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Ronald V. Kalafsky; Carrie Liu Currier – Geography Teacher, 2025
Teaching regionally focused introductory undergraduate courses can be challenging when students do not have similar levels of formal geography experience. One way to offset this problem is to introduce core geographical concepts as a framework to help refocus attention on the myriad spatial dynamics at work in a region. This article explores how…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Geography, Undergraduate Students, Geographic Regions
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Shadi Esnaashari; Lesley Gardner; Michael Rehm; Tiru Arthanari; Olga Filippova – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2025
Background: Self-Regulated Learning (SRL) plays a crucial role in student success, particularly in blended learning (BL) environments where learners must take greater ownership of their educational journey. Whilst prior research has extensively examined SRL, there remains a gap in understanding how students' SRL profiles evolve over time and how…
Descriptors: Blended Learning, Learning Strategies, College Freshmen, Undergraduate Students
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Charlie Smith – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2025
In place of unidirectional transmission of information, discourse on feedback advocates approaches that are more dialogic and promote student agency. The design review is a signature feedback method in architectural education. Although the review's format involves verbal interaction between students and reviewers regarding the students' design…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Dialogs (Language), Architectural Education, Evaluators
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Michael Sparrow – New York Journal of Student Affairs, 2025
Students from low-income backgrounds comprise almost a third of undergraduate enrollment, but most colleges are designed poorly to support these students. This misalignment between the characteristics and needs of students from low-income backgrounds and the typical college environment leads to disproportionately low matriculation, persistence,…
Descriptors: Low Income Students, Student Characteristics, Barriers, Academic Achievement
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Selen Çayli; Kemal Akoglu – International Journal of Education in Mathematics, Science and Technology, 2025
This study aims to investigate the influence of an undergraduate course on teaching statistics and probability on the statistical knowledge of preservice mathematics teachers. Statistics Concept Inventory (SCI) was used to measure the statistical understanding of the participants. It was implemented at both the beginning and the end of the course.…
Descriptors: Statistics Education, Preservice Teachers, Undergraduate Students, Probability
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Francesco Pace; Giulia Sciotto – International Journal for Educational and Vocational Guidance, 2025
In recent years, to better face university paths, the first approaches to the labor market, and then the actual university-to-work transition, university students are asked to have broader skills, such as the ability to network, to be involved in career-related issues, and to explore the characteristics of occupations as much as personal ones.…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Questionnaires, Foreign Countries, Test Reliability
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Michael M. Metz; Nadia Ganesh; Kevin Hobbs – McGill Journal of Education, 2025
Implicit bias education in the health sciences is crucial for disrupting the individual and systemic oppressive values that contribute to inequitable access to healthcare. In short, implicit bias can kill. Through a Playbuilding approach, dramatic vignettes on implicit bias were shown to undergraduate health science students in a performance…
Descriptors: Health Sciences, Bias, Drama, Theater Arts
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Mary Stenson – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2025
Ungrading or alternative grading has gained popularity among undergraduate educators. The purpose of this study was to compare students' perceptions of learning and two methods of grading in an upper-level exercise physiology course with third- and fourth-year undergraduate students. Two ungraded (UG1 and UG2) and two traditionally graded (TG1 and…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes, Exercise Physiology, Grading
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Lucy E. Napper; Shannon R. Kenney; Nicole L. Johnson; Laura C. Wolter; Lindsay M. Orchowski – Journal of American College Health, 2025
Objective: During young adulthood, drinking and sexual behaviors are both normative and inextricably linked. While this association is well documented, little is known about how students define positive and negative drinking-related sexual experiences. Methods: Thirty-five undergraduates participated in a focus group about sexual experiences in…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes, Sexuality, Drinking
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Mollie Dollinger; Nicole Crawford; Rola Ajjawi; Margaret Bearman; Joanna Tai – Teaching in Higher Education, 2025
This article explores the significant yet under-researched relationship between students' experiences of time and their emotions during university studies. We frame our study through two existing theoretical concepts of time, that of timescapes and time-as-affect, to illuminate the subjective, contextual nature of time and how students'…
Descriptors: Time, Psychological Patterns, Student Attitudes, Educational Experience
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Timothy Kluthe; Hannah Stabler; Amelia McNamara; Andreas Stefik – Computer Science Education, 2025
Background and Context: Data science and statistics are used across a broad spectrum of professions, experience levels and programming languages. The popular scientific computing languages, such as Matlab, Python and R, were organized without using empirical methods to show evidence for or against their design choices, resulting in them feeling…
Descriptors: Programming Languages, Data Science, Statistical Analysis, Vocabulary
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Nathan O. Buonviri – Update: Applications of Research in Music Education, 2025
This short-form manuscript in an ongoing line of research reports the effects of three listening approaches on rhythmic dictation scores. Forty-three undergraduate music majors completed dictations under each of three conditions, after hearing orienting tempo clicks: (a) immediate listening, (b) pulse tapping, and (c) silent, equivalent interval.…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Music Education, Music, Music Techniques
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Fang Ma; Ruilin Ma – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2025
This study expanded the "cell agglutination reaction" experiment in undergraduate cell biology teaching by integrating a sugar inhibition component. Lectins bind to specific sugars. In the traditional cell agglutination reaction, lectin is used to cause cells to aggregate via binding to sugars present on the cell surface. Here, various…
Descriptors: Cytology, Science Experiments, Science Instruction, College Science
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David G. LeVasseur; Elizabeth A. Munz – Basic Communication Course Annual, 2025
Public speaking classes should ideally produce students whose speeches are favorably received by an audience. Unfortunately, we actually know very little about how non-expert audiences assess such speeches. Given this information gap, the present study asked untrained public speakers to watch and rate a variety of speeches. Participants were also…
Descriptors: Speeches, Public Speaking, Audience Response, Nonverbal Communication
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Carlos Azevedo – Higher Education Quarterly, 2025
'Students as consumers' has become the dominant discourse applied to English undergraduate students in the United Kingdom. This construction by policymakers is linked to the marketisation of higher education and the increased financial contribution of English students towards their studies. However, the construction of students as consumers, from…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Educational Policy, Consumer Economics
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