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Özek, Umut; Xu, Zeyu – Education Finance and Policy, 2019
The federal Race to the Top competition provided significant impetus for states to adopt value-added models as a part of their teacher evaluation systems. Such models typically link students to their teachers in the spring semester when statewide tests are administered and estimate a teacher's performance based on his or her students' learning…
Descriptors: Teacher Evaluation, Value Added Models, Misconceptions, Attribution Theory
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Belcher, Brian; Palenberg, Markus – American Journal of Evaluation, 2018
The terms "outcome" and "impact" are ubiquitous in evaluation discourse. However, there are many competing definitions that lack clarity and consistency and sometimes represent fundamentally different meanings. This leads to profound confusion, undermines efforts to improve learning and accountability, and represents a…
Descriptors: Definitions, Language Usage, Vocabulary, Program Evaluation
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Van Kessel, Cathryn; Burke, Kevin – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2018
Teaching as a profession can be read as an immortality project, a form of compensation to help resolve a certain kind of existential terror. Terror management theory can help us understand the ways teachers might compensate for their limitedness as humans by imposing prescribed attributes on their students. In response to the freighted reality of…
Descriptors: Terrorism, Teacher Student Relationship, Futures (of Society), Attribution Theory
Hecht-Hewit, Denise D. – ProQuest LLC, 2018
The purpose of this study was to examine counselor trainees' cognitive attributions and countertransference reactions toward persons with physical disabilities. Specifically, the present study investigated whether counselor trainees responded differently either cognitively or affectively between a client without a physical disability versus with a…
Descriptors: Counselor Training, Trainees, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Counselor Client Relationship
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Chui, Wing Hong; Khiatani, Paul Vinod; She, Minnie Heep Ching; Wong, Chak Chong – Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 2020
This article assesses how an interactive simulation game, a modified version of Simulated Society (hereinafter 'SIMSOC-modified'), was used for teaching a theoretical criminology course in a Hong Kong university. Its use was intended to enable students to experience inequalities, in terms of wealth and power. The primary focus was to observe how…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Criminology, Foreign Countries, Active Learning
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Fukuta, Junya; Yamashita, Junko – Second Language Research, 2023
This study investigates how implicit and explicit learning and knowledge are associated, by focusing on the salience of target form--meaning connections. The participants were engaged in incidental learning of artificial determiner systems that included grammatical rules of [± plural] (a taught rule), [± actor] (a more salient hidden rule), and [±…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Grammar, Incidental Learning, Task Analysis
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Bao, Lei; Fritchman, Joseph C. – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2021
Newton's third law is one of the most important concepts learned early in introductory mechanics courses; however, ample studies have documented a wide range of students' misconceptions and fragmented understandings of this concept that are difficult to change through traditional instruction. This research develops a conceptual framework model to…
Descriptors: Science Education, Scientific Principles, Physics, Teaching Methods
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Shackleton, Nichola; Bonell, Chris; Jamal, Farah; Allen, Elizabeth; Mathiot, Anne; Elbourne, Diana; Viner, Russell – Journal of School Health, 2019
Background: Teachers report higher levels of stress than most occupational groups. Burnout is a specific psychological condition that results from chronic job stress characterized by emotional exhaustion, low personal accomplishment, and depersonalization. This study considers associations between aspects of the school environment and teacher…
Descriptors: Teacher Burnout, Stress Variables, Educational Environment, Work Environment
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Karkdijk, Jan; Admiraal, Wilfried; Van der Schee, Joop – Review of International Geographical Education Online, 2019
Relational thinking is a necessary skill for building students' individual capabilities and a core concept in geography education. Geographical relational thinking refers to being able to give interrelated, causal explanations for geographical phenomena such as regional change. The aim of this study was to gain more insight into differences in…
Descriptors: Small Group Instruction, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries, Thinking Skills
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Vettori, Giulia; Bigozzi, Lucia; Miniati, Francesco; Vezzani, Claudio; Pinto, Giuliana – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2019
This study was conducted to track conceptions of learning among pre-service teachers and to verify whether they can be grouped in profiles. A sample of 232 pre-service teachers took part in this research. A self-report instrument was administered to discover their conceptions of learning. A factorial analysis allowed us to build a model of eight…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Student Attitudes, Educational Attitudes, Profiles
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Eesley, Dale T.; Briggs, Robert O. – International Journal of Training Research, 2019
Research shows that innovation training can increase the number of innovative ideas that are proposed and successfully executed by an organization. Training satisfaction is also a strong predictor of the degree to which people use the knowledge they gain in training. To improve innovation training processes, therefore, it would be useful to have a…
Descriptors: Innovation, Cross Cultural Studies, Validity, Teaching Methods
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Gomez-Lavin, Javier; Prinz, Jesse – Journal of Moral Education, 2019
Recent studies demonstrate a moral self effect: continuity in moral values is crucial to ascriptions of identity in and over time. Since Locke, personal identity has been referred to as a 'forensic' concept, meaning that it plays a role in attributions of moral responsibility. If moral values are crucial to identity over time, then perceived…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Self Concept, Crime, Attribution Theory
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Verdis, Athanasios; Kalogeropoulos, Kleomenis; Chalkias, Christos – Research in Comparative and International Education, 2019
This study examines the geographical dimension of access to higher education in Greece by mapping spatial disparities in the distribution of "vathmos prosvasis", the decisive score for being accepted in one of the country's tertiary education departments. Influenced by the 'spatial turn' in the humanities and the social sciences, this…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Scores
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Srirama, Mamatha V.; Iyer, Parameshwar P.; Reddy, Hariprasad – Learning Organization, 2020
Purpose: Earlier studies of social capital have focused on its influence on various aspects of business. There is substantial void in the literature on how social capital enables learning culture in organizations. The purpose of this paper is to explore direct and indirect relations between dimensions of social capital and learning culture in the…
Descriptors: Social Capital, Organizational Culture, Information Technology, Employee Attitudes
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Murdock-Perriera, Lisel Alice; Sedlacek, Quentin Charles – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2018
Teacher expectancy effects, the class of phenomena in which teacher beliefs about students influence student outcomes, are widely believed to operate through recursive processes of teacher-student interaction. Recent work in "wise" interventions has shown profound and robust effects in educational domains, and has attributed these…
Descriptors: Teacher Expectations of Students, Teacher Student Relationship, Intervention, Empathy
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