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Kohlberg Moral Judgment…1
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Vanessa Svihla; Megan Jacobs; Tim Castillo; Mary Tsiongas; Leah Buechley; Drew Trujillo; Amy Traylor; Megan Tucker; Reuben Fresquez; Jaziel Cervantes-Carreon; Sydney Nesbit – International Journal of Designs for Learning, 2024
Speculative design, as a diverse set of methods that aim to offer critique, can be challenging to engage productively. In this design case, we share how a prior, stalled design project--an ambitious vision of interdisciplinary design education partnered with business and housing development projects in Santa Fe, New Mexico--provided compelling…
Descriptors: Design, Futures (of Society), Interdisciplinary Approach, College Faculty
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Cooper, William H. – Management Teaching Review, 2019
Teaching our successors about the art of theory building can be a challenge. If you have taught a theory-building course in any of our fields, you may have experienced a common hazard: The seminar can devolve into yet another methods course when the more methodologically inclined take over, focusing the class's attention on the flaws in tests of…
Descriptors: Theories, Business Administration Education, Questioning Techniques, Teaching Methods
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Tatebe, Jennifer – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2015
This paper examines the ethics review process for external researchers. Analysis of some ethical concerns and dilemmas experienced while conducting a multi-site study illustrates the complexities of researching in different contexts. Reflections on identity politics, and ethics review policies and practices expose the tensions between research…
Descriptors: Ethics, Researchers, Research Problems, Context Effect
Maura Sellars – Sage Research Methods Cases, 2016
This research project case discusses the methodology and research tools used in an action research study that was designed to support students' intrapersonal intelligence as defined by Howard Gardner (1993) in both the dimensions of self-knowledge and the cognitive capacities of executive function (Moran & Gardner, 2007). This involved…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Executive Function, Action Research, Research Methodology
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Lane, David; Oswald, Frederick L. – Educational Measurement: Issues and Practice, 2016
The educational literature, the popular press, and educated laypeople have all echoed a conclusion from the book "Academically Adrift" by Richard Arum and Josipa Roksa (which has now become received wisdom), namely, that 45% of college students showed no significant gains in critical thinking skills. Similar results were reported by…
Descriptors: College Students, Critical Thinking, Thinking Skills, Statistical Analysis
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Wendt, Maria; Åse, Cecilia – Studies in Higher Education, 2015
Essay-writing is generally viewed as the primary learning activity to foster independence and analytical thinking. In this article, we show that independent research projects do not necessarily lead to critical thinking. University-level education on conducting independent projects can, in several respects, counteract enhanced analytical skills.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Essays, Research Projects
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Kim, John J. – Cognition, 1997
Discusses Lawrence A. Hirschfeld's (1995) experiments, which Hirschfeld claims demonstrate that preschoolers use a biologically grounded theory in reasoning about race. Argues that the methods used cannot address the issue and therefore, the results do not support Hirschfeld's claims. Maintains that the experiments fail to demonstrate that 4- and…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Childhood Attitudes, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Langford, Peter E. – 1996
Failure to separate judicial reasoning (the application of rules) from legislative reasoning (the justification of rules) in earlier studies is claimed to invalidate most previous developmental research using moral dilemma interviews. Two studies used a novel method of scoring moral dilemma interviews that separates judicial from legislative…
Descriptors: Children, Decision Making, Decision Making Skills, Evaluative Thinking
Baldwin, Cynthia; Huggins, Don W. – 1995
Although feminist perspectives about research have not been presented in a unified paradigm, feminist theory has helped to expose and demystify the empirical assumption of objectivity as the only way to truth in research. The feminist perspective in research represents alternate, non-oppressive formulations of what constitutes meaningful and valid…
Descriptors: Experimenter Characteristics, Feminism, Humanization, Postsecondary Education
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Hubbard, Richard W.; Ritchie, Kathy L. – Teaching of Psychology, 1995
Maintains that undergraduate psychology curricula almost always include one or more required experimental courses. Describes the use of the human subjects review process as a method of stimulating critical thinking. Discusses questions posed by the review process and classroom applications of the approach. (CFR)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Course Content, Course Descriptions, Critical Thinking
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Willie, Charles V. – International Journal of Social Education, 1995
Maintains that social science mistakenly has emphasized symmetry (social forces that correct disequilibrium and maintain balance) over asymmetry (antithetical forces that support and embody divergent thinking). Calls for a more open, intuitive, and creative approach to research and methodology. (MJP)
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Divergent Thinking, Educational Principles, Educational Theories