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Ayat Mohammad Al-Mughrabi; Mo’en Salman Alnasraween; Manal Altawalbeh – Knowledge Management & E-Learning, 2025
The study aimed to investigate the relationship between students' prevailing brain dominance pattern and their level of creative thinking in science. The study sample consisted of 850 ninth-grade students in Jordan selected by the cluster random method. The brain control scale and the test of creative thinking in science were used to collect data.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Creative Thinking, Creativity
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Rosie Aboody; Julianna Lu; Stephanie Denison; Julian Jara-Ettinger – Child Development, 2025
When determining what others know, we intuitively consider not only whether they succeed but also their probability of success in the absence of knowledge (e.g., random guessing). Across three experiments (n = 240 North American 4-6-year-olds, data collected between 2020-2023) we find that 4-year-olds understand that tasks with a lower probability…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Age Differences, Childrens Attitudes, Abstract Reasoning
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Ryan D. P. Dunk; Paula E. Adams; Abby E. Beatty; Cissy J. Ballen – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2025
Recent efforts to make undergraduate biology more inclusive include developing content that explores how human values and priorities impact science, and previous work documents how instructors value an "ideologically aware" biology curriculum that highlights these themes. Here, we surveyed a national sample of undergraduate students in…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Biology, College Science, Student Attitudes
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Mandeep Gill Sagoo; Pak Yin Lam; Sharukesi Theivendran; Richard Wingate – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2025
Spatial skills, or spatial ability, is the ability to visualize and mentally manipulate three-dimensional objects, and is essential to the study of anatomy. This study aims to investigate whether spatial skills required to infer cross-sectional images could be improved through anatomy learning, as well as gender differences in spatial skills.…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Spatial Ability, Medical Students, Gender Differences
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Pinyan Tang; Glyn Lawson; Xu Sun; Sarah Sharples – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2025
This research investigates the influence of culture on sketching by comparing UK and Chinese designers. We employed a novel dual-method approach: machine learning algorithms analyzed a dataset of 2,090 digitized sketches from student designers, while protocol analysis based on shape transformation rules examined the sketching processes of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Design, Comparative Analysis, Cross Cultural Studies
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John Miller; David Pierce; Elizabeth Gregg; Blake Price – Sport Management Education Journal, 2025
Since its inception, no formal content analysis of the "Sport Management Education Journal" has been conducted. Thus, the purpose of this study was to examine article characteristics, assess topic diversity, determine predominant themes and methodological frameworks, and identify editorship and authorship gender differences. A total of…
Descriptors: Periodicals, Athletics, Management Development, Journal Articles
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Maki Kubota; Yuko Matsuoka; Jason Rothman – Journal of Child Language, 2025
This study examined the acquisition of numeral classifiers in 120 monolingual Japanese children. Previous research has argued that the complex semantic system underlying classifiers is late acquired. Thus, we set out to determine the age at which Japanese children are able to extend the semantic properties of classifiers to novel items/situations.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Japanese, Children, Language Acquisition
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Kyle M. Inselman – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2025
A growing body of calling literature demonstrates evidence of cross-cultural validity of scales to measure perceiving and living a calling, pointing to salience of the construct and useful application of calling interventions across populations. However, there has been little inquiry into the relationship of calling to similar concepts in cultures…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Career Development, Religion, Religious Factors
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Ling Gao; Zhiqiang Li; Xiaobo Zhao; Xingchao Wang – Psychology in the Schools, 2025
Student-student relationships, as forms of peer interaction, are central components in school life and exert positive effects on children. Based on social cognitive theory, the current study examined the mediating effect of perceived discrimination on the association between student-student relationships and bullying victimization and the…
Descriptors: Peer Relationship, Bullying, Victims, Parent Influence
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Heather L. Price; Rachel Cantin; Angela D. Evans – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2025
Despite considerable interest in children's ability to provide temporal information, there remain many unanswered questions about what children can provide and how to elicit this information. In Study 1, children (N = 147, aged 5 to 10 years) participated in an activity session. Either shortly after or 1 day later, children completed an interview…
Descriptors: Children, Time, Proximity, Accuracy
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Noam Shpancer; Samuel Degenhard; Maisie Snell; Alexi Baron; Genevieve Eversole; Halle Troutman – Child Care in Practice, 2025
Participants (N = 226; M[subscript age] = 27.2) completed questionnaires about their care history, attitudes toward non-parental care and maternal employment, their preference for working from home, and demographic characteristics. Overall, attitudes toward non-parental care and maternal employment skewed in a positive direction. More time spent…
Descriptors: Employed Parents, Attitudes, Child Care, Mothers
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Roya Abbasi-Asl; Natasha Keces; Richard M. Lerner; Margaret Mackin; Dian Yu; Elizabeth M. Dowling; Jonathan M. Tirrell; Alexa Hasse; Kirsten Olander; Angela Larkan; Chuma Mashita; Raah Msimango; Sinenhlanhla Mkhithi; Tyler Howard – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2025
Background: Nomothetic, group differential, and idiographic approaches are all needed to fully understand youth development. However, most research on youth character development has traditionally relied on either the nomothetic approach to study whole sample changes or the differential approach to study changes in predefined groups (e.g.,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Moral Development, Youth, Individual Development
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Abeer Alqahtani; Sawsan Al-Momen – Educational Process: International Journal, 2025
Background/purpose: Academic procrastination is widely recognized as a common challenge to academic performance. Self-compassion, on the other hand, is considered a potential protective factor that may mitigate such maladaptive behaviours. These psychological constructs, though important for academic performance, have received little attention in…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Time Management, Altruism, Graduate Students
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Vanessa De Wilde; Wander Lowie – Language Learning, 2025
Studies looking into second language development have shown that findings about a group of learners cannot be transferred to individual learners. In this study, we explored ways to meaningfully group individuals starting from the data and investigated whether this grouping can give extra information about learning trajectories that goes beyond the…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, English (Second Language), Speech Communication, Longitudinal Studies
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Md. Sayeed Al-Zaman; Ayushi Khemka; Andy Zhang; Geoffrey Rockwell – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2024
The growing significance of social media in research demands new ethical standards and practices. Although a substantial body of literature on social media ethics exists, studies on the ethics of conducting research using social media are scarce. The emergence of new evidence sources, like social media, requires innovative methods and renewed…
Descriptors: Social Media, Ethics, Research, Research Methodology
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