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Tobin, Joseph – International Journal of Research and Method in Education, 2005
The metaphor of scaling up is the wrong one to use for describing and prescribing educational change. Many of the strategies being employed to achieve scaling up are counter-productive: they conceive of practitioners as delivery agents or consumers, rather than as co-constructors of change. An approach to educational innovation based on the…
Descriptors: Training, Scaling, Figurative Language, Educational Change
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Mitchell, C.J.; Lovibond, P.F.; Condoleon, M. – Learning and Motivation, 2005
We have recently demonstrated that pre-training of additivity (the outcome of two causal cues is larger than one causal cue) greatly enhances blocking. This manipulation could work by removing a ceiling effect on the outcome, as proposed by Cheng (1997). Alternatively, it could remove the logical ambiguity associated with blocking under…
Descriptors: Structural Elements (Construction), Figurative Language, Cues, Logical Thinking
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Wallach, Geraldine P. – Communication Disorders Quarterly, 2004
In this article, the author reviews the state of the art in schoolage language learning disabilities. Some of the key connections among language, learning, and reading disabilities are outlined. The challenges facing speech and language professionals and other specialists who work within and outside of postmillennium classrooms are presented, and…
Descriptors: Reading Difficulties, Figurative Language, Language Impairments, Learning Disabilities
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Sweeting, Anthony; Vickers, Edward – World Englishes, 2005
Numerous commentators argue that the worldwide use of English in education is an important outcome of colonialism. While accepting that there is much truth in this general conclusion, the present authors also recognize an irony. In too few cases do commentators base their arguments on historical evidence; in too many, they treat colonialism as an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Figurative Language, Language Role, Foreign Policy
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Steiner, Joseph – American Psychologist, 2005
This paper presents comments on F. M. Moghaddam's article, (see record 2005-01817-002) which uses the metaphor of a narrowing staircase "to provide a more in-depth understanding of terrorism", describes the journey as being provoked by how people perceive of levels of fairness and experience feelings of relative deprivation. If the masses perceive…
Descriptors: Conflict, Terrorism, Figurative Language, Disadvantaged Environment
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Larsson, Staffan – Ethnography and Education, 2006
The emergence of new research practices is the general theme in this text. The case is ethnography as an approach in Swedish educational research. Ethnography is now an established approach in educational research in Sweden. What was the process behind this position? The article will follow a trajectory that starts in the 1960s and discuss how…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Figurative Language, Ethnography, Foreign Countries
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Terr, Lenore C.; Abright, A. Reese; Brody, Michael; Donner, Susan; Eth, Spencer; Fine, Louis; Fornari, Victor; Jetmalani, Ajit; Livingston, Richard; Powers, James H.; Robson, Kenneth – Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 2006
The psychiatrist renders a diagnosis, comes up with a formulation, and then simultaneously uses both frameworks to treat patients. In clinical situations, however, there are times when one is in ascendancy while the other lies temporarily dormant. This article deals with the doctor's particular emphasis. It presents 13 cases in which treating the…
Descriptors: Psychotherapy, Psychiatry, Patients, Identification
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Mahaffy, Peter – Journal of Chemical Education, 2006
A new conceptual metaphor is proposed to enrich the description of chemistry education and support the many existing efforts to help students make connections with the chemistry found in textbooks. A widely used metaphor for chemistry education takes the shape of a planar triangle that highlights three thinking levels in learning chemistry such as…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Textbooks, Figurative Language, Chemistry
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Pitney, William A.; Stuart, Moira E.; Parker, Jenny – Physical Educator, 2008
Many physical education teachers are hired with the expectation that they fulfill an extra-curricular role. Those who are dual position physical educators and athletic trainers may be exposed to many accumulating occupational pressures. The purpose of this mixed methods study, therefore, was to identify the extent to which role strain permeates…
Descriptors: High Schools, Physical Education, Athletics, Role Conflict
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McCormick, Samuel – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2008
As a rhetorical figure, the example is constitutively split between the structural vocations of the Greek "paradeigma" (emphasizing illumination and belonging) and the Latin "exemplum" (emphasizing detachment and exclusion). This bifurcation enables the example to function as a strategic resource of ambiguity. Christine de…
Descriptors: War, Figurative Language, Social Change, Foreign Countries
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Palmer, Barbara C.; Bilgili, Ebru M.; Gungor, Arzu; Taylor, Susan H.; Leclere, Judith T. – Reading Horizons, 2008
According to the 2000 U.S. Census, the Turkish-speaking population in the United States increased significantly in the 1990s and has risen steadily over time. Today, the highest concentration is located in the states of New York, California, New Jersey, and Florida. Kaya (2003) reported a geographical dispersion across the U.S., from New York to…
Descriptors: Population Trends, Turkish, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning
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Kalyuga, Marika; Kalyuga, Slava – Language Learning Journal, 2008
Patterns of language are usually perceived, learned and used as meaningful chunks that are processed as a whole, resulting in a reduced learning burden and increased fluency. The ability to comprehend and produce lexical chunks or groups of words which are commonly found together is an important part of language acquisition. This paper…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Figurative Language, Prior Learning, Short Term Memory
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Gunter, Helen M.; Fitzgerald, Tanya – School Leadership & Management, 2008
There is an emergent field of effective leadership of schools that is the product of recent policy strategies regarding the relationship between the state, public policy and knowledge. It is argued in this paper that this is producing a centralised branded form of effective leadership for the commissioning and delivery of provision that is…
Descriptors: Leadership Effectiveness, Public Policy, Instructional Leadership, Leadership Training
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Aspinwall, Leslie – Middle School Journal (J3), 2008
The purpose of this article is to probe teacher beliefs about the cultures and curricula of mathematics classroom. By examining the case of a teacher in New York City--his teaching practices and the resulting learning environment fostered there--certain pedagogical and epistemological beliefs can be highlighted. The author first examines some…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Teaching Methods, Teacher Attitudes, School Culture
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Dingo, Rebecca – College English, 2008
In this article, the author investigates the circulation and appropriation of representations of women in public policy. The author effectively mobilizes the metaphor of the network to examine the discursive intersections and transnational links between U.S. welfare programs and the World Bank gender mainstreaming policies. Her analysis reveals…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Females, Figurative Language, Rhetorical Criticism
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