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Emmanuel Dumbuya – Online Submission, 2025
The integration of artificial intelligence (AI) into educational ecosystems represents a paradigm shift in pedagogical practices and educational governance. While AI offers unprecedented opportunities to personalize learning, optimize administrative processes, and provide intelligent tutoring, it poses significant challenges to maintaining human…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Educational Technology, Technology Integration
Kaur, Navjot; Hirudayaraj, Malar – New Horizons in Adult Education & Human Resource Development, 2021
Although most researchers have argued that a leader's emotional intelligence (EI) capability positively influences organizational learning (OL), this relationship has only been studied at the surface level. Consequently, there is no clear explanation of how leaders facilitate various processes of learning at the individual, team, and…
Descriptors: Leadership, Emotional Intelligence, Organizational Culture, Self Concept
Lawrence, Randee Lipson – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2012
Intuitive knowing is one of the most complex and misunderstood ways of knowing. It is difficult to put into words and verbalize. Intuition is spontaneous, heart-centered, free, adventurous, imaginative, playful, nonsequential, and nonlinear. People access intuitive knowledge through dreams, symbols, artwork, dance, yoga, meditation, contemplation,…
Descriptors: Intuition, Adult Learning, Knowledge Level, Adult Education
Hedges, Helen – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2011
New Zealand's early childhood curriculum, "Te Whariki", has two learning outcomes, dispositions and working theories. While a sociocultural perspective of dispositions has received significant attention in research and teaching, "working theories" as a concept has remained somewhat nebulous. This paper describes ways teachers…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Intuition, Teaching Methods, Sociocultural Patterns
Peer reviewedBirgerstam, Pirjo – Studies in Higher Education, 2002
Emphasizes the role of intuition in the learning process where rational knowing alone does not suffice. Connects practical, didactic examples applied in a university course in psychology to some epistemological suppositions of different aspects of intuition. (EV)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Epistemology, Higher Education, Intuition
Peer reviewedLing, Charles X.; Marinov, Marin – Cognitive Science, 1994
Challenges Smolensky's theory that human intuitive/nonconscious cognitive processes can only be accurately explained in terms of subsymbolic computations in artificial neural networks. Symbolic learning models of two cognitive tasks involving nonconscious acquisition of information are presented: learning production rules and artificial finite…
Descriptors: Grammar, Intuition, Learning Processes, Mathematical Formulas
Peer reviewedLampert, Magdalene – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1984
Described is a project which explored how elementary teachers' intuitive knowledge (the common sense sort of information built from personal experimentation on the physical environment in contrast to formal knowledge learned in school) affects their educational practices. (RM)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Educational Practices, Educational Research, Elementary Education
Gattegno, Caleb – Mathematics Teaching Incorporating Micromath, 2007
Jean Louis Nicolet is a Swiss teacher of mathematics who found his subject so fascinating that he was puzzled as to why so many pupils could not share this enjoyment in their studies. He came to a conclusion which is now supported by the results of psychological research into the learning process: he suggested that the mind does not spontaneously…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Psychological Studies, Intuition, Geometry

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