NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Audience
Teachers1
Laws, Policies, & Programs
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 1 to 15 of 84 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
White, E. Jayne; Westbrook, Fiona; Hawkes, Kathryn; Lord, Waveney; Redder, Bridgette – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2023
Objects in early childhood education (ECEC) experiences have begun to receive a great deal more attention than ever before. Although much of this attention has emerged recently from new materialism, in this paper we turn to Merleau-Ponty's phenomenological concern with the (in)visibility of 'things' to illuminate the presence of objects within…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Visual Stimuli, Infants, Perception
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Bates, Katherine – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2023
Debates about teaching reading have long been a part of educational vernacular, frequently reduced to polarised views about phonics. This attention can unnecessarily divert from the cumulative skills required for learning to read and comprehensive research, which indicates the positive influence of systematic phonics instruction on students'…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Foreign Countries, Reading Skills, Phonics
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Cara S. Swit; Anne L. McMaugh; Wayne A. Warburton – Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 2024
This article explores video-stimulated recall as a novel approach to understanding children's decisions to engage in relational and physical aggression. Past studies have relied on caregiver and observer reports to investigate children's social behaviors, omitting children's experience and interpretation of their own behavior. Within this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Children, Child Behavior, Antisocial Behavior
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Beadle, Julie; Kim, Jeesun; Davis, Chris – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2021
Purpose: Listeners understand significantly more speech in noise when the talker's face can be seen (visual speech) in comparison to an auditory-only baseline (a visual speech benefit). This study investigated whether the visual speech benefit is reduced when the correspondence between auditory and visual speech is uncertain and whether any…
Descriptors: Adults, Young Adults, Age Differences, Acoustics
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Black, Melissa H.; Chen, Nigel T. M.; Lipp, Ottmar V.; Bölte, Sven; Girdler, Sonya – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2020
While altered gaze behaviour during facial emotion recognition has been observed in autistic individuals, there remains marked inconsistency in findings, with the majority of previous research focused towards the processing of basic emotional expressions. There is a need to examine whether atypical gaze during facial emotion recognition extends to…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Adults, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Lim, Ming D.; Birney, Damian P. – Journal of Intelligence, 2021
Emotional intelligence (EI) refers to a set of competencies to process, understand, and reason with affective information. Recent studies suggest ability measures of experiential and strategic EI differentially predict performance on non-emotional and emotionally laden tasks. To explore cognitive processes underlying these abilities further, we…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Affective Behavior, Barriers, Inhibition
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
López López, Ligia – Curriculum Inquiry, 2020
From the vantage point of Ta Moko, this paper reads educational practices as ancestral rituals engendering antibrownness. Antibrownness is the social and analytical routine that this paper attempts to unsettle by examining the curricular practices of difference making in literacy in primary education in the US as the locus of colonial…
Descriptors: Social Bias, Racial Bias, Popular Culture, Literacy Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Grainger, Jonathan; Beyersmann, Elisabeth – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
Two masked priming experiments investigated the impact of prime lexicality (word vs. nonword) and the pseudo-morphological structure of prime stimuli (pseudosuffixed vs. nonsuffixed) on embedded word priming effects. In the related prime conditions, target words were embedded at the beginning of prime stimuli and were followed either by a…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Morphemes, Priming, Decision Making
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Hurlstone, Mark J.; Hitch, Graham J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2018
A central goal of research on short-term memory (STM) over the past 2 decades has been to identify the mechanisms that underpin the representation of serial order, and to establish whether these mechanisms are the same across different modalities and domains (e.g., verbal, visual, spatial). A fruitful approach to addressing this question has…
Descriptors: Serial Ordering, Recall (Psychology), Visual Stimuli, Short Term Memory
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Bland, Derek – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2018
Emerging from projects that have involved working with primary school children in school-related research, this article offers suggestions of how drawing as a principal means of data gathering can be either constructive or of little value. The qualitative research projects discussed include investigations of school improvement and consideration of…
Descriptors: Freehand Drawing, Research Methodology, Children, Qualitative Research
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Kinoshita, Sachiko; Mills, Luke – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2020
The present study investigated how response mode (oral vs. manual) modulates the Stroop effect using a picture variant of the Stroop task in which participants named orally, or identified with a manual keypress, line drawings of animals (e.g., camel). Consistent with previous color-response Stroop studies, relative to the nonlinguistic neutral…
Descriptors: Phonology, Language Processing, Animals, Color
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Symes, Colin; Drew, Christopher – Critical Studies in Education, 2017
As universities have succumbed to market discourses, they have adopted advertising strategies. It is not uncommon to see advertisements for them displayed in such mobile spaces as railway stations and alongside highways. Whilst it is true that such environments have always sought to take advantage of populations in transit, the fact that higher…
Descriptors: Advertising, Ethnography, Universities, Transportation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Parker, Rhiannon B.; Larkin, Theresa; Cockburn, Jon – AERA Open, 2018
Medical education curricula have the potential to impact the gender attitudes of future healthcare providers. This study investigated whether gender-biased imagery from anatomy textbooks had an effect on the implicit and explicit gender attitudes of students. We used an online experimental design in which students (N = 456; 55% female) studying…
Descriptors: Gender Bias, Medical Education, Textbooks, Textbook Content
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Cardoso, Patricia; Hawk, Dianne V.; Cross, Donna – Health Education & Behavior, 2020
Sixty-eight young people contributed to a Design Thinking Challenge created to elicit a better understanding of their electronic image-sharing experiences, the helpful and harmful consequences of image-sharing to adolescent mental health and safety, and promising interventions that allow young people to make more positive decisions and minimize…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Mental Health, Safety, Intervention
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Kinoshita, Sachiko; Mills, Luke; Norris, Dennis – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2018
Using the oral and manual Stroop tasks we tested the claim that retrieval of meaning from a written word is automatic, in the sense that it cannot be controlled. The semantic interference effect (greater interference caused by color-related words than color-neutral words) was used as the index of semantic activation. To manipulate the level of…
Descriptors: Semantics, Color, Interference (Learning), Visual Stimuli
Previous Page | Next Page »
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6