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Bentley, Terry; Zhao, Fangxia; Reames, Ellen H.; Reed, Cindy – Professional Educator, 2004
Members of Auburn University's educational leadership program at the doctoral level have created a new framework for learning and sharing knowledge, experience, and support. This framework is shared among the doctoral candidates in the form of series of core classes called "doctoral cohort." This paper captures the essence of the…
Descriptors: Grouping (Instructional Purposes), Instructional Leadership, Human Resources, Administrator Education
Brown, Pamela U.; Parsons, Sue Christian; Worley, Virginia – Scholar-Practitioner Quarterly, 2005
This study, set in the teacher education program of a large, Midwestern public university, examines metaphors used by elementary pre-service teachers in writing about diversity and teaching in diverse settings with diverse populations. Using metaphor analysis methodology grounded in Lakoff and Johnson's work on conceptual metaphor and working…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Constructivism (Learning), Critical Theory, Teacher Education Programs
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Mischoulon, David; Beresin, Eugene V. – Academic Psychiatry, 2004
Objective: "The Matrix" has been a huge commercial and critical success and has spawned a series of books and essays exploring the philosophical and religious themes in the story. Methods: The authors propose that "The Matrix" can be interpreted as an allegory for an individual's journey into spiritual and mental health, achieved by overcoming…
Descriptors: Psychotherapy, Films, Mental Health, Popular Culture
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Zhao, Yong; Frank, Kenneth A. – American Educational Research Journal, 2003
Why is technology not used more in schools? Many researchers have tried to solve this persistent puzzle. The authors of this article report on their study of technology uses in 19 schools. They suggest an ecological metaphor, using the example of the introduction of the zebra mussel into the Great Lakes, to integrate and organize sets of factors…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Technology Integration, Figurative Language, Ecological Factors
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Scholefield, Lynne – British Journal of Religious Education, 2004
Using data gathered during a case study of the "culture" of a Jewish secondary school, this article explores the indeterminate boundaries of Jewish identity. By examining the mechanisms that control what and who comes into the school, and what is approved and disapproved of in the school, a picture emerges of what and who is counted as…
Descriptors: Jews, Figurative Language, Foreign Countries, Case Studies
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Rochin, Refugio I.; Mello, Stephen F. – Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 2007
In U.S. coverage of leadership in science and engineering (S&E), Latinos are generally dismissed from consideration. The pipeline metaphor tends to ignore advances made by Latinos in completing doctoral degrees in S&E. New data suggest a better metaphor, the pyramid of higher education, for understanding the progress of Latinos in S&E. Questions…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Science Education, Engineering Education, Figurative Language
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Davies, Bronwyn – Studies in Higher Education, 2006
The controlling strategies of neo-liberalism, designed to constitute academics as economic units supporting the designs of government, are contrasted here with the creative and transgressive elements of a more Deleuzian approach to writing that opens things up, that brings thought to life, that makes the familiar, predictable order tremble. The…
Descriptors: Females, Politics of Education, Gender Bias, Political Attitudes
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Hagedorn, Linda Serra; Lester, Jaime – Community College Journal of Research & Practice, 2006
Like baseball, community colleges are an American invention. This article employs a baseball metaphor to analyze and to explain success of Latino students in the Los Angeles Community College District. Specifically, a sample of 5,000 students were participants in the Transfer Game, where progress was measured by passing the courses specified by…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Hispanic American Students, Academic Achievement, Ethnicity
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Nassif, Nader; Khalil, Yvette – American Journal of Evaluation, 2006
Teaching difficulties often require creative approaches. Difficulties are often compounded when students in class show anxiety toward the material presented and, in particular, in the case of quantitative methods--"fear of numbers." This case presented itself in an advanced course in health behavior theory, where teaching the concepts of validity…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Measures (Individuals), Reliability, Class Activities
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Docan, Tony – Communication Teacher, 2006
System theory, which attests that any change in one component of a system will change other components, is fundamental to the communication discipline. Students are often provided with verbal metaphors (e.g., the machine metaphor) when learning about this theory but many times are not shown its complexity in an engaging manner. Additionally,…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Games, Systems Approach, Theories
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Hagedorn, Linda Serra; Moon, Hye Sun; Cypers, Scott; Maxwell, William E.; Lester, Jaime – Community College Journal of Research & Practice, 2006
In this article, the authors introduce a novel way, using the metaphor of a baseball game, to evaluate and measure community college student progress for those whose stated goal is to transfer to a 4-year institution and, ultimately, earn a bachelor's degree. The proposed framework of "the Transfer Game" is an outgrowth of the Transfer…
Descriptors: Team Sports, Figurative Language, Two Year College Students, Community Colleges
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Logan, Cheri D. – Journal of Workplace Learning, 2006
Purpose: This paper investigates the specialist learning undertaken in graphic design classrooms and its relationship to industry practices. It considers how well students are prepared for work and the nature of this vocational preparation. Design/methodology/approach: The paper is based on an empirical study using a qualitative, case study…
Descriptors: Graphic Arts, Industry, Figurative Language, Vocational Education
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Roldan-Riejos, Ana Maria; Ubeda-Mansilla, Paloma – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2006
The following paper deals with the importance of genre in academic and professional engineering discourse. The main objective is to explore the use of analogy and metaphor in one specific genre, namely civil engineering research journal articles both in English and in Spanish. Thus, we will start by briefly outlining the use of metaphor in…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Figurative Language, Civil Engineering, Journal Articles
Goldberg, Michelle P. – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2006
This article explores the link between discourse and policy using a discursive web metaphor. It develops the notion of policy as a discursive web based on a post-positivist framework that recognises the way multiple discourses from multiple voices interact in a complex web of power relationships to influence reality. Using Ontario's Access to…
Descriptors: Public Policy, Foreign Countries, Brain Drain, Immigrants
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Cook-Sather, Alison – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2006
Concerned about the dehumanization of teachers and students throughout the history of schooling in the United States, the author critically analyzes two metaphors for education that have perennially shaped educational practices in the United States: education is production and education is a cure. Drawing on a set of commitments that could…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Educational Practices, Educational Philosophy, Educational History
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