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Showing 1 to 15 of 38 results Save | Export
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Barker, Timothy H.; Pollock, Danielle; Stone, Jennifer C.; Klugar, Miloslav; Scott, Anna M.; Stern, Cindy; Wiechula, Rick; Shamseer, Larissa; Aromataris, Edoardo; Ross-White, Amanda; Munn, Zachary – Research Synthesis Methods, 2023
Synthesizers of evidence are increasingly likely to encounter studies published in predatory journals during the evidence synthesis process. The evidence synthesis discipline is uniquely positioned to encounter novel concerns associated with predatory journals. The objective of this research was to explore the attitudes, opinions, and experiences…
Descriptors: Journal Articles, Periodicals, Evidence, Synthesis
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Julian Taupe; Rainer W. Alexandrowicz; Andreas Bollin; Peter Schartner – Informatics in Education, 2025
Integrating the understanding of digital threats into informatics education is crucial for preparing pupils to navigate the complexities of the digital world. This study provides foundational insights for embedding digital safety competencies within informatics curricula by prioritizing key threats faced by young people. Through data collected…
Descriptors: Digital Literacy, Safety Education, Statistics Education, Foreign Countries
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Fredrick Otike; Asmaa Bouaamri – Education for Information, 2024
Scholarly publishing is considered one of the most frustrating endeavors among academicians. For learners, it symbolizes the culmination of studies, whereas for academicians, it signifies promotion and acknowledgment. This paper highlights and discusses some of the breakthroughs and hindrances scholars, especially doctorate students, undergo in…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Writing (Composition), Faculty Publishing, Developing Nations
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Owen W. Tomlinson – Advances in Physiology Education, 2025
An increase in scholarly publishing has been accompanied by a proliferation of potentially illegitimate publishers (PIPs), commonly known as "predatory publishers." These PIPs often engage in fraudulent practices and publish articles that are not subject to the same scrutiny as those published in journals from legitimate publishers…
Descriptors: Physiology, Publications, Scholarship, Writing (Composition)
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Oravec, Jo Ann – Tertiary Education and Management, 2020
Community engagement has played central roles in tertiary education, expanding the potentials for academic as well as civic enhancement. Such efforts are often undertaken in part with the use of metrics, as tertiary education institutions attempt to reach various community audiences with quantitatively-supported defenses of their missions, through…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Postsecondary Education, Games, Deception
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Nejadghanbar, Hassan; Hu, Guangwei; Jahangiri Babadi, Maryam – Language Teaching, 2023
This study examines the experiences and motivations of language and linguistics academics who have published in potential predatory journals (PPJs). A questionnaire was administered to 2,793 academics with publications in 63 language and linguistics PPJs, and 213 of them returned their responses. A subsample of the respondents (n = 21) also…
Descriptors: Publishing Industry, Writing for Publication, Periodicals, Deception
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Berkovich, Izhak; Perry-Hazan, Lotem – Educational Researcher, 2022
This essay coins and conceptualizes the term "publicwashing." In educational systems and organizations, publicwashing is a symbolic communication that emphasizes organizational publicness for the purpose of a superficial repair of reputation. The essay defines publicwashing and describes its motives and manifestations. Additionally, it…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Reputation, Charter Schools, Public Relations
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Andrea A. Wirth – portal: Libraries and the Academy, 2025
This paper describes results of a 2023 survey of authors who applied to University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) Open Article Fund, a fund that supports article processing charges (APCs). The survey sought feedback about the fund's impact, value, and award criteria as well as opinions on other open access topics. Results show that the fund has had a…
Descriptors: Universities, Access to Information, Authors, Attitudes
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Ranschaert, Rachel – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2020
This qualitative, longitudinal study traces the development of preservice social studies teachers' awareness of and reaction to the current climate of truth decay over the course of their initial certification program. By drawing a parallel between Bakhtin's concept of the carnivalesque and the current online media landscape, this study found that…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Media Literacy, Ethics, Preservice Teacher Education
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Jeniece Tyria Lusk; Kara Jones; Alanna Ross; Veronique Lecat – New Review of Academic Librarianship, 2023
Open access (OA) publishing presents university librarians, administrators, and faculty researchers with a paradox of both opportunities and challenges. For faculty researchers in particular, the decision of whether to pursue OA publication of their scholarship is driven by their perceptions of the credibility and quality of OA publishing. While…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Access to Information, College Faculty, Teacher Researchers
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Sá, Maria José; Ferreira, Carlos Miguel; Santos, Ana Isabel; Serpa, Sandro – International Journal of Higher Education, 2020
At a time of great dynamism among publishers of scientific publications, with the inevitability of Open Access and the ease of publishing online at low cost, it is possible to find publications with different levels of scientific respectability. In this context, the improvement of the quality of scholarly publications emerges as a critical element…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Faculty Publishing, Scientific Research, Periodicals
Kayyali, Mustafa – Online Submission, 2022
Diploma mills, also known as fake universities or degree mills, are organizations that offer unaccredited degrees for a fee. They exploit the value and prestige associated with a university degree, often without offering any meaningful education or qualifications. In recent years, the rise of online education and the increasing importance of a…
Descriptors: Universities, Reputation, Institutional Evaluation, Institutional Characteristics
Kristen Buras – Network for Public Education, 2025
For the 20-year memorial of Hurricane Katrina, Tulane University's Education Research Alliance (ERA) for New Orleans widely disseminated a policy brief entitled "The New Orleans Post-Katrina School Reforms: 20 Years of Lessons," which lauded "large gains in achievement" in the city's all-charter school district. This critique…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, School Districts, African American Students, Research Reports
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Silver, Ike; Shaw, Alex – Cognitive Science, 2018
Across a variety of situations, people strongly condemn plagiarizers who steal credit for ideas, even when the theft in question does not appear to harm anyone. Why would people react negatively to relatively harmless acts of plagiarism? In six experiments, we predict and find that these negative reactions are driven by people's aversion toward…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Evidence, Intellectual Property, Authors
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Shuttleworth, Jay M.; Patterson, Timothy – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2020
The American media has historically favored conservative critiques when reporting about national history exam results. Utilizing the frameworks of critical media studies and collective memory, this mixed methods study analyzes the media responses to the 2014 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) United States history exam. Findings…
Descriptors: Criticism, News Reporting, Tests, United States History
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