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Dana Ferris – Journal of Response to Writing, 2018
This study examines the relationship between students' memories of teacher feedback and these students' writing and attitudes toward and enjoyment of writing. More than 8,500 survey responses were collected from advanced undergraduate students in a large university writing program. A question about the characteristics of teacher feedback received…
Descriptors: Teacher Influence, Feedback (Response), Writing (Composition), Student Attitudes
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Guido Veronese; Alessandro Pepe; Jamal Dagdukee; Shaher Yaghi – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2018
Informed by a perspective centred on psychological health and well-being, the present research investigated whether teachers' overall well-being was influenced by their affect balance, as well as the extent to which both affect and well-being are influenced by social capital, in conflict-ridden areas such as the occupied Palestinian Territories…
Descriptors: Social Capital, Well Being, Foreign Countries, Political Influences
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Chang, Aurora; Torrez, Mark Anthony; Ferguson, Kelly N.; Sagar, Anita – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2017
Undocumented students find themselves on continuously shifting ground, calibrating each decision they make in accordance with or as a strategic reaction to the existing political climate. Specifically, some undocumented students find themselves in an ongoing internal battle to fashion an identity that both counters the pervasive stereotypes of…
Descriptors: Undocumented Immigrants, Hispanic American Students, Identification, Individual Power
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Thomson, Michaela; Johnson, Paula – British Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2017
Background: This research aimed to capture the experiences of women with learning disabilities living in secure services who undertook dialectical behaviour therapy (DBT); they were the first people to do this in the trust. It is hoped their experiences may guide and inform other services undertaking the same process. Materials and Methods:…
Descriptors: Females, Learning Disabilities, Phenomenology, Behavior Modification
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Middleton, Jerry C.; Middleton, Jason A. – International Journal for Educational and Vocational Guidance, 2017
Few studies in the existent empirical literature explore the career transitions of performing artists. First, we provide working definitions of career transition and of a performing artist. Thereafter, we peruse empirical studies, from the 1980s onward, that delineate the career transition process in terms of three main types of transition:…
Descriptors: Career Change, Career Development, Theater Arts, Artists
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Schinkel, Anders – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2017
That wonder is educationally important will strike many people as obvious. And in a way it is obvious, because being capable of experiencing wonder implies an openness to (novel) experience and seems naturally allied to intrinsic educational motivation, an eagerness to inquire, a desire to understand, and also to a willingness to suspend judgement…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Learner Engagement, Discovery Learning, Constructivism (Learning)
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Dahlbeck, Johan – Ethics and Education, 2017
In this paper I suggest that Spinoza's understanding of virtue and collective flourishing, rooted in his psychological and ethical egoism, offers a fresh perspective on the question of egoism in education. To this end, I suggest an understanding of the teacher as egoist, where the self-seeking of the teacher is conditioned by--and runs parallel…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Teacher Characteristics, Self Concept, Psychological Patterns
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Burkitt, Esther – Educational Psychology, 2017
Effects of asking children to communicate through their drawings have been investigated using animate rather than inanimate drawing topics. The present study investigated the impact of a communication context on children's drawings of topics with contrasting animism. Three hundred and twenty-two children, 156 boys and 166 girls aged 6-11 years…
Descriptors: Children, Freehand Drawing, Nonverbal Communication, Psychological Patterns
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Oikonomidoy, Eleni; Wiest, Lynda R. – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2017
Drawing on insights from reflective research accounts in the social sciences, this paper attends to the complexities of conducting cross-boundary educational research. Cross-boundary research is defined as any type of inquiry that is conducted across cultural and/or structural boundaries, including but not limited to race, class, gender, language,…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Cross Cultural Studies, Group Membership, Ethics
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Britzman, Deborah P. – Educational Theory, 2017
The preceding symposium articles speculate on the psychosocial dynamics of discrimination as reverberating with grief, mourning, melancholia, and denial. They invite a psychoanalytic paradox on the fate of inchoate loss and its complex relation to oppression and depression: constellations of attachment to loss met with its social and psychical…
Descriptors: Psychotherapy, Grief, Psychological Patterns, Depression (Psychology)
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Backer, David I. – Educational Theory, 2017
In a majority of cases observed in classrooms over the last several decades, what has gone by the name "discussion" is not discussion, but rather an interaction better known as recitation. If one sees this phenomenon as a problem, then an aspect of its resolution must be theoretical (as opposed to empirical or pedagogical): What series…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Classroom Communication, Teaching Methods, Discourse Communities
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Paulsen, Hilko Frederik Klaas; Kauffeld, Simone – International Journal of Training and Development, 2017
Motivation to transfer is a critical element for successful training transfer. Whereas recent research has shown that training-related factors such as training design are related to motivation to transfer, participants' affective experiences have been neglected. Based on the broaden-and-build theory of positive emotions, we conducted a multilevel…
Descriptors: Motivation, Transfer of Training, Psychological Patterns, Hierarchical Linear Modeling
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Lindblom, Jallu; Peltola, Mikko J.; Vänskä, Mervi; Hietanen, Jari K.; Laakso, Anu; Tiitinen, Aila; Tulppala, Maija; Punamäki, Raija-Leena – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2017
The family environment shapes children's social information processing and emotion regulation. Yet, the long-term effects of early family systems have rarely been studied. This study investigated how family system types predict children's attentional biases toward facial expressions at the age of 10 years. The participants were 79 children from…
Descriptors: Attention, Bias, Psychological Patterns, Family Environment
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Resnick, David – Religious Education, 2017
An 18th-century parable based on the Adam story offers a model of moral education rooted in communitarianism. Individual conscience arises from social norms, with a vital role for shame and pride. Emphasizing the nobility of being created in the divine image, this model overcomes shortcomings of rationalist, Enlightenment education. Moreover, the…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Ethical Instruction, Moral Values, Tales
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Chubb, Jennifer; Watermeyer, Richard; Wakeling, Paul – Higher Education Research and Development, 2017
The research impact agenda is frequently portrayed through "crisis" accounts whereby academic identity is at risk of a kind of existential unravelling. Amid reports of academics under siege in an environment in which self-sovereignty is traditionally preferred and regulation is resisted, heightened emotionalism, namely fear and dread,…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Psychological Patterns
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