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Gordon, Mordechai – Educational Theory, 2023
This essay describes what it means to live with existential self-doubt, explores how such doubt emerges in educational encounters, and examines some educational benefits and challenges of uncertainty and doubt. Mordechai Gordon begins his analysis by describing the type of self-doubt that Paul Cézanne embodied, that is, of an artist who painted…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Trust (Psychology), Credibility, Philosophy
DeJeu, Emily Barrow – Written Communication, 2023
Despite students' growing interest in entrepreneurship education (EE), the small body of research exploring rhetorical strategies for proposing new business ventures has focused only on the argument strategies that startup entrepreneurs use when delivering oral pitches to investors. This study, by contrast, explores the "topoi," or lines…
Descriptors: Small Businesses, Entrepreneurship, Persuasive Discourse, Rhetoric
Williams, Anna H.; Johnston, Michael B.; Averill, Robin – Educational Assessment, Evaluation and Accountability, 2023
Suitable execution of moderation policy is challenging but crucial for the trustworthiness and credibility of internal high-stakes assessment systems. In formal education, policies are rarely implemented as intended. Instead, they are "enacted" in ways influenced by mediating factors including the internal and external contexts of…
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Educational Policy, Policy Formation, Credibility
Nina Rosalie Mandracchia – ProQuest LLC, 2023
There are a range of educational web-based resources available for use by education professionals. Although widely available, such web resources vary in terms of usability. As of 2022, there was no way to assess whether these web resources are useful for educators in terms of identifying new classroom interventions to implement. In response, the…
Descriptors: Educational Resources, Internet, Usability, Preservice Teachers
Ramazan Kaya – SAGE Open, 2025
This research aims to reveal the negative impacts of out-of-school sources on history lessons and how teachers respond to these effects. The participants of the study are 20 history teachers who teach history lessons in secondary education institutions in Turkey. The research was conducted using a qualitative research method, and data was…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Secondary School Teachers, Foreign Countries, Information Sources
Kristján Kristjánsson; Tom Harrison; Andrew Peterson – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2025
Is character education flawed as an approach to values education? A 2013 article answered that question in the negative and defused ten common objections against character education as 'myths'. The aim of the present article is to revisit those objections and consider the evidence that has accumulated since 2013. After a brief historical and…
Descriptors: Values Education, Misconceptions, Moral Development, Credibility
Laura Hamilton Brown – Communication Teacher, 2025
Students will analyze article excerpts that demonstrate how the opioid crisis was fueled by a five-sentence "letter to the editor" that was uncritically cited as "evidence" that opioid addiction was rare. Indirectly this activity demonstrates why ChatGPT and other generative artificial intelligence platforms should never be…
Descriptors: Letters (Correspondence), Citations (References), Evidence, Misinformation
Yulu Cui; Hai Zhang – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
With the development of artificial intelligence technology, it has become increasingly difficult to distinguish between Artificial Intelligence Generated Content (AIGC) and non-AIGC. Inaccuracies in identifying AIGC in higher education may lead to academic misconduct and risks, and the credibility of AIGC is also subject to certain doubts. Users…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Educational Technology, Identification
Miller, Ryan A.; Howell, Cathy D.; Knight, Shawn – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2022
Increasingly, colleges and universities require at least one diversity course as part of general education programs. Students in required undergraduate diversity courses may challenge the credibility and authority of their instructors, particularly if these faculty members belong to minoritized social identity groups. The authors report on…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Undergraduate Students, Credibility, Courses
Lim, Alliyza; Young, Robyn L.; Brewer, Neil – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2022
We hypothesized that autistic adults may be erroneously judged as deceptive or lacking credibility due to demonstrating unexpected and atypical behaviors. Thirty autistic and 29 neurotypical individuals participated in video-recorded interviews, and we measured their demonstration of gaze aversion, repetitive body movements, literal interpretation…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Deception, Credibility
Covitt, Beth A.; Anderson, Charles W. – Science & Education, 2022
This article focuses on "uncertainty"--ways in which scientists recognize and analyze limits in their studies and conclusions. We distinguish uncertainty from (un)trustworthiness--ways in which scientific reports can be affected by conscious deception or unconscious bias. Scientific journal articles typically include analyses and…
Descriptors: Sciences, Scientists, Science Education, Ambiguity (Context)
Mallett, Jan; Johnston, Luz Casquejo; Christensen, Olivia; Saylor, Laura – Montessori Life: A Publication of the American Montessori Society, 2021
The purpose of this article is to describe scholarly research to the degree that when something labeled "research" is encountered in daily life, the reader will be equipped to discern its credibility. Specifically, the article addresses the following questions: (1) What exactly is "research"?; (2) What distinguishes scholarly…
Descriptors: Research Skills, Credibility, Montessori Method, Research
Oberlader, Verena A.; Quinten, Laura; Banse, Rainer; Volbert, Renate; Schmidt, Alexander F.; Schönbrodt, Felix D. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Content-based techniques for credibility assessment (Criteria-Based Content Analysis [CBCA], Reality Monitoring [RM]) have been shown to distinguish between experience-based and fabricated statements in previous meta-analyses. New simulations raised the question whether these results are reliable revealing that using meta-analytic methods on…
Descriptors: Credibility, Meta Analysis, Bias, Validity
Guerin, Cally – Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
Researcher developers conduct their work in the borderlands between academic disciplines and university administration. Navigating this third space [Berman, J. E., and T. Pitman. 2010. "Occupying a 'Third Space': Research Trained Professional Staff in Australian Universities." "Higher Education" 60 (2): 157-169.…
Descriptors: Professional Development, Professional Personnel, Doctoral Students, Credibility
Mali M. Hubert; Maryrose Weatherton; Elisabeth E. Schussler – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2024
Understanding attitudes towards anthropogenic disturbances, especially among undergraduates, is important to inform educational practices because of the theoretical link between attitude and behavior. We evaluated the attitudes of undergraduate students in a biology majors course and nonmajors course toward two anthropogenic disturbances: wildfire…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes, Urbanization, Natural Disasters

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