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Monika Parchomiuk; Katarzyna Cwirynkalo; Agnieszka Zyta – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2025
Background: The perception and experience of death with respect to individuals with intellectual disability are almost unexplored in the Polish context. We aimed to understand how these persons conceptualise death, understand their experiences associated with it, and the meanings they ascribe to it. Method: The study was designed and conducted…
Descriptors: Death, Comprehension, Intellectual Disability, Concept Formation
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Heesoo Ha; Jongchan Park; Ying-Chih Chen – Research in Science Education, 2024
Sensemaking is conceptualized as a trajectory to develop better understanding and is advocated as one of the fundamental practices in science education. However, the field is lacking of a framework to view the prolonged process of sensemaking that starts from a raise of uncertainty of a target phenomenon to a grasping of a better understanding of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Education, Comprehension, Concept Formation
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Shen Yong Ho; R. Subramaniam – Research in Science & Technological Education, 2024
Background: Recognizing the relatively few studies that have explored university students' understanding and alternative conceptions in linear and circular motion as well as the relatively few studies that have used 2-dimensional multiple-choice questions (MCQs) in the science education literature, this study set out to contribute to these areas.…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Motion, Scientific Concepts, Concept Formation
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Shuaishuai Mi; Tiantian Zong; Xiaojuan Yang; Weiling Gui – Science & Education, 2025
This study used structural topic models (STMs) to analyze physics pre-service teachers' conceptual understanding of scientific literacy. Participants included 126 physics pre-service teachers studying at Shandong Normal University in China. First, we used an open-ended questionnaire to collect the data. Second, STM was used to classify the data,…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Teachers, Preservice Teachers, Scientific Literacy
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Corinna Hankeln; Susanne Prediger – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2025
There has been a consensus that students' conceptual understanding of mathematical operations (such as multiplication) can be developed through communication about multiple representations. However, learning opportunities have often appeared to be limited to surface translations (in which only obvious similarities such as numbers have been…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Concept Formation, Language Usage
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Karin Bergman – Education Inquiry, 2025
As phenomena, time, and history, particularly the nature of the two and how to tell them apart, are not easily defined. In the tradition of historical consciousness, time, and the human understanding of the nature of time are defined as a part of a historical consciousness, where this may more or less evolved. In this study, students aged 11 were…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Time, History, Preadolescents
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Analita, Rizki Nur; Bakti, Iriani; Nugraheni, Putranty Widha; Noviyanti, Ester – Journal of Education and Learning (EduLearn), 2023
The learners' conceptual understanding has become one of the leading research areas conducted by educational researchers. Both students and current educators should actively work to improve their understanding of alternative conceptions and deepen their conceptual knowledge. One of the essential concepts in chemistry learning is colligative…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Chemistry, Scientific Concepts, Foreign Countries
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Michal Pinhas – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Our mental representation of the infinite has received little research attention in cognitive psychology. In countably infinite sets, the infinity symbol (8) is presumed to be perceived as larger than any finite natural number. The present study sought to explore if the infinity symbol is processed as "larger than" natural numbers, and,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Concept Formation, Number Concepts, Mathematics Education
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Adrien Alejandro Fillon; Fabien Girandola; Nathalie Bonnardel; Lionel Souchet – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2025
People systematically overlook subtractive changes and favor additive ones when reporting new ideas. In a first preregistered experiment conducted via the Prolific platform among French adults (N = 477), we replicated experiments 2, 3, and 4 in Adams et al.'s study. We replicated the overlooking of subtraction, as participants reported 1155…
Descriptors: Cues, Social Behavior, Norms, Adults
Navinesh Thanabalasingam; Berinderjeet Kaur; Weng Kin Ho – Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia, 2025
This paper examines Grade 10 students' conceptions of proof in a secondary school in Singapore. Using a purposive survey of 9 mathematical items, proofs by 8 students for two items, one on Number and Algebra and another on Geometry and Trigonometry, were coded using Harel's proof schemes. The findings show that the students' proofs for the two…
Descriptors: Grade 10, Secondary School Students, Mathematical Logic, Validity
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Camille Warrington; Kristine Langhoff; Becky Warnock – Health Education Journal, 2025
Background: The use of participatory visual methods in humanities, health, education and social science research to study 'sensitive' subject matter with children and young people is growing. Such approaches have been widely -- though sometimes uncritically -- celebrated for contributing to safe data elicitation, promoting participant influence…
Descriptors: Rape, Photography, Participatory Research, Concept Formation
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Meredith Smith; Tricia McGuire-Adams; Kaylee Eady – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2025
Health professional learners are increasingly called to learn about health inequity to reduce inequities and improve patient care and health outcomes. Anti-oppression pedagogy (AOP) addresses the need for health professional learners to understand multiple health inequities and the structures and systems that produce inequities. However, the…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Social Justice, Power Structure, Racism
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T. G. K. Bryce; E. J. Blown – British Educational Research Journal, 2025
This paper provides a critical and detailed study of what researchers in the fields of contemporary cognition and neuroscience have revealed about the blurred boundary between perception and cognition. We set out the arguments with a view to what researchers and teachers should now consider regarding the subtleties of their interrelationship in…
Descriptors: Perception, Cognitive Processes, Science Education, Children
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Taksina Sreelohor; Sarawut Jakpeng; Sumalee Chaijaroen – Journal of Education and Learning, 2025
This study aims to develop and validate a Constructivist Learning Environment Model to address secondary students' misconceptions in learning Science. Employing a Design and Development approach (Richey & Klein, 2007), the research is conducted in two phases. Phase 1 focuses on model design, drawing from an extensive literature review to…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Science Education, Scientific Concepts, Misconceptions
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Vaunam P. Venkadasalam; Nicole E. Larsen; Patricia A. Ganea – Developmental Psychology, 2024
Evaluating evidence and restructuring beliefs based on anomalous evidence are fundamental aspects of scientific reasoning. These skills can be challenging for both children and adults, especially in domains where they possess inaccurate prior beliefs that can interfere with the acquisition of correct scientific information (e.g., heavier objects…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Young Children, Concept Formation, Cognitive Development
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