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Agius, Andee; Calleja, Neville; Camenzuli, Christian; Sultana, Roberta; Pullicino, Richard; Zammit, Christian; Calleja Agius, Jean; Pomara, Cristoforo – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2018
During the last decade, global interest in the multiple benefits of formal peer teaching has increased. This study aimed to explore the perceptions of first-year medical students towards the use of peer teaching to learn anatomy using cadaveric specimens. A descriptive, cross-sectional, retrospective survey was carried out. Data were collected…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Student Attitudes, Human Body, Teaching Methods
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Özokcu, Osman; Yildirim, Taskin – International Education Studies, 2018
This study aims to determine and identify the fears of students with special needs in inclusive classrooms. The study was conducted with a total of 69 students (32 female, 37 male) from 36 classrooms across 12 different schools (including six primary schools and six middle schools) in Malatya, Turkey. The data were collected using a…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Inclusion, Elementary School Students, Middle School Students
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Kennel, Larissa; Martin, David M. A.; Shaw, Hannah; Wilkinson, Tracey – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2018
Thiel-embalmed cadavers, which have been adopted for use in anatomy teaching in relatively few universities, show greater flexibility and color retention compared to formalin-embalmed cadavers, properties which might be considered advantageous for anatomy teaching. This study aimed to investigate student attitudes toward the dissection experience…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Human Body, Death, Medical Education
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Howard Sharp, Katianne M.; Russell, Claire; Keim, Madelaine; Barrera, Maru; Gilmer, Mary Jo; Foster Akard, Terrah; Compas, Bruce E.; Fairclough, Diane L.; Davies, Betty; Hogan, Nancy; Young-Saleme, Tammi; Vannatta, Kathryn; Gerhardt, Cynthia A. – School Psychology Quarterly, 2018
The objective was to characterize the relation between different sources of school-based social support (friends, peers, and teachers) and bereaved siblings' grief and grief-related growth and to examine whether nonparental sources of social support buffer the effects of low parent support on bereaved siblings. Families (N = 85) were recruited…
Descriptors: Grief, Siblings, Interaction, Social Support Groups
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George, Mark Patrick; Williams, Dana M. – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2018
This paper explores how incorporating localized historical acts of racial injustice into Sociology courses can have a variety of pedagogical and social impacts. The use of one such event, the 1918 lynching of 13 people in South Georgia, led to the formation of the Mary Turner Project (MTP). We document the organization's work as well as its impact…
Descriptors: Sociology, Local History, Undergraduate Students, Crime
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Tess Huia Moeke-Maxwell; Janine Wiles; Stella Black; Lisa Williams; Merryn Gott – Qualitative Research Journal, 2018
Purpose: Is collaborative story production (CSP) a useful method to collaborate with bereaved families to record their reflections on the end of life circumstances and care of people of advanced age? The paper aims to discuss this issue. Design/methodology/approach: Drawing from Te Pakeketanga, a bicultural study involving 58 bereaved Maori and…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Grief, Death, Caregivers
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Ruin, Hans – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2019
The article provides a new interpretation of the most widely cited essay on historical consciousness, Friedrich Nietzsche's 'On the use and abuse of history for life' from 1874, reconnecting it to current debates in educational science and the role of the historian and educator in a post-colonial situation. It reminds us how historical…
Descriptors: History, Consciousness Raising, Historians, Educational Philosophy
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Lam, Kevin D. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2019
A critical ethnic studies in education is a way to extend or push notions of equity and justice in education. It is necessary given the deleterious impact of neoliberal policies and practices that support an a historical, apolitical, and non-materialist understanding of history. The four articles in this symposium offer a critical comparative…
Descriptors: Ethnic Studies, Social Justice, Neoliberalism, Death
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Richards, Elizabeth A.; Thomas, Patricia A.; Forster, Anna K.; Hass, Zachary – Health Education & Behavior, 2019
Background: Despite promotion of physical activity guidelines, less than one third of U.S. adults are sufficiently active and an even larger number of older adults fail to meet guidelines. To address this major public health issue, it is essential to broadly consider determinants of physical activity. Aims: This study explores how physical…
Descriptors: Physical Activities, Physical Activity Level, Experience, Influences
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Rich, Jennifer – Social Studies, 2019
A quarter of a century has passed since lawmakers enacted the New Jersey Holocaust education mandate, and it seems responsible and timely to ask if it, the original Holocaust education mandate, actually encouraged substantive learning about the Holocaust. Despite repeated fanfare about the mandate and its inclusion in educational curricula…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Death, Jews, European History
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Mooney, Megan – International Research and Review, 2021
Today, as many as two million Uighurs (WEE-guhrs)--a predominately Muslim, Turkish ethnic minority group--in China's northwest Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region (XUAR) have been arbitrarily detained in highly-secretive, government-run mass detention centers. After years of conducting intensive surveillance--which included the collecting of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Muslims, Ethnic Groups, Violence
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Al-Sayyed, Sa'ida Walid – Arab World English Journal, 2021
This study explores to what extent a personal name has a causal relationship with its usage. Data were collected by means of a survey in which demographic data were elicited from the participants. Furthermore, the participants, whose ages were above 18 years, were asked to write their first names and reasons behind being given such names. The…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Naming, Social Media, Social Networks
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Hallandvik, Linda; Aadland, Eivind; Vikene, Odd Lennart – Journal of Outdoor Recreation, Education, and Leadership, 2016
It is difficult to rely on snow conditions, weather, and human factors when making judgments about avalanche risk because these variables are dynamic and complex; terrain, however, is more easily observed and interpreted. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate (1) the type of terrain in which historical fatal snow avalanche accidents in Norway…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Accidents, Risk, Safety
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Sheikh, Ahmad Hassan; Barry, Denis S.; Gutierrez, Humberto; Cryan, John F.; O'Keeffe, Gerard W. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2016
Reduced contact hours and access to cadaveric/prosection-based teaching in medical education has led to many doctors reporting inadequate anatomical knowledge of junior doctors. This trend poses significant risk, but perhaps most of all in surgery. Here the opinions of surgeons regarding current and future teaching practices in anatomy were…
Descriptors: Human Body, Death, Anatomy, Medical Education
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Kennedy, Katharine – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2016
A crucial historical intersection of war and education asks how schooling contributed to convincing people to fight and to sacrifice their own lives, and those of their loved ones, in wars. This article addresses this question by asking how primary schools, in one country, namely Germany, over several tumultuous generations, used songs to teach…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Singing, War
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