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Sophat Lang – International Review of Education, 2025
Despite significant progress, literacy programme implementation in Cambodia continues to face challenges concerning inactive learning participation, irregular attendance and dropout. Learners' motivation to engage in learning literacy, and the barriers that prevent them from doing so, are not adequately researched. This mixed-methods study aims to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adult Literacy, Literacy Education, Nonformal Education
Sean Brim – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Traumatic events can alter the brain structure, affecting cognitive capacities and academic performance. Educators at all grade levels are responsible for supporting students through trauma-informed approaches. Previous trauma-informed research focused on K-12 education levels. Graduate-level occupational therapy educators' experiences and…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Graduate Study, Occupational Therapy, Teaching Experience
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Maha Kumaran; Cecile Farnum; Aditi Gupta; Lisa Levesque – College & Research Libraries, 2025
The aim of this study was to understand marginalized graduate students' use of academic libraries for research activities during the COVID-19 pandemic. Using a phenomenological approach, this study investigated the challenges, barriers, and coping strategies of marginalized graduate students from three Canadian universities. Focus groups were…
Descriptors: Minority Group Students, Graduate Students, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Yongliang Wang; Ali Derakhshan; Hadi Rahimpour – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
With the emergence of the positive psychology trend, studying teacher resilience has gained tremendous momentum in mainstream education. Nonetheless, it has yet remained an underappreciated concept in English language education and research. The challenges that teachers experience in maintaining their resilience have also been the focus of a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Resilience (Psychology), English (Second Language), Language Teachers
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Meghan Comstock – Teachers College Record, 2025
Background or Context: Culturally responsive instruction (CRI) has garnered significant attention in local and state policy in recent years amid politicization of what is taught in schools, and the scholarly field is increasingly focused on how to develop culturally responsive "schools" and "systems," not just culturally…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Social Justice, Knowledge Level, Teacher Attitudes
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Danielle Helminger; Kimberly Hartmann – Journal of Occupational Therapy, Schools & Early Intervention, 2024
Mealtime is an essential occupation that occurs daily in the school setting for all learners. This study explored how school occupational therapy practitioners address mealtime challenges using a one-group, convergent mixed methods design. Participants were school occupational therapy practitioners who service pre-K to 5th-grade students. Data…
Descriptors: Occupational Therapy, Allied Health Personnel, Employee Attitudes, Educational Environment
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Jennie M. Carr; Tracy Hough – AILACTE Journal, 2024
Due to the teacher shortage, school divisions and educator preparation programs are working collaboratively to provide alternative routes for student teaching to meet licensure requirements (Donitsa-Schmidt & Zuzovsky, 2014; Flynt & Morton, 2009; National Research Council, 2010). This qualitative case study explored the strengths and…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Student Teachers, Student Teaching, Mentors
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Carolyn Carlson – Advocate, 2024
Teachers must have an understanding of dyslexia, including characteristics, assessments, and interventions, but also an understanding of the reactions the students may display when faced with these learning difficulties. In addition, teachers need to be aware of how their typical classroom practices may cause even further disruptions and…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Students with Disabilities, Preservice Teachers, Simulation
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Claire Evans – Educational Review, 2025
In 2020, COVID-19-associated measures closed the majority of work places resulting in the transfer of education to online classrooms. Many parents were forced to work from home whilst simultaneously providing childcare or supervising home-school-learning activities. In common with many countries worldwide, the drive to widen participation in UK…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, College Students, Child Rearing
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Ghaida Q. Bait Kulaib; Nasr Al-Hinai; Khalid Alzebdeh – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2024
The COVID-19 pandemic has forced most universities to shift from traditional face-to-face teaching to remote learning. This sudden transition has presented numerous challenges for institutions that were unaccustomed to remote work, particularly in the context of senior design projects in engineering. Therefore, this study aimed to identify the…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Teamwork, Distance Education
Tiffany Taylor – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Most military-connected students (MCS) with active-duty parents attend public schools in the United States. Due to the highly mobile military lifestyles of MCS, some are at risk for academic, emotional, and social challenges. School counselors are often charged with supporting and advocating for MCS; therefore, it is vital to understand elementary…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Elementary Education, School Counselors, Counselor Attitudes
Annie Mak – Online Submission, 2023
Remote learning has long existed as a learning modality in the education sector, where it has been seen more as an alternative option for receiving education rather than a common learning modality until the entrance of a global pandemic -- COVID-19, also known as the coronavirus -- that hit the world by surprise in late 2019. This study was…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Distance Education, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Mart, Mehmet; Waite, Sue – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2023
Intentional approaches to designing and structuring learning environments apply outdoors as well as indoors, but the value of freedom and unrestricted play outside is well known. However, several factors influence teachers' provision of freedom within outdoor activities, and it is important to reflect on these variables and appropriate degrees of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Outdoor Education, Cultural Differences, Public Policy
Sophia Mansori; Jackie Zweig; Anne Huntington; Tracy McMahon – Education Development Center, Inc., 2024
Bringing learning through play pedagogies to schools and children requires major investments in teacher professional development (TPD) that builds teachers' understanding of the value of learning through play, enables them to build and practice strategies and skills to support learning through play in the classroom, and supports their ongoing…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Play, Teaching Methods, Educational Research
Christopher Lamar Wilson – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This dissertation explores the issue of minority underrepresentation in K-12 educational leadership roles, examining its perceived causes and implications within academic settings. The research utilized a qualitative approach involving detailed surveys and interviews with school administrators from K-12 schools in Western North Carolina, Upstate…
Descriptors: Disproportionate Representation, School Administration, Administrators, Minority Groups
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