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Tin L. Nguyen; Rohan Prabhu – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2025
Creative action is idiosyncratic. Not only do "creators" differ in their approaches to creative work, but "creative endeavors" differ in complexity, scale, and level of difficulty, meaning that the self-regulation strategies people use to manage themselves and their ideas from creative ideation to implementation may differ.…
Descriptors: Self Management, Creativity, Personality Traits, Environmental Influences
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Michalinos Zembylas – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2025
This paper builds on discussions about what sort of generosity might be nurtured in pedagogy when perspectives of affectivity, corporeality, and politics are foregrounded. The paper focuses on highlighting a multidimensional understanding of generosity with specific emphasis on the ways in which affective/embodied/corporeal and political…
Descriptors: Caring, Empathy, Affective Behavior, Ethics
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Karen Gravett; Simon Lygo-Baker – Studies in Higher Education, 2025
In this article, we examine how thinking with affect theory offers fertility within higher education studies to see and do teaching and learning differently. For many educators in universities, the idea that teaching is a cognitive process of information transmission is still taken-for-granted. These beliefs are visible through the persistence of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Emotional Response, Psychological Patterns, Affective Behavior
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Rosalyn Black; Matthew Krehl Edward Thomas; Margaret Bearman – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2025
The contemporary university works to produce an imagined global graduate who can demonstrate competencies such as mobility, intercultural awareness and global citizenship. In Australia and New Zealand, teacher education academics are charged with the production of graduates who can display and transmit such competencies, but the labour and lived…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Graduates, Global Approach, Teacher Education
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Elena Savina; Caroline Fulton; Christina Beaton – Educational Psychology Review, 2025
The classroom represents a complex socio-cultural environment where emotions emerge as a result of instruction, learning, and interpersonal transactions. Teachers' ability to recognize, regulate, and respond to emotions in the classroom has powerful consequences for students' behavior, learning, and the teacher's own well-being. In order to be…
Descriptors: Teachers, Teacher Behavior, Affective Behavior, Emotional Intelligence
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Christopher Dignam; Candace M. Smith; Amy L. Kelly – Journal of Education in Science, Environment and Health, 2025
The evolution of artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics in education has transitioned from automation toward emotionally responsive learning systems through artificial emotional intelligence (AEI). While AI-driven robotics has enhanced instructional automation, AEI introduces an affective dimension by recognizing and responding to human…
Descriptors: Robotics, Artificial Intelligence, Teaching Methods, Computer Software
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Suresh Namboothiri; Thomas Varghese; Mendus Jacob; Sunil Job; Joby Cyriac – Higher Education for the Future, 2025
This research investigates the critical need to integrate affective and psychomotor domains alongside cognitive development in educational systems to achieve the comprehensive 'Exit Outcomes' of Outcome-Based Education (OBE) and align with the National Higher Education Qualification Framework (NHEQF) descriptors. Traditional educational approaches…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Affective Behavior, Psychomotor Skills, Cognitive Processes