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Dennis Sumara; Claire Robson; Rebecca Luce-Kapler – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2025
This article uses excerpts from poetry, memoir and epistolary genres emerging from research that has utilized close writing practices to interpret the interplay among memory, narrative, and agency. Biographical, historical, archival, and interpretive processes are used to reveal deferred, not noticed, and/or not counted experiences of those…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Poetry, Personal Narratives, Letters (Correspondence)
Ciba, Daniel – Research in Drama Education, 2022
This essay documents my expansions on a lesson developed in courses that juxtaposed performance and memory studies. Building on a recursive reading of Toni Morrison's literary conceptualisation of rememory, I describe the reiterative nature of memory using two digital performances -- a TikTok meme featuring 50 Cent's 'Candy Shop' and a Reddit…
Descriptors: Memory, Performance, Art, Fiction
Dave Hewitt – For the Learning of Mathematics, 2024
The author has been influenced throughout his time in mathematics education by the work of Caleb Gattegno. Gattegno made extensive use of the word awareness whereas much educational literature from a psychological perspective talks about memory (for example, Justicia-Galiano, MartÌn-Puga, Linares & Pelegrina, 2017). This has, amongst other…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Memory, Mathematics Education
Lindsay Michelle Schofield – Policy Futures in Education, 2024
In recent years, the theoretical lens of new materialism(s) and surge in feminist thinking has opened up new ways of understanding the complexities of motherhood, babyhood and early childhood. This surge in post-qualitative and feminist inquiry towards the troubling of dominant early childhood abstractions and norms, as well as resistance to…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Mothers, Children, Infants
Zatzman, Belarie – Research in Drama Education, 2023
Can critical questions and complicated conversations addressing issues of representation, difference, and witnessing be positioned at the centre of a TYA curriculum? This article examines contemporary, issue-based and culturally specific TYA scripts. In addition, a collection of aesthetic representations are offered as dynamic prompts to help…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Youth, Audiences, Culturally Relevant Education
Krueger-Henney, Patricia; Kress, Tricia; Amorim, Simone – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2023
In this article, the authors engage with Anzaldua's (Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza, Aunt Lute Books, 1987) notion of borderlands while approaching social science research as a process of (re)membering as explained by Cynthia Dillard (Learning to r(e)member the things we've learned to forget: Endarkened feminisms, spirituality, and the…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Epistemology, Knowledge Management, Memory
Butler, Kevin – Journal of Education and Learning, 2022
Dyslexia is a reading disability affecting a large number of people worldwide. People with dyslexia have at least normal levels of intelligence, yet they nevertheless have significant difficulties with reading. Dyslexia is known to have genetic causes; however, some researchers believe that there are also environmental factors at play.…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Dyslexia, Phonetics, Nature Nurture Controversy
Carmack, Lori – PRIMUS, 2022
This paper presents ideas for constructing mathematics homework assignments based on lessons from the cognitive science of learning and memory. In particular, we focus on two popular techniques from the field: spaced practice and mixed practice. The paper describes the techniques and supporting research, and then discusses various straightforward…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Homework, Learning, Memory
Gail Elliott; Grace Pinhal-Enfield – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2025
Graduate anatomy courses should be designed based on several needs. These include preparation for how to study in medical school and other healthcare programs, integrating multiple ways of engaging with the material, including repetition for long-term retention, and training of anatomy educators. Our graduate anatomy course presents an example of…
Descriptors: Graduate Medical Education, Anatomy, Learner Engagement, Retention (Psychology)
Lucinda Powell – Psychology Teaching Review, 2024
Our school career culminates in a set of exam results, but if students want to do well, attending lessons is not enough: the implicit expectation is that all students will reinforce learning independently outside of the classroom. Really effective learners employ effective independent study techniques, but when, how and where do they learn to do…
Descriptors: Study Skills, Independent Study, Skill Development, Metacognition
Wirth, Joachim; Stebner, Ferdinand; Trypke, Melanie; Schuster, Corinna; Leutner, Detlev – Educational Psychology Review, 2020
Models of self-regulated learning emphasize the active and intentional role of learners and, thereby, focus mainly on conscious processes in working memory and long-term memory. Cognitive load theory supports this view on learning. As a result, both fields of research ignore the potential role of unconscious processes for learning. In this review…
Descriptors: Self Management, Learning Processes, Difficulty Level, Short Term Memory
Élisabeth Bélanger; Lorie-Marlène Brault Foisy; Steve Masson – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2025
The main objective of this methodological article is to discuss the contribution of response times as a tool in education research. The use of response times in research is largely a legacy of the work carried out in cognitive psychology, which has made it possible to describe the cognitive processes involved in information processing. In…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Reaction Time, Cognitive Processes, Research Methodology
Sayegh, Fares; Herraiz, Laurie; Colom, Morgane; Lopez, Sébastien; Rampon, Claire; Dahan, Lionel – Learning & Memory, 2022
Dopamine participates in encoding memories and could either encode rewarding/aversive value of unconditioned stimuli or act as a novelty signal triggering contextual learning. Here we show that intraperitoneal injection of the dopamine D1/5R antagonist SCH23390 impairs contextual fear conditioning and tone-shock association, while intrahippocampal…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Memory, Fear, Conditioning
Craig, Michael; Knowles, Christopher; Hill, Stephanie; Dewar, Michaela – Learning & Memory, 2021
Awake quiescence immediately after encoding is conducive to episodic memory consolidation. Retrieval can render episodic memories labile again, but reconsolidation can modify and restrengthen them. It remained unknown whether awake quiescence after retrieval supports episodic memory reconsolidation. We sought to examine this question via an…
Descriptors: Memory, Cognitive Processes, Recall (Psychology), Task Analysis
Yuko Ida – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
This onto-epistemic experimental essay is a modest attempt to imagine another world yet to come in a time of what David Theo Goldberg calls "dread." To interrogate the unnamable feeling/texture the author's body wants to be free from, memories of the author, an…
Descriptors: Creativity, Memory, Poetry, Photography

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