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McGregor, Sue L. T. – Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences, 2009
The family as a basic social unit needs strategic support and strength to carry its weight, relative to other social institutions. This article focuses on why it is important to help people learn to be in a family and presents the construct of becoming family literate (different from family literacy). This learning is a legitimate platform from…
Descriptors: Consumer Science, Family Programs, Family Needs, Family (Sociological Unit)
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Webb, Darren – Oxford Review of Education, 2009
This paper explores the way in which the concept of utopia is employed within contemporary educational theory. Confronted with the relentless marketisation and managerialisation of education, there is a growing willingness to embrace utopianism as a means of bolstering hope, opening up new possibilities and catalysing change. At the same time,…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Social Change, Concept Formation, Realism
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Lather, Patti – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2009
This article probes how philosophical structures are immanent in empirical work and how philosophy might be understood when it is within the precincts of science. My interest is in both opening philosophy to disruption by a science that knows itself as inside history and opening science to the costs of its inability to tolerate the necessary lack…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Educational Philosophy, Philosophy, Ethnography
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Jansoon, Ninna; Coll, Richard K.; Somsook, Ekasith – International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 2009
The purpose of this study was to investigate Thai students' understanding of dilution and related concepts. The literature suggests that a complete understanding of chemistry concepts such as dilution entails understanding of and the ability to integrate mental models across three levels of representation: the macroscopic, sub-microscopic and…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Foreign Countries, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts
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Hopwood, Nick – International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education, 2009
This paper explores substantive and methodological issues in relation to pupils' conceptions of geography. It draws on an in-depth qualitative study with 13-14-year-old pupils from three secondary schools. Selected pupils were interviewed numerous times about their geography classroom experiences and ideas about the subject in general. A detailed…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Student Attitudes, Geography
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Mandrin, Pierre-A; Preckel, Daniel – School Science and Mathematics, 2009
Analogies are known to foster concept learning, whereas discovery learning is effective for transfer. By combining discovery learning and analogies or similarities of concepts, attractive new arrangements emerge, but do they maintain both concept and transfer effects? Unfortunately, there is a lack of data confirming such combined effectiveness.…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Mechanics (Physics), Discovery Learning, Concept Formation
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Robinson, Katherine M.; Dube, Adam K. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
After the onset of formal schooling, little is known about the development of children's understanding of the arithmetic concepts of inversion and associativity. On problems of the form a+b-b (e.g., 3+26-26), if children understand the inversion concept (i.e., that addition and subtraction are inverse operations), then no calculations are needed…
Descriptors: Grade 2, Grade 3, Grade 4, Subtraction
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Meuter, Matthew L.; Chapman, Kenneth J.; Toy, Daniel; Wright, Lauren K.; McGowan, William – Journal of Marketing Education, 2009
This article describes a standardization process for an introductory marketing course with multiple sections. The authors first outline the process used to develop a standardized set of marketing concepts to be used in all introductory marketing classes. They then discuss the benefits to both students and faculty that occur as a result of…
Descriptors: Required Courses, Student Attitudes, Marketing, Course Content
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Baxter, Kristin – Teaching Artist Journal, 2009
This review presents a rare blend of a scholar's insight into research and a teaching artist's insight into what the implications of that research can and should be for all teaching artists, regardless of their field. The author thoroughly examines Daniel Serig's 2006 research "A Conceptual Structure of Visual Metaphor" (Studies in Art Education,…
Descriptors: Artists, Art Activities, Cognitive Processes, Research
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Balslev, T.; de Grave, W.; Muijtjens, A. M. M.; Eika, B.; Scherpbier, A. J. J. A. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2009
In a previous study, we established that compared to a written case, a video case enhances observable cognitive processes in the verbal interaction in a postgraduate problem-based learning format. In a new study we examined non-observable cognitive processes using a stimulated recall procedure alongside a reanalysis of the data from the first…
Descriptors: Pediatrics, Graduate Students, Medical Students, Cognitive Processes
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Nadeau, Jay L. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2009
This article describes a 3-week intensive molecular biology methods course based upon fluorescent proteins, which is successfully taught at the McGill University to advanced undergraduates and graduates in physics, chemical engineering, biomedical engineering, and medicine. No previous knowledge of biological terminology or methods is expected, so…
Descriptors: Methods Courses, Teacher Education Curriculum, Molecular Biology, Chemical Engineering
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McDuffie, Amy Roth; Eve, Norma – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2009
Understanding the concept of area is a challenge for children. In the past, instruction about area often focused more on learning procedures for measuring rather than on learning underlying concepts. To develop conceptual understanding, primary students need experiences with (1) partitioning a region with a two-dimensional unit of measure; (2)…
Descriptors: Grade 2, Teaching Methods, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts
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Strathdee, Rob – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2009
The present paper raises questions about the use of the concept of reputation in sociological studies of the relationship between higher education and the labour market. Sociologists of education have yet to subject the concept of reputation to sustained critique and evaluation. This situation is unsatisfactory because a number of critical…
Descriptors: Reputation, Educational Sociology, Higher Education, Concept Formation
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Gulwadi, Gowri Betrabet – International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education, 2009
Purpose: This paper seeks to introduce a pedagogical method used in a design studio as part of a curriculum-greening process to encourage reflection on the complexity of sustainability and sustainable design. Online reflective journals were used in two semesters of a sustainable design studio to develop students' awareness and understanding of…
Descriptors: Interior Design, Journal Writing, Reflection, Teaching Methods
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Mahir, Nevin – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2009
We investigate the conceptual and procedural knowledge in integration of a group of students who has successfully completed a one-year calculus course. The participants are asked five questions and their responses are analysed in detail. We observed that the students do not have satisfactory conceptual understanding of integration. Moreover, it is…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Concept Formation, Calculus, Mathematical Concepts
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