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Jessica Swenson; Emma Treadway; Krista Beranger – Journal of Engineering Education, 2024
Background: Real-world engineering problems are ill-defined and complex, and solving them may arouse negative epistemic affect (feelings experienced within problem-solving). These feelings fall into sequenced patterns (affective pathways). Over time, these patterns can alter students' attitudes toward engineering. Meta-affect (affect or cognition…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Problem Solving, Student Attitudes, Affective Behavior
Kimberly A. Bain – ProQuest LLC, 2024
In identifying ways to create inclusive spaces in the classroom, instructors should not be limited by singular modes of discourse to engage students. Particularly when teaching first-year students who seek to invent the university and claim their intellectual space within it, these considerations must be deeply integrated into the course…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, College Freshmen, Persuasive Discourse, Emotional Response
Zembylas, Michalinos – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2023
This paper turns our attention to a rather neglected dimension of (de)colonization, namely, the affective elements of (de)colonization in the context of higher education. "Affective decolonization" highlights that decolonization has to also happen at the level of affective life. The notion of affective decolonization complements the work…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Higher Education, Program Effectiveness, Affective Behavior
Pamela den Heijer; Ton Zondervan; Joke Voogt – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2024
Students in vocational education and training (VET) need to be prepared for coping with value conflicts they will face in their professional lives. Development of awareness of one's feelings is an essential aspect in this regard. Students need to be aware of their own inner feelings to decrease the unconscious influence of inner feelings on their…
Descriptors: Vocational Education, Values, Conflict, Psychological Patterns
Cory Legassic – LEARNing Landscapes, 2024
This piece offers a conceptual framework for collective care as pedagogy in higher education, and a proposition of how to theorize its orientations within anticolonial and feminist work on affect in education. First, I spotlight work that helps to define collective care. Next, I call on the concept of affective individualism as a way to describe…
Descriptors: Caring, Higher Education, Decolonization, Feminism
Mulcahy, Dianne; Martinussen, Maree – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2023
Based on empirical research with working-class students studying in Australian universities, this article frames class as a structuring relation, but also as a series of affective events, through which we emphasise capacities. Putting the concept of class in conversation with two analytics of affect, we show how class is a relational site of…
Descriptors: Working Class, College Students, Foreign Countries, Equal Education
Kinchin, Ian; Balloo, Kieran; Barnett, Laura; Gravett, Karen; Heron, Marion; Hosein, Anesa; Lygo-Baker, Simon; Medland, Emma; Winstone, Naomi; Yakovchuk, Nadya – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2023
To explore the affective domains embedded in academic development and teacher practice, a team of academic developers was invited to consider a poem and how it reflects the emotions and feelings underpinning experiences as teachers within Higher Education. We used a method of arts-informed, collective biography to evaluate a poem to draw upon and…
Descriptors: Poetry, Psychological Patterns, Teaching Experience, College Faculty
Rosalyn Black; Matthew Krehl Edward Thomas; Margaret Bearman – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2025
The contemporary university works to produce an imagined global graduate who can demonstrate competencies such as mobility, intercultural awareness and global citizenship. In Australia and New Zealand, teacher education academics are charged with the production of graduates who can display and transmit such competencies, but the labour and lived…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Graduates, Global Approach, Teacher Education
Jason L. Snyder; Mark D. Cistulli; Cathleen D. Donahue; Alana S. Ledford – Journal of Education for Business, 2024
College textbook costs have risen dramatically since the late 1970s. Open educational resources (OERs) stand as a low- to no-cost alternative. This research examined the impact of OER book adoption on indicators of student performance and perceptions of the instructor, learning, and out-of-classroom communication. The first study compared student…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Open Educational Resources, Textbooks, Educational Quality
The Effects of Sleep on Body Image: Examining the Roles of Depression, Perceived Stress, and Anxiety
Diane L. Rosenbaum; Meghan M. Gillen; Steven A. Bloomer – Journal of American College Health, 2024
Objective: Although health and wellness behaviors are associated with positive body image, research is limited regarding the relationship between sleep and positive body image. We propose that negative affective states may link sleep and body image. Specifically, we examined whether better sleep may relate to positive body image through reductions…
Descriptors: Sleep, Self Concept, Human Body, Depression (Psychology)
Massimiliano Vesci; Chiara Crudele; Rosangela Feola; Roberto Parente – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
Through the lenses of Entrepreneurial Event Theory and the Affective Processing Principle, this study aims to explore the interplay between cognition and emotion in the entrepreneurship education-entrepreneurial intention link, exploring the specific role of fear, conceptualized as a negative, avoidance-oriented, emotion. A moderation- mediation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Entrepreneurship, Education Work Relationship
Bae, Beom Jun; Heald, Gary – Journal of American College Health, 2023
Objective: The current study explores non-linear effects of absolute risk and effects of comparative risk information about skin cancer on individuals' safety ratings, affective responses and behavioral intentions. Method: An experimental survey was conducted among college students (N = 563) to test the effects of absolute and comparative risk…
Descriptors: Cancer, College Students, Risk, Safety
Elaine Atkins; Matthew Muscat-Inglott – International Journal of Emotional Education, 2023
Existing research suggests that mindfulness cultivates positive affect while reducing negative affect, and facilitates increases in resilience. More research is needed to examine the complex mechanisms by which emotional affect likely translates mindfulness into increased states of resilience in undergraduates. We hypothesised that the…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Resilience (Psychology), Undergraduate Students, Well Being
Bylsma, Paul E. – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The hidden curriculum has been theorized and researched as imposing messaging that students learn but are not explicitly taught. However, few studies considered the hidden curriculum as an integrated and embodied function of students' lived experiences, or students' role in their encounters with the hidden curriculum. This study investigated how…
Descriptors: Hidden Curriculum, Business Administration Education, Undergraduate Students, Affective Behavior
Carlos J. Desme; Anthony S. Dick; Timothy B. Hayes; Shannon M. Pruden – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2024
Spatial ability is defined as a cognitive or intellectual skill used to represent, transform, generate, and recall information of an object or the environment. Individual differences across spatial tasks have been strongly linked to science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) interest and success. Several variables have been proposed…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Individual Differences, Affective Behavior, Self Esteem