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Michalinos Zembylas – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2025
The purpose of this paper is to highlight the political potential of boredom as an affirmative negation of neoliberalism in higher education. On this account, boredom is re-inscribed as a political affect and emotion that interrupts neoliberalism and capitalism. This discussion troubles the idea of boredom as a psychologised, individualised…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Psychological Patterns, Student Interests, Affective Behavior
Jade Da Costa; Skylar Sookpaiboon – Whiteness and Education, 2025
This article examines the racism and whiteness we felt attending a graduate course in the Fall of 2019. We revisit two moments of the course to highlight how academia is imbued with whiteness at a spatial and affectual level, exemplifying what we call "white affect." The first moment constitutes the official start of the course, the…
Descriptors: Racism, Whites, Higher Education, Affective Behavior
Majid Ghasemy – Educational Research for Policy and Practice, 2025
Sustainable service-led universities actively promote sustainability initiatives and service provision. In this context, servant leadership is relevant for higher education, since it ensures sustainable performance over time, encourages the idea of serving stakeholders (e.g., students, staff, and beyond), and is in alignment with the concept of…
Descriptors: Leadership Styles, Higher Education, Sustainability, Educational Policy
Zembylas, Michalinos – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2023
This paper turns our attention to a rather neglected dimension of (de)colonization, namely, the affective elements of (de)colonization in the context of higher education. "Affective decolonization" highlights that decolonization has to also happen at the level of affective life. The notion of affective decolonization complements the work…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Higher Education, Program Effectiveness, Affective Behavior
Karen Gravett; Simon Lygo-Baker – Studies in Higher Education, 2025
In this article, we examine how thinking with affect theory offers fertility within higher education studies to see and do teaching and learning differently. For many educators in universities, the idea that teaching is a cognitive process of information transmission is still taken-for-granted. These beliefs are visible through the persistence of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Emotional Response, Psychological Patterns, Affective Behavior
Cory Legassic – LEARNing Landscapes, 2024
This piece offers a conceptual framework for collective care as pedagogy in higher education, and a proposition of how to theorize its orientations within anticolonial and feminist work on affect in education. First, I spotlight work that helps to define collective care. Next, I call on the concept of affective individualism as a way to describe…
Descriptors: Caring, Higher Education, Decolonization, Feminism
Ting Sun; Tong Wu; Florence Martin; Carl Westine – Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia, 2025
Multimedia-based education focuses on utilizing various digital media elements, such as text, images, sound, video, and animation in learning material. In this second-order meta-analysis, 14 first-order meta-analyses were included to investigate the effect of multimedia-based education on learning outcomes. In addition, moderator analyses were…
Descriptors: Multimedia Instruction, Educational Technology, Instructional Effectiveness, Educational Environment
Lund, Rebecca W. B. – Gender and Education, 2023
This article explores affective alignment and epistemic polarization in the field of feminist research, resulting from the neoliberalization of the universities and a performance-oriented research economy. Previous research has described and analysed the 'epistemic splitting' that feminist scholars engage in to live up to standardized performance…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Feminism, Educational Research, Neoliberalism
Rajkishore Roul; Ramakanta Mohalik – Journal of Educational Technology, 2025
Engaging students in learning activities is the main responsibility of teacher. The responsibility becomes more challenging when we approach the teaching and learning process through an online platform. Students at all levels, from elementary schools to graduate need to have some specific engagement arrangements in virtual or online platform for…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Learner Engagement
Mollie Baker – Prism: Casting New Light on Learning, Theory & Practice, 2023
Drawing from the tensions within non-representational and human practice perspectives on affect, this paper continues the task of re-conceptualising academic-hlevel resistance in the context of UK higher education. Such re-conceptualisation is underpinned by the belief that illustrating the breadth of resistant possibility within and between…
Descriptors: Resistance (Psychology), Affective Behavior, College Students, Higher Education
Stein, Sharon – Australian Universities' Review, 2021
Conversations about academic freedom are never just about protecting the intellectual rigour of academic knowledge as an abstract object; they are also about the relational rigour of how, by whom, and to what ends that knowledge is produced, transmitted, circulated, and ultimately impacts both humans and other-than-human beings (Stein, in Lobo et…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Higher Education, Cognitive Processes, College Faculty
Shi, Wanchen – Journal of Education and Learning, 2022
The COVID-19 crisis made spaces for people to immerse themselves in moments of reflection. The suspension of time, sites, and body mobility, the collapse of the past principles; as the macro learning environment has undergone unprecedented changes, how could people read and react to those changes? Learning at the university, almost all the…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Human Body, Online Courses
Wen Xu – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
The growth of the Chinese language in African countries and African students' consequent flocking into Chinese higher education are both emergent phenomena. This partly explains the lack of empirical research on this body of student migrants and their Chinese language learning. This paper applies Watkins' theorisation on pedagogic affect to…
Descriptors: Chinese, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Foreign Students
Paul E. Bylsma; Riyad A. Shahjahan – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
We offer the concept of "proximate ambivalence" to highlight the ambiguity inherent in the social and spatial relations of higher education's digitally-mediated teaching and learning that replaced in-person seminars during the COVID-19 pandemic. By proximate ambivalence, we refer to one's simultaneous proximity and distance in relation…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Proximity, Technology Uses in Education
John Clayton; Paul Griffin; Graham Mowl – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2024
In this paper we reflect on our experiences teaching human geography across two modules that pedagogically centre student reflexivity through content that has potential to be dis-comforting. Drawing upon student experiences on two final year option modules, relating to social and spatial exclusion and "race", ethnicity and multiculture,…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Teaching Methods, Human Geography, Learning Experience

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