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Helena Pedersen – Teaching in Higher Education, 2025
What does it mean to teach in higher education (HE) from vantage points that do not privilege human self-interest, but include nonhuman animals as significant subjects of educational practice? This paper addresses human-animal relations as a nascent area of HE pedagogy. It explores premises of, and approaches to post-anthropocentric HE pedagogies…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Teaching Methods, Higher Education, Humanism
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Anna Garrido; Digna Couso – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2025
The importance of models and modeling in science education is well-recognized, yet there exists significant polysemy among these terms within the literature. This ambiguity often leads to confusion, particularly regarding whether modeling represents an expected student performance, an instructional strategy to promote such performance, or both.…
Descriptors: Science Education, Learner Engagement, Models, Educational Practices
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Jorge Oceja; Carmen Álvarez-Álvarez – Electronic Journal of e-Learning, 2025
Although the term streaming is polysemic, nowadays it is generally understood as real time communication between broadcasters of information (or streamers) and their community, through popular platforms such as Twitch or YouTube Live. As there is a lack of knowledge about the educational impact of this kind of streaming on higher education, the…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Computer Mediated Communication, Social Media, Educational Practices
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Gábor Király; Ildikó Dén-Nagy – Action Learning: Research and Practice, 2025
Higher education institutions can be key agents of innovation and regional development. Nevertheless, they are in a transition period: good, tried, and tested practices no longer work or do not work as well as they used to, while new, fully developed, and widely applied solutions are yet to emerge. In this paper, we investigate to what extent…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Business Education, Higher Education, Educational Change
Office of Special Education Programs, US Department of Education, 2025
Children with typical hearing and vision learn to communicate by watching and listening to others. But children who are deafblind have limited access to learning this way. They need knowledgeable educators who understand how deafblindness impacts learning--who know how to assess a child's communication and plan for and engage in meaningful…
Descriptors: Children, Deaf Blind, Communication Skills, Skill Development
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Yujun Xu; Junwei Qian – Sport, Education and Society, 2025
There is a paradox between the demands for safety and the productive value of risk in outdoor education and adventure learning. This seems particularly to be the case in Chinese culture, policy, and empirical practice of outdoor education. This paper aims to utilise the rich cultural context and philosophical perspectives of China to broaden the…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Religion, Safety, Risk
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Rotem Maor – Psychology in the Schools, 2025
Teachers play an important role in treating and preventing school bullying; however, there are instances when they do not act to stop or prevent this phenomenon. There are multiple factors that predict whether and how teachers respond to school bullying. The current study focuses on teachers' Social Dominance Orientation (SDO) as a predictor of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes, Intention, Prevention
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Santiago Rincon-Gallardo – Professional Development in Education, 2025
This conceptual article presents a challenge to the dominant view and practice of teacher professional learning and its focus on preparing "experts in teaching" and proposes instead an emphasis on preparing "experts in learning." Drawing on contemporary knowledge on the nature of human learning and development, and in…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Educational Innovation, Foreign Countries, Expertise
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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
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David A. G. Berg; Naomi Ingram; Mustafa Asil; Jenny Ward; Jeffrey K. Smith – Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education, 2025
This study explored teachers' self-efficacy in teaching mathematics (SETM) as related to their teaching profile and pedagogical practices. Using data from 327 New Zealand primary teachers, a multilevel structural equation model was constructed and analyzed that looked at the relationships among SETM and effective pedagogical practice scales and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Self Efficacy, Mathematics Instruction, Educational Practices
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Laura Arnau-Sabatés; Georgeta Ion; Linda Wang; Marta Kowalczuk-Waledziak – Higher Education Quarterly, 2025
Integrating research into teaching gives future practitioners the opportunity to inform and enhance their own professional capacities and practices with research. This study analyses integration practices currently employed by a sample of 124 university teachers delivering teacher education and education studies courses from three…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Educational Practices, Teacher Education
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Asyrul Fikri; Cheri Saputra; Middya Boty; Muhammad Rico; Ilmiawan; Muadz Assidiqi; Johan Setiawan – Journal of Education and Learning (EduLearn), 2025
Student teams' achievement divisions (STAD) is a learning method that can provide active responses to students so that learning is maximized, but this method is still very rarely used by social studies teachers, thus making social studies learning less than optimal. The purpose of this study is to analyze the effectiveness of the question students…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Studies, Grade 7, Junior High Schools
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Martha Perez-Mugg – Educational Theory, 2025
Recent calls by legislators to exclude "divisive concepts" and histories from our curricula pose a challenge to the development of students' epistemic responsibility and agency in classrooms. In this paper, Martha Perez-Mugg examines the classroom as a space for the development of epistemic responsibility, ultimately suggesting that…
Descriptors: Misinformation, Teaching Methods, Epistemology, Responsibility
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Davut Nhem – International Journal of Comparative Education and Development, 2025
Purpose: The teaching-research nexus (TRN) has assumed a prominent role in global higher education systems. However, the connection between the two domains has been subject to diverse interpretations within well-developed higher education systems. Little is known about translating TRN into policy and practice in diverse higher education spaces. In…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Educational Policy, Educational Practices
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Presley Shilling; Jeffrey M. Byford; Alisha Milam – SRATE Journal, 2025
Drawing on three decades of research, this study explores the attitudes of middle school social studies teachers toward professional development in Western Tennessee. Social studies educators frequently navigate the repercussions of the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act, which has led to misguided incentives for states and districts to prioritize…
Descriptors: Middle School Teachers, Social Studies, Faculty Development, Teacher Attitudes
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