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Knutsen, Dominique; Le Bigot, Ludovic – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2021
Conversational memory is subject to a number of biases. For instances, references which were reused during dialogue are remembered better than non-reused references. Two experiments examined whether speakers are aware that they are subject to such biases and whether they use information about reference origin (i.e., information about who said…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Memory, Bias, Metacognition
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Alemanji, Aminkeng A. – Educational Practice and Theory, 2021
Finland is widely said to have the best, or one of the best, educational systems in the world. This debatable view hides a lot of weaknesses and shortcomings, especially regarding issues around racism and discrimination. In Finland, issues of race, racism and other forms of discrimination are often hidden, silenced and ignored. This makes it…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Social Justice, Best Practices, Foreign Countries
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Bynum, Gregory – Educational Theory, 2021
Philosophers and other scholars writing on the idea of race have pointed to a tension, in society and in intellectual life, between: (1) an understanding of race as an experienced identity, the experience of which must not be denied in the interest of both social justice and critical attentiveness to social structures of racist oppression; and (2)…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Race, Educational Philosophy, Social Justice
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Nuttgens, Simon – Research Ethics, 2021
Ethical decision-making is inherent to the research ethics committee (REC) deliberation process. While ethical codes, regulations, and research standards are indispensable in guiding this process, decision-making is nonetheless susceptible to nonrational factors that can undermined the quality, consistency, and perceived fairness REC decisions. In…
Descriptors: Research, Ethics, Decision Making, Research Committees
Jean-Francois, Sara – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2021
The U.S. landscape of higher education has featured two types of universities: one for people of color, the sometimes formally recognized Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), and the other, more informally known as predominantly white institutions (PWIs), where only white students were generally admitted. PWIs are not unlike…
Descriptors: Institutional Characteristics, Whites, Social Change, Educational Change
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Prince, Michael J. – Evidence & Policy: A Journal of Research, Debate and Practice, 2021
Background: While governments draw on survey data to inform policy choices, the design, application, and interpretation of surveys can generate certain images of disability and ignore many others. Aims and objectives: This article draws attention to social circumstances of people with disabilities often unacknowledged in research evidence: hidden…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Foreign Countries, Public Policy, Adolescents
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Soares, Ana Paula; Lages, Alexandrina; Velho, Mariana; Oliveira, Helena M.; Hernández-Cabrera, Juan – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2021
Soares, Lages, Oliveira, and Cabrera-Hernández (2019) recently showed that the mirror-letter interference effect observed for words containing reversal letters was reliable for words containing left-oriented mirror-letters as 'd', but not for words containing right-oriented mirror-letters as 'b', thus indicating that the directionality of the…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Word Recognition, Alphabets, Interference (Learning)
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Gaviria, Christian; Corredor, Javier – Metacognition and Learning, 2021
The Illusion of Explanatory Depth (IOED) occurs when people overestimate their ability to explain the causal mechanisms of natural or social processes. Prior research has attributed this metacognitive bias to confounding the understanding of abstract causal patterns with the comprehension of domain-specific mechanisms. However, this explanation…
Descriptors: Social Desirability, History, Metacognition, Attribution Theory
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Guan, Shuang; Arnold, Jennifer E. – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2021
In discourses involving implicit causality, the implicit cause of the event is referentially predictable, that is, it is likely to be rementioned. However, it is unclear how referential predictability is calculated. We test two possible explanations: (1) The frequency account suggests that people learn that implicit causes are predictable through…
Descriptors: Influences, Prediction, Incidence, Comprehension
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Huang, Ao; Komukai, Sho; Friede, Tim; Hattori, Satoshi – Research Synthesis Methods, 2021
Prospective registration of study protocols in clinical trial registries is a useful way to minimize the risk of publication bias in meta-analysis, and several clinical trial registries are available nowadays. However, they are mainly used as a tool for searching studies and information submitted to the registries has not been utilized as…
Descriptors: Publications, Bias, Meta Analysis, Selection
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Page, Matthew J.; Sterne, Jonathan A. C.; Higgins, Julian P. T.; Egger, Matthias – Research Synthesis Methods, 2021
A "P" value, or the magnitude or direction of results can influence decisions about whether, when, and how research findings are disseminated. Regardless of whether an entire study or a particular study result is unavailable because investigators considered the results to be unfavorable, bias in a meta-analysis may occur when available…
Descriptors: Publications, Bias, Medical Research, Meta Analysis
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Myers, Aaron J.; Finney, Sara J. – Journal of Experimental Education, 2021
Perceived test importance and test-taking effort are typically measured after test completion, contrary to the temporal ordering specified by expectancy-value theory. Retrospective importance and effort scores may reflect students' self-protective attributions of performance, which would support collection of prospective importance and effort…
Descriptors: Change, Measurement Techniques, Student Motivation, Test Wiseness
Singleton, Glenn E. – Corwin, 2021
Schools, like all organizations, face a nearly insurmountable hurdle when addressing racial inequities--the inability to talk candidly about race. In this timely update, author Glenn Singleton enables you to break the silence and open an authentic dialogue that forges a path to progress for racial equity. The third edition offers new coverage of…
Descriptors: Race, Equal Education, Pandemics, Racial Bias
Butcher, Jonathan; Burke, Lindsey M. – Heritage Foundation, 2021
In December 2020, the Illinois State Board of Education adopted new "Culturally Responsive Teaching and Leading Standards" that are focused on identity politics, teaching students to find bias around them, and instructing students on how to resist the "systems of oppression" in which they allegedly live. Critical Theorists…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Educational Policy, Race, Bias
Alexandra Littlefox – ProQuest LLC, 2021
This study examines the current state of collegiate athletics through a critical and historical lens. Drawing on examples of activism and social justice in sport, this research seeks to examine the necessary elements for an athletics setting that disrupts oppressive structures. Using a counterspaces framework, it looks at alternative models for an…
Descriptors: College Athletics, Activism, Social Justice, Team Sports
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