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Margaret Blackie; Kathy Luckett – Science & Education, 2025
In this paper, we begin a conversation with educators invested in developing epistemic insight. We argue that generative artificial intelligence provides an opportunity to make a necessary corrective to our understanding of knowledge and knowledge building. The use of the metaphors of such as 'human-as-machine' has inadvertently promoted a…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Epistemology, Cognitive Processes, Learning
Ansgar Allen – Research in Education, 2024
This paper takes on and explores the disturbing and perhaps counter-intuitive notion that the university is the place where the intellect goes to die. This idea is explored alongside Georges Bataille's suggestion that the death of thought might actually be a worthy pursuit and only thought which seeks its own limits is worth striving for. The…
Descriptors: Universities, Intelligence, Death, Cognitive Processes
Juan C. Castro-Alonso; Paul Ayres; Shirong Zhang; Björn B. de Koning; Fred Paas – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
Research on embodied cognition acknowledges that cognitive processing is tightly coupled with bodily activities and the environment. An important implication for education is that learning can be enhanced when the brain, body, and environment mutually influence each other, such as when making or observing human actions, especially those involving…
Descriptors: Research, Cognitive Processes, Environment, Human Body
Elena, Tsupikova; Alexander, Tyutchenko; Larisa, Katsyuba – Journal of Educational Psychology - Propositos y Representaciones, 2021
The article describes the main types of mental information processing in the context of a systematic structural method. The author analyses the semantic theories of information. The author reviews the mechanisms of information processing and its qualitative properties. The article describes the mechanism of textual presupposition accommodation.
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Information Theory, Semantics, Learning
Yang, Chunliang; Yu, Rongjun; Hu, Xiao; Luo, Liang; Huang, Tina S.-T.; Shanks, David R. – Metacognition and Learning, 2021
Judgments of learning (JOLs) play a fundamental role in helping learners regulate their study strategies but are susceptible to various kinds of illusions and biases. These can potentially impair learning efficiency, and hence understanding the mechanisms underlying the formation of JOLs is important. Many studies have suggested that both…
Descriptors: Learning, Evaluative Thinking, Beliefs, Cognitive Processes
Ellis, Robert A.; Goodyear, Peter; Marmot, Alexi – Understanding Teaching-Learning Practice, 2018
This chapter provides an orientation to both the book series, "Understanding Teaching-Learning" Practice," and this book, "Spaces of Teaching and Learning." It begins by situating the idea of "practice" in educational research and emphasises our interest in the individual and the mind and the links between these…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Educational Practices, Interaction, Educational Environment
Stock, Wendy A. – Journal of Economic Education, 2021
What do we know about how well graduate teaching in economics addresses cognitive challenges to learning? In short, very little. There is a dearth of research that investigates how graduate student, program and professor characteristics, and choices impact graduate student learning and other outcomes. Some of the broader literature on graduate…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Graduate Students, Learning, Cognitive Structures
Bozkurt, Gulay – Journal of Education and Practice, 2017
This article examines the literature associated with social constructivism. It discusses whether social constructivism succeeds in reconciling individual cognition with social teaching and learning practices. After reviewing the meaning of individual cognition and social constructivism, two views--Piaget and Vygotsky's--accounting for learning…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Mathematics Education, Cognitive Processes, Learning
Dahlstrom-Hakki, Ibrahim; Asbell-Clarke, Jodi; Rowe, Elizabeth – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2019
The value of neurocognitive measures to study memory, attention, cognition, and learning is well established. However, the vast majority of work using these tools is performed in tightly controlled lab experiments using simple lab stimuli. This article looks at the viability of using multimodal neurocognitive instruments to measure implicit…
Descriptors: Memory, Attention, Cognitive Processes, Learning
Mak, Barley; Keung, Chrysa; Cheung, Alan – Teacher Education, Learning Innovation and Accountability, 2018
This chapter critically reviews the official document "Kindergarten Education Curriculum Guide" (2017) in Hong Kong by using the concept of five curriculum orientations as an analytical tool. The five curriculum orientations are academic; cognitive process; social reconstruction; humanistic; and technological. The analysis covers the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Kindergarten, Preschool Curriculum, Academic Education
Krishnan, Harini C.; Lyons, Lisa C. – Learning & Memory, 2015
Circadian clocks evolved under conditions of environmental variation, primarily alternating light dark cycles, to enable organisms to anticipate daily environmental events and coordinate metabolic, physiological, and behavioral activities. However, modern lifestyle and advances in technology have increased the percentage of individuals working in…
Descriptors: Learning, Memory, Cognitive Processes, Time
Jacobson, Michael J.; Kapur, Manu; Reimann, Peter – Educational Psychologist, 2016
This article proposes a conceptual framework of learning based on perspectives and methodologies being employed in the study of complex physical and social systems to inform educational research. We argue that the contexts in which learning occurs are complex systems with elements or agents at different levels--including neuronal, cognitive,…
Descriptors: Models, Educational Research, Social Systems, Feedback (Response)
Hammond, Zaretta – American Educator, 2021
As a result of the racial justice reckoning happening alongside the COVID-19 pandemic, more educators were able to see the impact of gross inequities in education. The educational disparities went beyond the digital divide and access to technology: the more insidious gaps were in the ability of students to be independent learners during distance…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Social Justice, Racial Bias, Ethnicity
Cleeremans, Axel – Cognitive Science, 2014
Consciousness remains a mystery--"a phenomenon that people do not know how to think about--yet" (Dennett, D. C., 1991, p. 21). Here, I consider how the connectionist perspective on information processing may help us progress toward the goal of understanding the computational principles through which conscious and unconscious processing…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Computation, Brain, Metacognition
Valdez, Pablo; Ramírez, Candelaria; García, Aída – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2014
Circadian variations have been found in cognitive processes, such as attention, working memory, and executive functions, which may explain oscillations in the performance of many tasks. These cognitive processes improve during the day and decrease during the night and early hours of the morning. Sleep deprivation further decreases these cognitive…
Descriptors: Sleep, Cognitive Processes, Learning, Attention

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