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Jodi P. Lampi; Leslie S. Rush; Jodi Patrick Holschuh; Todd Reynolds – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2025
In this article, we argue that the goal of reading literary text is the creation of interpretation, and we advocate for a research-based disciplinary literacy heuristic that centers on reading and interpreting literary text. The heuristic serves as a guide for designing instruction that incorporates important instructional principles for…
Descriptors: Heuristics, Reading, Literature, Educational Principles
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Kyle D. S. Maclean; Tiffany Bayley – INFORMS Transactions on Education, 2024
We introduce a novel type of assessment that allows for efficient grading of higher order thinking skills. In this assessment, a student reviews and corrects a technical memo that has errors in its formulation or process. To overcome the grading challenges imposed by essay-type responses in large undergraduate courses, we provide a Visual Basic…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Thinking Skills, Test Construction, Error Correction
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Nora McCarthy; Karen Neville; Andrew Pope – Discover Education, 2025
The terms 'feedback' and 'formative assessment' are ubiquitous in education, but their conceptual boundaries are ill-defined. This perspective piece explores the meaning of 'feedback' and 'formative assessment', revealing the entanglement and confusion that exists between these two terms. An argument for clarity of terms is made, to avoid…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Formative Evaluation, Definitions, Language Usage
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Effatpanah, Farshad; Baghaei, Purya – Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 2023
Item response theory (IRT) refers to a family of mathematical models which describe the relationship between latent continuous variables (attributes or characteristics) and their manifestations (dichotomous/polytomous observed outcomes or responses) with regard to a set of item characteristics. Researchers typically use parametric IRT (PIRT)…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Feedback (Response), Mathematical Models, Item Analysis
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van der Linden, Wim J. – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2022
Two independent statistical tests of item compromise are presented, one based on the test takers' responses and the other on their response times (RTs) on the same items. The tests can be used to monitor an item in real time during online continuous testing but are also applicable as part of post hoc forensic analysis. The two test statistics are…
Descriptors: Test Items, Item Analysis, Item Response Theory, Computer Assisted Testing
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Hamann, Julian; Ringel, Leopold – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2023
If there is one thing all university rankings have in common, it is that they are the target of widespread criticism. This article takes the many challenges university rankings are facing as its point of departure and asks how they navigate their hostile environment. The analysis proceeds in three steps. First, we unveil two modes of ranking…
Descriptors: Universities, Achievement Rating, Criticism, Responses
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Hayley Glover; Fran Myers; Hilary Collins – Teaching in Higher Education, 2024
This paper explores tensions and ambiguities for UK HE teachers during COVID-19. It analyses changed behaviours and routines for existing hybrid workers experienced in online pedagogy through three core axes of "precarity and security;" "time and perceptions of time;" and "communication." Twelve participants supplied…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, College Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Juuso Henrik Nieminen; Laura Ketonen – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
In this conceptual article, we discuss the idea of students' epistemic agency as an overlooked link between assessment, knowledge and society. We transcend the contemporary discourses around assessment that focus on its authenticity and student-centredness and instead investigate assessment from the viewpoints of knowledge and knowing. This…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Evaluative Thinking, Feedback (Response), Learning Processes
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Enriquez, Grace – Children's Literature in Education, 2022
What can the affective turn mean for literacy educators who believe their work can lay the foundation for a life filled with meaningful reading pursuits, for students who "become" readers and "do" reading? Because reading occurs across and within an elaborate composite of time, space, relationships, histories, discourses, and…
Descriptors: Grade 1, Elementary School Students, Emotional Response, Reader Response
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Tara Widner; Linnette Werner – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2024
Emergent-based practices of leadership development (such as intentional emergence (IE), case-in-point, or group relations) rely a great deal on stopping the action in order to publicly notice group behaviors and patterns and connect what is happening authentically to conscious actions and ideas (such as course content, readings, theories, etc.).…
Descriptors: Intention, Observation, Leadership Training, Teaching Methods
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Jairo Jiménez – Teaching in Higher Education, 2024
This paper analyzes academic identities and academic agency in the context of knowledge management and production that permeate the contemporary university. A practical argumentation on the meaning of teaching activity seeks to propose, in contrast to traditional approaches, that identity and meaning are constitutive dimensions of present…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Professional Identity, Knowledge Management, Teaching (Occupation)
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Khoa Dang Truong – Asian-Pacific Journal of Second and Foreign Language Education, 2024
Drawing inspiration from the sociocultural turn in language teacher cognition research, this conceptual article argues for the utilisation of cultural-historical activity theory (CHAT) as a theoretical framework for researching and understanding teacher cognition as a social phenomenon. In this article, three CHAT-related concepts, namely…
Descriptors: Language Teachers, Learning, Sociocultural Patterns, Psychological Patterns
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Rachel Leslie; Alice Brown; Ellen Larsen; Melissa Fanshawe – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2024
Establishing and building rapport is a crucial aspect of research interviews with children and families. With interviews increasingly conducted via online platforms, such as Teams and Zoom, researchers are challenged to reflect on relational aspects, such as building rapport, when using this medium and how approaches may need to be nuanced. This…
Descriptors: Interviews, Computer Mediated Communication, Synchronous Communication, Children
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Cheng, Yiling – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2023
Computerized adaptive testing (CAT) offers an efficient and highly accurate method for estimating examinees' abilities. In this article, the free version of Concerto Software for CAT was reviewed, dividing our evaluation into three sections: software implementation, the Item Response Theory (IRT) features of CAT, and user experience. Overall,…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Computer Assisted Testing, Adaptive Testing, Item Response Theory
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Wistisen, Lydia – Children's Literature in Education, 2021
This article argues that emotions are utilized for norm breaking, identity formation, and socialization in S.E. Hinton's YA novel "The Outsiders" (1967). Drawing on the history of emotions studies, it investigates how emotional expressions are utilized to negotiate and contest given emotional norms on the one hand, and Young Adult…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Young Adults, Reader Response, Emotional Response
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