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Rachel Romero – Teaching in Higher Education, 2025
This paper explores the value of autoethnography in the context of student teaching and learning. The manuscript situates autoethnography within restorative and critical pedagogies and draws from students' impressions to examine how autoethnography aids in developing self-awareness, empathy, and vulnerability as emotional resiliency. Further…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Empathy, Autobiographies, Ethnography
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Sisi Zou – Accounting Education, 2025
This study investigates the identities, identity work and emotions of an international accounting teacher working in the UK. An autoethnographic method is adopted to explore the self-reflexive account of the accounting teacher in a UK university during the COVID-19 pandemic from 2020 to 2022. Personal narratives are analysed in combination with…
Descriptors: Accounting, Business Education, Business Education Teachers, Professional Identity
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Rachael T. S. Cheang; Maya Skjevling; Alexandra I. F. Blakemore; Veena Kumari; Ignazio Puzzo – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2025
Empathy deficits in autism, particularly cognitive empathy, have been a long-held, but much debated assumption. An alternative perspective challenging this deficit model is the 'double empathy problem', proposing that empathy difficulties are bidirectional between autistic and non-autistic people. Despite this view gaining popularity, there has…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Empathy, Accuracy, Task Analysis
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Gary W. J. Pluim – Prospects, 2025
Drawing upon a five-year critical reflexive autoethnographic study, this article proposes that student comprehension of critical global citizenship education (GCE) perspectives in teacher education hinges heavily on the disciplinary frameworks of the courses in which critical GCE is integrated. Courses that use pedagogies of international…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Global Education, Citizenship Education, Teacher Education
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Baumann, Jennie; Issa, Ayah – Mentoring & Tutoring: Partnership in Learning, 2023
The unique nature of the COVID-19 pandemic prevented many typical graduate assistantships from occurring due to school-building closures, virtual classes, and stay-at-home orders. As such, the authors address the increase of 'shadowing' graduate assistantships at a large land-grant institution. To uphold the governmental stay-at-home regulations…
Descriptors: Mentors, Graduate Students, Teaching Assistants, School Closing
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Yorke, Louise; Kim, Janice Heejin; Hagos Hailu, Belay; Ejigu Berhie, Chanie – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2023
This paper considers the contribution of North-South partnerships in conducting ethical and policy-relevant research in times of uncertainty. Using collaborative autoethnography, we critically reflect on our experience conducting two related research projects in Ethiopia during the COVID-19 pandemic. We discuss how our research has adapted to take…
Descriptors: International Cooperation, Ethics, Research Methodology, Autobiographies
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Ikier, Simay; Duman, Çagla; Gökel, Nazim – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022
We investigated whether the phenomenological experience of mental time travel is similar when one travels as oneself versus with another possible self. Participants first described and rated their phenomenological experience for an autobiographical memory, a counterfactual event, and a future event (real-self condition). Then, they imagined…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Cognitive Processes, Time, Travel
Jamison Pearce – ProQuest LLC, 2022
The problem being studied was that although humor provides positive effects on student learning, teaching quality, and effectiveness, there are many difficulties in building a professional identity with the use of humor. The purpose of this qualitative autoethnographic study was to explore how humor could shape a professional's identity and be…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Ethnography, Humor, Professional Identity
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Nikita Kalwani; Amanda Kelly Ferguson; Lori Goff; Kim Dej – International Journal for Students as Partners, 2024
This article presents the results of collaborative autoethnographical (CAE) research that investigated the group dynamics and processes of an undergraduate student, a post-doctoral fellow, and two senior administrators engaged in a students-as-partners (SaP) project. The CAE methodology allowed us to systematically, collaboratively, and…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Ethnography, Group Dynamics, Student Participation
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Ok-Hee Jeong – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2024
An autoethnographic exploration of identity formation raises the question of how individuals inhabit, negotiate, accommodate and resist the social groups to which they belong, continually coming to terms with who and what they are. This paper discusses, through this researcher's autobiographical exploration, the ways in which pedagogical discourse…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Art Education, Art Teachers, Autobiographies
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Matt Kessler – TESOL Journal, 2024
Autoethnography, a qualitative research methodology that investigates aspects of individuals' identities, ideologies, and emotions, has recently gained traction in applied linguistics and second language (L2) scholarship. However, research is needed that investigates the use of autoethnography in preservice teacher education programs, along with…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Ethnography, Preservice Teacher Education, Second Language Instruction
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Staci M. Zavattaro; Christopher Bellingham; Stephanie King; Mohammad Newaz Sharif; Georgiana Tynes; Kara Williamson – Journal of Public Affairs Education, 2024
As calls increase to give public affairs doctoral students more agency in their learning, we report on the effects of implementing professional development, self-reflection, and original research into a first-year, first-semester introductory doctoral seminar. Using Scott et al.'s framework, we purposively integrated elements of socialization and…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Doctoral Students, Seminars, Reflection
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Tirill Fjellhaugen Hjuler; Daniel Lee; Simona Ghetti – Child Development, 2025
This longitudinal study examined age- and gender-related differences in autobiographical memory about the COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns and whether the content of these memories predicted psychological adjustment over time. A sample of 247 students (M[subscript age] = 11.94, range 8-16 years, 51.4% female, 85.4% White) was recruited from public and…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Memory, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Bakhtiar Naghdipour – TESOL Journal, 2025
Developing writing skills in a foreign language is a highly value-laden practice that is susceptible to the influence of the dominant ideological narratives of a given context. This influence is typically echoed in policies and practices informing the role, scope, and place of writing in curriculum and pedagogy. Using autoethnographic reflections,…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Ethnography, Second Language Learning, English (Second Language)
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Anastasia Sorokina – Multilingua: Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 2025
Research has shown that bilingual individuals might encode autobiographical memories in either their first language (L1) or their second language (L2), depending on the language spoken at the time of the event. Although language mixing is a common occurrence among multilingual speakers, previous studies have largely overlooked mixed…
Descriptors: Psycholinguistics, Memory, Language Processing, Native Language
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