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Karen Nociti – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2025
Environmental provocations are a common pedagogical strategy for early childhood educators and are often planned for the purpose of contributing to the wider goals of sustainability and environmental education. However, the transformative potential of the environmental provocation is compromised by its grounding in human-centric perspectives of…
Descriptors: Physical Environment, Environmental Education, Early Childhood Education, Homosexuality
Elke Nissen; Suzi Marques Spatti Cavalari; Solange Aranha – Language Learning & Technology, 2025
This exploratory study investigates the relationship between students' anxiety and social presence (SP) in virtual exchange (VE). While existing literature predominantly focuses on a single type of anxiety in online learning (i.e., FLA or online learning anxiety), this study examines (a) the various types of anxiety students experience in…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Anxiety, Electronic Learning, College Students
Naja Ferjan Ramírez; Aeddan Claflin – Developmental Science, 2025
Parental language input is a key predictor of child language achievement. Parentese is a widely used style of child-directed speech (CDS) distinguished by a higher pitch and larger pitch range. A recent parent coaching randomized control trial (Parentese-RCT) demonstrated that English-speaking US parents who were coached to use parentese with…
Descriptors: Child Language, Speech Communication, Linguistic Input, Parent Child Relationship
Reflecting on Metaphors and the Possibilities of 'Language Change' in Teaching and Teacher Education
Zvi Bekerman; MIchalinos Zembylas – European Journal of Teacher Education, 2025
The paper suggests that 'language change' might hold an important key to aspects of educational reform and to the betterment of teacher education. The language we identify as contributing the most to the ineffectiveness of educational reform is the educational language impregnated by psychologised metaphors, which dominate educational discourses…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Figurative Language, Teacher Education, Educational Change
Erçin Ayhan – Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology - TOJET, 2025
This qualitative study investigates collocational awareness among instructors of Turkish as a Foreign/Second Language (TFSL), focusing on how regular collocation-focused activities influence their teaching practices. While the study was conducted in the Teaching Turkish as a Second Language (TSL) context at a private university in Türkiye, the…
Descriptors: Turkish, Second Language Instruction, Private Colleges, Language Usage
Xia Fang – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2024
Whether creativity can be taught or not has remained an unresolved and recurring topic of debate in creative writing. Writing that is creative and imaginative is distinguished from translation, which is more derivative. However, both activities are creative in their own unique ways. With the intent of fostering creativity in creative writing, I…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Translation, Poetry, Creativity
Verónica Vidal; Pamela Urra; María Fernanda Cerda Diez; Carla Becerra León; María Consuelo Ramos Alarcón; Juan P. Cortés – Topics in Language Disorders, 2024
The discussion about the words and concepts related to autism is alive in the scholarly community, tacitly or explicitly. Contrasting ideologies linked to the medical model and neurodiversity paradigm underlie terminology referring to autism. The present proof-of-concept study conducted a critical discourse analysis of the terminology (i.e.,…
Descriptors: Vocabulary, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Periodicals, Attitudes toward Disabilities
Nicholas D. Duran; Amie Paige; Sidney K. D'Mello – Cognitive Science, 2024
Cocreating meaning in collaboration is challenging. Success is often determined by people's abilities to coordinate their language to converge upon shared mental representations. Here we explore one set of low-level linguistic behaviors, linguistic alignment, that both emerges from, and facilitates, outcomes of high-level convergence. Linguistic…
Descriptors: Task Analysis, Semantics, Syntax, Problem Solving
Evrim Dalyan Eberdes; Elza Alisova Demirdag – Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology - TOJET, 2024
Societies cannot destroy the old system of faith while accepting a new religion. Human begins to transform the new belief system within the old belief system. One of the things they have to convert is the terminology of religion, which they accept. The change process of this new religious terminology can give concrete findings about the learning,…
Descriptors: Religion, Vocabulary, Social Change, Language Usage
Alessandro Miani; Lonneke van der Plas; Adrian Bangerter – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2024
Conspiracy theories (CTs) are spectacular narratives, widely spread, that pose societal threats. We test whether CTs might be linguistically creative products, which would facilitate their transmission and thereby account for their widespread popularity. We analyzed nominal compounds (e.g., "mind control," "carbon dioxide"; N =…
Descriptors: Misinformation, Creativity, Language Usage, Discourse Analysis
Andrea Karsten – Written Communication, 2024
In the past decades, the notion of voice in the theorizing and teaching of academic writing has been the subject of much debate and conceptual change, especially concerning its relation to writer identity. Many newer accounts of voice and identity in academic writing draw on the dialogical concept of voice by Bakhtin. However, some theoretical and…
Descriptors: Academic Language, Psycholinguistics, Teacher Education, Writing Attitudes
Lucinda McKnight; Cara Shipp – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to share findings from empirically driven conceptual research into the implications for English teachers of understanding generative AI as a "tool" for writing. Design/methodology/approach: The paper reports early findings from an Australian National Survey of English teachers and interrogates the…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Writing Strategies, English Instruction, Language Usage
Rebecca L. Parker – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2024
High-level literacy skills are required for full participation in the democratic process through voting. Consequently, adults with low-level literacy skills are at a disadvantage. This work investigated the disparity between the readability of U.S. ballot propositions for year 2022 state elections and grade level reading estimates ([less than or…
Descriptors: Adult Literacy, Adults, Voting, Political Issues
Iker Erdocia; Josep Soler – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
This study aims to contribute to the ongoing scholarly debate about linguistic privilege in academia. The article pushes this debate forward by considering the role of English in the career development of academics in Anglophone universities. More concretely, our study empirically explores the career trajectories of multilingual scholars in…
Descriptors: Language Usage, English (Second Language), Multilingualism, College Faculty
Louw, Marti; Sanford-Dolly, Camellia W. – Science Education, 2024
Scientific observation is a disciplinary-informed way of looking at the world that requires the coordination of domain knowledge and perceptual skills with specialized tools and techniques to systematically identify objects, organisms, specimens, or phenomena of interest. Identification is a particular form of skilled observational practice where…
Descriptors: Volunteers, Observation, Identification, Biology

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