers extensive examples based on two formats: (1) activities offered before, during, and after lessons or…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Definitions, Reflection, Learning Strategies
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Kortegast, Carrie; Davis, Jonathan – College Teaching, 2017
This article discusses the use of digital storytelling, a pedagogical tool, to enhance student learning and meaning-making. During the process of creating and sharing their digital stories, students engaged in self-reflexivity and demonstrated the ability to apply theories of student development to their personal experiences. Findings have…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Teaching Methods, Electronic Publishing, Student Development
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