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Karen D. Könings; Tina Seidel – Educational Studies, 2025
Students' learning environments often change during school career, due to school transitions and the introduction of educational innovations, causing discontinuity in teaching and learning. Success of students entering a new learning environment depends in part on their prior expectations of education, as these influence later perceptions.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Curriculum, Secondary School Students, Expectation
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María Esther Téllez-Acosta; Scott McDonald; Andres Acher – International Journal of Science Education, 2024
Professional Vision (PV) has been used in teacher education to interpret novice teachers' learning in various educational contexts. To date, research has conceptualized this framework largely from a cognitive perspective of learning, overlooking the affordances of taking a sociocultural perspective. This theoretical paper aims to articulate the…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Teacher Education, Beginning Teachers, Sociocultural Patterns
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Mambu, Joseph Ernest – Critical Inquiry in Language Studies, 2023
One critical question for English language teachers is how their learners, especially in non-English-speaking developing countries, address global issues as they learn the foreign language. The question seems more viably answered following the United Nations' dissemination of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in 2015 to be achieved by 2030.…
Descriptors: Sustainable Development, Educational Objectives, Language Teachers, English (Second Language)
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Laura Greenhaw; Ana Martin-Ryals; Jonathan Orsini – Journal of Agricultural Education, 2025
According to employers, college graduates should possess interpersonal skills including the ability to work in and lead teams. Many instructors incorporate group projects in their courses to encourage student development of teamwork and leadership skills through experience. Research suggests, however, these skills must be taught explicitly. To…
Descriptors: College Students, Teaching Methods, Teamwork, Experiential Learning
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Ndudi Okechukwu Ezeamuzie; Mercy Noyenim Ezeamuzie – Review of Educational Research, 2025
Computer programming provides a framework for interdisciplinary learning in sciences, arts and languages. However, increasing integration of programming in K--12 shows that the block-based and text-based dichotomy of programming environments does not reflect the spectrum of their affordance. Hence, educators are confronted with a fundamental…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Elementary Secondary Education, Computer Science Education, Programming
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Jan Elen; Fien Depaepe – Educational Technology Research and Development, 2025
The relationship between technology and educational processes is a complex one. At this moment, increased digitization as well as efforts to limit the use of digital tools can be observed. In view of (a) deepening our understanding of the relationship between technology and educational processes and (b) strengthening the productive educational use…
Descriptors: Students, Teachers, Educational Technology, Learning Processes
Tamra Stambaugh; Elizabeth Covington; Emily L. Mofield – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2025
The focus of this article is on the development of expertise in interpreting literature within English Language Arts (ELA). Experts and novices differ significantly in how they approach problems and acquire information, with experts demonstrating more sophisticated pattern recognition, nuances, and conceptual understandings and approaches than…
Descriptors: Language Arts, English Curriculum, Expertise, Experienced Teachers
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Anthemis Raptopoulou – European Journal of Education, 2025
Recent advancements in Artificial Intelligence (AI), particularly AI chatbots like ChatGPT, have sparked significant discussions in higher education regarding their impact on teaching and academic integrity. This study examines the integration of ChatGPT into a philosophy of education course for first-year Education students at a Swedish…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Computer Software, Undergraduate Students, Literacy Education
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Christine N. Green – Language and Literacy Spectrum, 2025
In an era of rapidly advancing technology, integrating digital tools into literacy instruction has become a vital component of effective educational practice. This article presents findings from a case study examining how digital technology was incorporated into the literacy block of a first-grade classroom. Through sixteen hours of classroom…
Descriptors: Technology Integration, Literacy Education, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes
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M. El-Sayed; J. El-Sayed; K. Burke; D. Apple – European Journal of Education, 2025
In any educational setting, stigmatisation and implicit biases can stifle growth and reduce the quality of the learning experience of students from low socio-economic status by creating invisible barriers to opportunity and achievement. Furthermore, due to the lack of monitoring and mentoring, these invisible barriers become harder to detect and…
Descriptors: Social Bias, Negative Attitudes, Educational Environment, Attitude Change
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Kanarek, Jane L. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2021
Although Talmud study is central to rabbinical school curriculums, rabbinical students' experiences with Talmud study remain understudied. This article draws on interviews with students from five seminaries to argue that students describe Talmud study as a process of acquiring both knowledge and authenticity. These two goals intersect with a…
Descriptors: Judaism, Religious Education, Student Attitudes, Educational Objectives
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Li, Yuheng; Rakovic, Mladen; Poh, Boon Xin; Gaševic, Dragan; Chen, Guanliang – International Educational Data Mining Society, 2022
Learning objectives, especially those well defined by applying Bloom's taxonomy for Cognitive Objectives, have been widely recognized as important in various teaching and learning practices. However, many educators have difficulties developing learning objectives appropriate to the levels in Bloom's taxonomy, as they need to consider the…
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Taxonomy, Universities, Cognitive Ability
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Sheetal Deo; Mercedez Hinchcliff; Nguyen T. Thai; Mary Papakosmas; Paul Chad; Troy Heffernan; Belinda Gibbons – Journal of Marketing Education, 2024
This qualitative study aims to explore how a university-level School of Marketing integrates the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) into curriculum, using Bloom's Taxonomy, and to develop a reflective process that could be applied within tertiary education, more broadly. The research investigates the depth of SDG integration, with marketing…
Descriptors: Marketing, Business Administration Education, Sustainable Development, Objectives
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Hashem Alshurafat; Merwiey Alaqrabawi; Mohannad Obeid Al Shbail – Accounting Education, 2024
This paper aims to identify and explore the learning objectives outlining the core knowledge for forensic accounting education. Bloom's taxonomy is used to outline and analyze the core knowledge for forensic accounting education (e.g. fraud examination, litigation support, business valuation, and IT forensic accounting) in 15 Australian…
Descriptors: Accounting, Professional Education, Taxonomy, Universities
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Albert Rof; Andrea Bikfalvi; Pilar Marques – TechTrends: Linking Research and Practice to Improve Learning, 2025
Microlearning is gaining ground in the higher education domain. Despite this trend, there is a lack of evidence of effectiveness when a large number of microlearning units are grouped to form a macrolearning programme. The purpose of this paper is to explore how and why a macrolearning affects students' self-efficacy. The originality of this paper…
Descriptors: Business Education, Teaching Methods, Computer Assisted Instruction, Critical Thinking
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