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Ucan, Serkan; Özmen, Zehra Kiliç – International Journal of Curriculum and Instructional Studies, 2023
As a pedagogical approach aiming at increasing the quality of classroom talk, dialogic teaching and learning puts an emphasis on students' understanding and thinking and supports their learning process in numerous ways. As recent studies show, alongside promoting students' cognitive, social, and emotional development, dialogic teaching and…
Descriptors: Social Emotional Learning, Dialogs (Language), Teaching Methods, Classroom Communication
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Qiongli Zhu; Sarfaroz Niyozov – Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2024
This article presents a case study of an online course that cross-pollinated Universal Design for Learning (UDL) and dialogic teaching to facilitate deep learning. Conceptualized through the UDL framework, dialogue and dialogic teaching, and deep learning, our analysis employs the methods of design-based research and thematic analysis to unpack…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Access to Education, Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education
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Kraatz, Elizabeth; von Spiegel, Jacqueline; Sayers, Robin; Brady, Anna C. – Theory Into Practice, 2022
Controversial topics may be uncomfortable for teachers to include in their in-class discussions. However, there are considerable cognitive and social-emotional benefits to engagement in controversial conversations, or classroom discussion about controversial topics. It is critical that teachers support students in respectful discussion to help…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Educational Benefits, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Teaching Methods
Resnick, Lauren B.; Asterhan, Christa S. C.; Clarke, Sherice N. – UNESCO International Bureau of Education, 2018
"Accountable Talk" begins with students thinking out loud about a complex problem that requires collaboration: noticing something about the problem, questioning a surprising finding, or articulating, explaining, and reflecting upon their own reasoning. The teacher works to elicit a range of ideas, which may be incomplete. With teacher…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Dialogs (Language), Educational Practices, Teacher Student Relationship
Skidmore, David, Ed.; Murakami, Kyoko, Ed. – Multilingual Matters, 2016
This book provides a wide-ranging and in-depth theoretical perspective on dialogue in teaching. It explores the philosophy of dialogism as a social theory of language and explains its importance in teaching and learning. Departing from the more traditional teacher-led mode of teacher-student communication, the dialogic approach is more egalitarian…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Teaching Methods, Second Language Learning, Social Theories
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Burger, Kaspar – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2015
This research article attempts to determine strategies that can be used to support children's cognitive and social-emotional development in early childhood care and education programs. By synthesizing empirical evidence about pedagogical techniques that promote children's competencies, the article aims to identify those characteristics of programs…
Descriptors: Child Development, Language Acquisition, Cognitive Development, Teaching Methods
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Hopkins, Larissa E.; Domingue, Andrea D. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2015
A central goal of intergroup dialogue (IGD) is to strengthen individual and collective capacities to foster social justice commitments by supporting new ways of thinking about oneself, others, and the social structures in which we live. Relatedly, IGD assists individuals with building multicultural competencies and skill sets that support peoples'…
Descriptors: Skill Development, Social Justice, Dialogs (Language), Intergroup Relations
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Fisher, Robert – Early Child Development and Care, 2007
This paper explores the important relationship between dialogue and cognitive and metacognitive development in young children. The characteristics of dialogue are identified and a case is presented for involving young children in talking to think through philosophical discussion. The paper provides a theoretical context for kinds of metacognitive…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Young Children, Metacognition, Classroom Research
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Berthoff, Ann E. – College English, 1984
Assesses the hazards of models of cognitive development and the positivist views of language that support them. Considers how alternative views of language and learning can help develop a method of teaching that views reading and writing as interpretation and the making of meaning. (RBW)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Mapping, Communication Research, Comprehension
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Rogers, Dwight L.; And Others – Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 1987
Examines the verbal interactions of one teacher with young children (three to five years old) in a preschool classroom through an analysis of her questions and dialogue. Results indicated this teacher asked questions encouraging open, extended conversations, and maintained natural and child-centered conversations with children. (Author/BB)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Cognitive Development, Dialogs (Language), Language Acquisition
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Englert, Carol Sue; And Others – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1994
This article reports on implementation of the Early Literacy Project with primary level students with mild disabilities. Special attention is given to one preconventional writer whose performance was advanced by involving him in literacy activities in advance of competence, using meaningful text representations to scaffold performance, and…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Cognitive Development, Dialogs (Language), Learning Disabilities
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Genishi, Celia; And Others – Language Arts, 1988
Claims that although a child-oriented classroom is organized by the teacher, the curriculum is enacted by everyone, and that dialogues in which teachers and children develop together provides the core of this enactment. (MM)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Environment, Cognitive Development, Computer Assisted Instruction