NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 12 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Carly Berwick; Kayla Luga; Emily Zhang – Educational Forum, 2024
In this co/autoethnographic account of a school-based cyber-bullying incident, the authors discuss the challenges of current anti-bullying approaches in schools. In the incident, male-identifying students were alleged to have engaged in online gender-based abuse of female-­identifying students. The authors identify three key themes toward…
Descriptors: High School Students, Computer Mediated Communication, Bullying, Sexual Harassment
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Asowayan, Alaa A.; Ashreef, Samaar Y.; Omar, Sozan H. – English Language Teaching, 2017
This systematic review aims to explore the effect of NGSS on students' academic excellence. Specifically, considering increased cultural diversity, it is appropriate to identify student's science-related values, respectful features of teachers' cultural competence, and underlying challenges and detect in what ways these objectives are addressed by…
Descriptors: Science Education, Standards, Student Diversity, Cultural Pluralism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Beer, Paula; Hallet, Fiona; Hawkins, Claire; Hewitson, Dawn – International Journal of Emotional Education, 2017
Cyberbullying is defined as "an aggressive, intentional act carried out by a group or individual, using electronic forms of contact, repeatedly and over time against a victim who cannot easily defend him or herself" (Smith et al., 2008, p. 376). There are many quantitative studies on cyberbullying, but now researchers argue that we need…
Descriptors: Bullying, Computer Mediated Communication, Context Effect, Special Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Rambe, Patient – Journal of Computing in Higher Education, 2017
The rhetoric on the potential of Web 2.0 technologies to democratize online engagement of students often overlooks the discomforting, differential participation and asymmetrical engagement that accompanies student adoption of emerging technologies. This paper, therefore, constitutes a critical reality check for student adoption of technology to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Cooperative Learning, Web Sites
Jablonski, Deirdre – ProQuest LLC, 2013
This study investigated the relationship between cultural values and effectiveness of virtual team processes. In order to render an acceptable degree of comparison, four specific team outcomes of virtual team effectiveness were aligned on Hofstede's cultural dimensions of power distance and individualism. The lack of awareness of how power and…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Individualism, Teamwork, Computer Mediated Communication
Peterson, David Kent – ProQuest LLC, 2014
The following study is an extended ethnographic case study of a "black intellectual insurgency" within the predominantly white space of the U.S. intercollegiate policy debate activity. A growing number of black students are entering the debate activity and insisting that "whiteness" be confronted and interrogated and that…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, African American Students, Intercollegiate Cooperation, Debate
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Rambe, Patient – Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2012
While research literature affirms the potential for social networking sites (SNSs) to democratise communication, their impact on micro-level, academic relations at university level has not been explored sufficiently in developing countries. The literature on SNSs (especially "Facebook") has emphasised its appropriation for the marketing…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Social Networks, Web Sites, Computer Mediated Communication
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Doerr, Neriko M.; Sato, Shinji – Learning, Media and Technology, 2011
This article discusses the validity of the incorporation of online communication in language education classes as a practice free of power politics. By examining blog activities in an advanced-level Japanese-as-a-Foreign-Language classroom at a university in the USA, we show that the blog's postings and readers' comments evoke certain modes of…
Descriptors: Web Sites, Electronic Publishing, Native Speakers, Second Language Learning
Morris, Jill – ProQuest LLC, 2011
As the culmination of a two-year long Internet ethnographic study of three separate sites, I use examples of women and minorities fighting against discrimination online to explore the power structures inherent to networks and how these might affect classroom practice. I will show how our ordinary assumptions in rhetoric and composition as well as…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Females, Ethnography, Internet
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Rambe, Patient – Journal of Information Technology Education, 2011
Social networking sites (SNS) affordances for persistent interaction, collective generation of knowledge, and formation of peer-based clusters for knowledge sharing render them useful for developing constructivist knowledge environments. However, notwithstanding their academic value, these environments are not necessarily insulated from the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Computer Science Education, Information Technology, Social Networks
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Guzzetti, Barbara J. – E-Learning, 2008
Cyberculture has been more celebrated as establishing sites of possibilities than critiqued as a source of limitations for identity representation. Few researchers have explored through "in situ" interviews and their own online participation how electronic forums may actually prevent young women's representations of themselves in cyberspace.…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Rhetoric, Females, Social Networks
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Tamatea, Laurence – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2008
The intent of this article is to explore how No Child Left Behind (NCLB) emerges from a discursive frame that is also used in relation to neoliberal corporate conquests and, significantly, America's war on terror. The article first demonstrates through reference to online resistance discourses and NCLB, how NCLB is a product of and reproduces the…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Educational Policy, Terrorism, Discourse Analysis