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Faber, Brenton – Technical Communication Quarterly, 1999
Examines the role intuition plays in forming ethical decisions. Reviews examples of intuitive ethics in professional-communication research. Suggests that intuition is the naturalization of dominant cultural values and beliefs. Offers a pedagogical example of the theory and concludes by suggesting the value that a "critique of intuition"…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Ethics, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness
Guillot, Marie-Cecile – Canadian Journal of Applied Linguistics, 1998
A survey was carried out to determine whether the registers indicated in "Le Dictionnaire quebecois d'aujourd'hui" correspond to Quebec francophones' linguistic intuition. A 50-word questionnaire was given to 150 respondents, who were asked to assign a language register to each word. Results suggest that the registers in "Le…
Descriptors: Dictionaries, Foreign Countries, French, French Canadians
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Gerber, Rod – Education + Training, 2001
A phenomenological study of 56 manufacturing workers revealed 7 different conceptions of "common sense" in workplace experiences: gut feeling, innate ability, knowing how, learning, using others purposefully, demonstrable cognitive ability, and personal attributes. These varied conceptions should be taken into account in workplace…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Foreign Countries, Intuition, Phenomenology
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Uslucan, Haci-Halil – Mind, Culture, and Activity, 2004
The philosophy of the classical American pragmatism represents one of the basic challenges to the conception of self and reason in the history of philosophical and psychological thinking. As the founder of pragmatism, Peirce is well known for his attempt to overcome the Cartesian tradition of philosophy, which was founded on the paradigm of…
Descriptors: Semiotics, Pragmatics, Philosophy, Self Concept
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Kaur, Manmohan – PRIMUS, 2006
In order to get undergraduates interested in mathematics, it is essential to involve them in its "discovery". In this paper, we will explain how technology and the knowledge of lower dimensional calculus can be used to help them develop intuition leading to their discovering the first derivative rule in multivariable calculus. (Contains 7 figures.)
Descriptors: Intuition, Calculus, Undergraduate Students, College Mathematics
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Karwowski, Maciej – Gifted and Talented International, 2008
Two studies were conducted to show connections between giftedness and intuition. The first study was exploratory. A sample of 194 gifted adolescent students (N=194) included fifty-five students identified as gifted by their teachers and fifty-six percent who were female. Using the Polish version of the Myers Briggs Type Indicator, the students…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Creativity, Cognitive Style, Gifted
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O'Leary, Maureen Ellen – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2007
As a professor of English at Diablo Valley College in northern California where she teaches a variety of writing and literature courses, the author finds her students' essays so often lack not only shape and drama, but the ring of emotional truth as well. Their "life" stories are lifeless and their "true" stories sound somehow…
Descriptors: Personal Narratives, Writing Instruction, Autobiographies, Story Grammar
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Watson, Jane – Australian Primary Mathematics Classroom, 2007
The fortunes of chance and data have fluctuated in the mathematics curriculum in Australia since their emergence in the National Statement in the early 1990s. Their appearance in Australia followed closely on similar moves in the United States. In both countries the topics, taken together, were given a section status equal to other areas of the…
Descriptors: Mathematics Curriculum, Foreign Countries, Primary Education, Mathematics Education
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Jaeger, Elizabeth – Language Arts, 2007
The author calls into question whether learning to read and write is an exclusively logical and systematic process in which the child moves step-by-step from part to whole, as it is frequently presented in "scientific" reading research. She examines research on different types of intuitive behavior and suggests parallels in the development of…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Reading Research, Literacy Education, Bilingual Education
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Cook, David A.; Thompson, Warren G.; Thomas, Kris G.; Thomas, Matthew R. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2009
Background: Adaptation to learning styles has been proposed to enhance learning. Objective: We hypothesized that learners with sensing learning style would perform better using a problem-first instructional method while intuitive learners would do better using an information-first method. Design: Randomized, controlled, crossover trial. Setting:…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Learning Processes, Internal Medicine, Educational Media
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Hoskins, Sally G.; Stevens, Leslie M. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2009
The rapid and accelerating pace of change in physiology and cell biology, along with the easy access to huge amounts of content, have altered the playing field for science students, yet most students are still mainly taught from textbooks. Of necessity, textbooks are usually broad in scope, cover topics much more superficially than do journal…
Descriptors: Physiology, Cytology, Biology, Knowledge Level
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Loomis, David J. – Religious Education, 1988
Describes imagination as the cognitive faculty that mediates a person's relationship with God. Discusses imagination's integrative function and its realm of pure possibility which facilitates openness to God. States that only through imagination grounded in God's spirit can humankind hope to perceive, with increasing degrees of clarity, God's…
Descriptors: Cognitive Structures, Imagination, Intuition, Religion
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Menuhin, Yehudi – Roeper Review, 1987
To support the statement that intuitive process is as important as the scientific, two axioms are explored by the violinist: no phenomenon discovered or created by science is possible unless its equivalent has already existed in nature; and the basic revelations of science can be formulated by intuition through meditation. (Author/KM)
Descriptors: Art, Creative Thinking, Creativity, Fine Arts
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Braisby, Nick; And Others – Cognition, 1996
Argues that discoveries concerning the essential properties of whole categories of word concepts are critical to essentialist intuitions. Reviews studies demonstrating that words and concepts are not used in accordance with essentialism, concluding that since essentialism is not vindicated by ordinary word use, it fails to undermine the cognitive…
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Cognitive Psychology, Intuition, Language Processing
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Elk, Seymour B. – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 1998
Discards the blinders that have hampered the traditional teaching of calculus and reexamines some of the intuitive ideas that underlie this subject matter. Analyzes the various indeterminate forms that arise through the blind application of algebraic operations. (Author/ASK)
Descriptors: Algebra, Calculus, Intuition, Mathematics Education
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