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Robert Santiago; Otis Williams; Jorge Zaragoza; Haiwen Chu; Monique Evans – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2025
All students want to talk about ideas that interest them, but often, multilingual learners are not offered high-challenge, high-support opportunities to connect everyday experiences to mathematical ideas. We describe a single class period that connects students' everyday opinions with two-way tables and notions of independence.
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Mathematics Instruction, Student Attitudes, Probability
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Anneli Bergnell; Lisbeth Åberg-Bengtsson – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2025
This article is based on multimodal perspectives and contributes to research on how children deal with a multimodal illustration of scientific concepts used in emergent science (i.e., early years science) education. It presents a study of a group of 14 preschoolers observed when dealing with the concept of stability, as illustrated in a…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Early Childhood Education, Science Education, Learning Modalities
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Jiunwen Wang – Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education, 2025
Purpose: This essay articulates the vision of a flourishing classroom, which arguably is the ultimate goal of a positive approach to management education. By demonstrating how improvisational theater is the epitome of a flourishing ensemble, this essay proposes that there are some lessons educators can glean from improvisational theater in order…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Group Dynamics, Classroom Communication, Trust (Psychology)
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Ümmühan Avci; Hatice Yildiz Durak – Psychology in the Schools, 2025
Design thinking has become an important process in many fields to encourage innovation toward problem solving skills in various fields. In the field of education, design thinking has been incorporated into curriculums as it contributes both to higher order thinking skills and to the learning process with its flexible and dynamic nature. However,…
Descriptors: Design, Learning Activities, Thinking Skills, Problem Solving
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Xueqiao Zhang; Chao Zhang; Jianwen Sun; Jun Xiao; Yi Yang; Yawei Luo – IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies, 2025
Large language models (LLMs) have significantly advanced smart education in the artificial general intelligence era. A promising application lies in the automatic generalization of instructional design for curriculum and learning activities, focusing on two key aspects: 1) customized generation: generating niche-targeted teaching content based on…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Instructional Design, Technology Uses in Education, Cognitive Ability
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Elise M. Walck-Shannon; Heather D. Barton; Shaina F. Rowell; Douglas L. Chalker; Angela Fink – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2025
Recently, our course team transformed a large-enrollment introductory genetics course from being predominantly lecture based to active learning based. During class sessions, students engaged in problem solving, which occurs when a student attempts to solve a problem without knowing the path to complete it. We designed class activities…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Genetics, Learning Activities, Inquiry
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Marianne Miserandino – Teaching of Psychology, 2025
Introduction: Artificial intelligence (AI) presents challenges and opportunities for higher education. The challenge is to incorporate the benefits of AI while minimizing its potential for misuse and undermining of learning. The opportunity is that AI allows instructors to assess learning authentically by fostering creative, engaging, realistic,…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Evaluation Methods, Undergraduate Study
Phil Gersmehl – Geography Teacher, 2025
In this classroom activity, students consider geographic context--features like mountains, rainforest, and rivers--in order to assess their influence on transport mode selection, speed, weight limit, and cost. Cost of transport, in turn, has significant effects on the local economy. Students will learn that people in a place must import anything…
Descriptors: Teaching Guides, Learning Activities, Geography Instruction, Teaching Methods
Phil Gersmehl – Geography Teacher, 2025
In this classroom activity, students read about the storage and movement of plant nutrients in the hot and rainy climate near the equator. Then they use that information to evaluate six statements about forestry and farming in the Amazon rainforest. The purpose is to show that the rules that govern the movement and storage of nutrient elements are…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Teaching Guides, Class Activities, Learning Activities
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Madison Lee Mason; Caleb Vatral; Clayton Cohn; Eduardo Davalos; Mary Ann Jessee; Gautam Biswas; Daniel T. Levin – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2025
Although the "eye-mind link" hypothesis posits that eye movements provide a direct window into cognitive processing, linking eye movements to specific cognitions in real-world settings remains challenging. This challenge may arise because gaze metrics such as fixation duration, pupil size, and saccade amplitude are often aggregated…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Nursing Students, Student Experience, Nursing Education
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Jing Tian; Grace Bennett-Pierre; Nadia Tavassolie; Xinhe Zhang; Emily D'Antonio; Lexi Sylverne; Nora S. Newcombe; Marsha Weinraub; Annemarie Hindman; Kristie Newton; Elizabeth A. Gunderson – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2025
The frequency of home spatial activities (e.g., puzzles and blocks) correlates with young children's spatial skills, but causal evidence is limited. We addressed this issue by comparing the effects of a parent-led intervention aimed at increasing spatial activities to an active control targeting narrative activities (preregistered:…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Intervention, Parents as Teachers, Young Children
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Garvin Brod; Elfriede Holstein; Leonie Weindorf; Joseph Colantonio; Elizabeth Bonawitz; Maria Theobald – npj Science of Learning, 2025
Can you learn better by doing something yourself (DIY) or by watching somebody else do it? We present a new approach to examine this perennial question in research on learning and instruction. In a science learning task, children aged 5 to 7 years (N = 95) either generated predictions themselves (active condition) or observed the predictions of a…
Descriptors: Independent Study, Learning Activities, Experiential Learning, Active Learning
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Shannon Pappas – Communication Teacher, 2024
This activity aims to assist students with persuasive tactics for argumentative speeches. The activity involves students creating an argumentative speech to defend a hot-take assertion chosen from a list provided by the instructor. In small groups, students will craft an argument supporting their hot-take assertion and present it to the class.…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Public Speaking, Speeches, Models
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Anna Backman – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2024
The purpose of this study is to explore a theoretical idea in relation to a body of empirical material from a reading activity involving a picturebook on shadow. The theoretical idea, sprung from variation theory, entails children's discernment through synchronic simultaneity as a key to their ability to imagine. To explore this idea, an analysis…
Descriptors: Imagination, Picture Books, Preschool Children, Learning Activities
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Kelly-Ann Macalpine; Veronica Pacini-Ketchabaw – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2024
The earth is drowning in plastic waste. Yet, as the plastic waste crisis grows exponentially, responses to excess waste remain stuck around containment and management processes. These approaches fail to notice that plastics know no boundaries. We now encounter plastic rocks, plastic water, plastic bodies, plastic worlds spilling into oceans and…
Descriptors: Plastics, Early Childhood Education, Conservation (Environment), Ecology
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