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Showing 1 to 15 of 24 results Save | Export
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Chengming Zhang; Florian Hofmann; Lea Plößl; Michaela Gläser-Zikuda – Education and Information Technologies, 2024
Reflective practice holds critical importance, for example, in higher education and teacher education, yet promoting students' reflective skills has been a persistent challenge. The emergence of revolutionary artificial intelligence technologies, notably in machine learning and large language models, heralds potential breakthroughs in this domain.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Reflection, Student Writing Models
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Kilfoil, Carrie Byars – Composition Studies, 2017
This article analyzes the decline of linguistics in rhetoric and composition PhD programs in terms of the "linguistic memory" (Trimbur) of composition. Since the field of linguistics once offered the primary means for composition to address the structural, psychological, sociohistorical, and cultural dimensions of language in student…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Graduate Study, Graduate Students, Linguistics
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Kastberg, Signe E.; Lischka, Alyson E.; Hillman, Susan L. – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2016
This cross-case analysis of three distinct letter writing activities between prospective teachers (PTs) and K-12 learners provides insights into PTs' levels of feedback according to Hattie and Timperley's (2007) framework. PTs' written feedback from letter writing activities conducted in teacher preparation programs were analyzed using this…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Preservice Teachers, Preservice Teacher Education, Mathematics Activities
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Tang, Kok-Sing – International Journal of Science Education, 2016
This paper reports on the design and enactment of an instructional strategy aimed to support students in constructing scientific explanations. Informed by the philosophy of science and linguistic studies of science, a new instructional framework called premise--reasoning--outcome (PRO) was conceptualized, developed, and tested over two years in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Education, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts
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Bhullar, Naureen; Rose, Karen C.; Utell, Janine M.; Healey, Kathryn N. – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2014
The authors assessed the impact of peer review on student writing in four sections of an undergraduate Developmental Psychology course. They hypothesized that peer review would result in better writing in the peer review group compared to the group with no peer review. Writing was rated independently by two instructors who were blind to the…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Student Writing Models, Writing (Composition), Undergraduate Students
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Shi, Weixuan; Han, Jikun – English Language Teaching, 2014
Writing, as an advanced model of output, not only conveys the subject but also realizes the communication between readers and writers. Metadiscourse can help writers arrange and organize the discourse to influence readers' understanding of the text and their attitude towards its content. Taking writing samples of College English Test Band 4…
Descriptors: Writing Research, College English, Student Writing Models, Meta Analysis
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Hayward, Stephen; Pjesky, Rex – Journal of Instructional Pedagogies, 2012
This paper uses a blind grading process to test if the performance of online students were different from traditional students using a term paper from an economics graduate course. Consistent with the literature, no significant difference was found between the scores of online students and those of traditional students. Also consistent with the…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Conventional Instruction, Grading, Scoring Formulas
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Tasdemir, Adem – Educational Sciences: Theory and Practice, 2012
Reflecting effective and psychomotor skills to teaching environment are as important as cognitive skills in learning process. In this context, values are important to develop skills in affective domain. In this study, the opinions of the students who have been studying in three different countries (Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Turkey) were aimed to be…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries, Opinions
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Patton, Martha Davis; Taylor, Summer Smith – Across the Disciplines, 2013
This study examines the writing of 30 engineering students, faculty response, students' reading of the response, subsequent revision, and faculty evaluation to ask what factors contribute to constructive conversation about writing. It affirms previous research that suggests engineering faculty do not provide the facilitative commentary widely…
Descriptors: Writing Across the Curriculum, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Engineering Education
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Monte-Sano, Chauncey – American Educational Research Journal, 2008
This study explored the practices of two high school teachers of U.S. history and their students' performance on evidence-based history essays over 7 months. Data include pre- and posttest essays, interviews, observations, teacher feedback, assignments, and readings. Qualitative and quantitative comparisons of 42 students' work show that one class…
Descriptors: Evidence, Direct Instruction, Feedback (Response), Reading Comprehension
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Nyberg, V. R.; Nyberg, A. M. – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 1980
A respectable reliability of scoring twelfth-grade essays can be achieved through the use of essay models in the two Alberta Essay Scales (style-content and mechanics). The scales can assist classroom teachers in the day-to-day scoring of essays by providing a constant standard. (Author/SB)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Content Analysis, Correlation, Essays
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Freedman, Sarah Warshauer – Written Communication, 1995
Studies secondary school classrooms in Great Britain and the United States, revealing that, when teachers apply similar theories to everyday practice, important pedagogical contrasts illustrate the ways in which instruction is organized and in what students produce. Finds that, in classrooms with the most highly involved interactions, students…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Comparative Analysis, Educational Theories, Secondary Education
Jarvey, Marya; McKeough, Anne – 2003
A study compared two approaches to teaching 38 grade 4 students in Canada to write trickster tales. By integrating understandings from cognitive and neo-Piagetian theory into instructional method, a novel approach to writing instruction was created. The compositions of children taught via this method were compared to those of students who…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Classroom Techniques, Comparative Analysis, Grade 4
Kelly, Patricia R.; Farnan, Nancy – 1989
A study examined whether the higher-order thinking patterns elicited by a reader response approach would carry over and become part of students' ways of thinking about literature, even in the absence of reader response prompts. Subjects were fourth-grade students (48 in all) in two intact, heterogeneously grouped classrooms in the same elementary…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis, Critical Reading
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Crew, Louie – College Composition and Communication, 1987
Compares the rhetorical strategies of 20 opening paragraphs from "Psychology Today" to those in 20 first paragraphs from student essays. Observes that professionals regularly begin exposition with narratives, indirection, and irony, while students begin with rhetorical questions, truisms, and muddled strategies. Concludes that students'…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Discourse Analysis, Expository Writing, Higher Education
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