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Robinson, Leslie; Harris, Ann; Burton, Rob – Active Learning in Higher Education, 2015
This qualitative study investigated the complex social aspects of communication required for students to participate effectively in Problem-Based Learning and explored how these dynamics are managed. The longitudinal study of a group of first-year undergraduates examined interactions using Rapport Management as a framework to analyse communication…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Qualitative Research, Problem Based Learning, College Freshmen
Foulsham, Tom; Kingstone, Alan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2013
Many modern theories propose that perceptual information is represented by the sensorimotor activity elicited by the original stimulus. Scanpath theory (Noton & Stark, 1971) predicts that reinstating a sequence of eye fixations will help an observer recognize a previously seen image. However, the only studies to investigate this are…
Descriptors: Memory, Theories, Eye Movements, Recognition (Psychology)
Brooks, Michael; Kakabadse, Nada K. – Management in Education, 2014
This article reflects on the introduction of "matrix management" arrangements for an Educational Psychology Service (EPS) within a Children's Service Directorate of a Local Authority (LA). It seeks to demonstrate critical self-awareness, consider relevant literature with a view to bringing insights to processes and outcomes, and offers…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Action Research, Educational Psychology, Administrative Organization
James, Alana I.; Smith, Peter K.; Radford, Lorraine – Pastoral Care in Education, 2014
Peer mentoring is the most common type of peer support framework used in English secondary schools, involving a one-to-one supportive relationship between pupils. Interpersonal benefits have been found for pupils who provide support to others, but there has been little exploration of the experience of being a peer mentor. This qualitative study…
Descriptors: Mentors, Peer Teaching, Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students
Sharp, John G.; Hemmings, Brian; Kay, Russell; Murphy, Barbara; Elliott, Sam – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2017
Academic boredom usually contributes adversely towards student engagement and performance across a diverse range of settings including universities. The formal study of academic boredom in higher education remains, however, a relatively underdeveloped field and one surprisingly neglected in the UK. Rooted in Control-Value Theory, details of a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Seniors, Student Attitudes, Learner Engagement
Phillips, Magdalen – IAFOR Journal of Language Learning, 2017
The learning of modern languages in primary school (PL) was recently promoted to statutory status in the curriculum of England and Wales, but practice remains patchy. Low PL capacity amongst primary school teachers and constraints on curricular time persist. Viewed through the lenses of policy, learning theory and context, current PL practice can…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Stoten, David William – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2013
In order to understand the changing nature of professionalism we must consider how the work of teachers has changed in recent years and place this into its wider political and social context as the British State moved from a social democratic model of the State to one based on neo-liberal ideology. Although much of the literature of teacher…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Professional Identity, Neoliberalism, Critical Theory
Casanovas-Rubio, Maria del Mar; Ahearn, Alison; Ramos, Gonzalo; Popo-Ola, Sunday – Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 2016
In principle, the research-teaching nexus should be seen as a two-way link, showing not only ways in which research supports teaching but also ways in which teaching supports research. In reality, the discussion has been limited almost entirely to the first of these practices. This paper presents a case study in which some student field-trip…
Descriptors: Research and Development, Theory Practice Relationship, Case Studies, Field Trips
Maylor, Uvanney – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2016
What is meant by fundamental British values? How are they constructed and can they be taught in schools? In trying to address these questions, this paper revisits a small-scale research study commissioned by the UK's previous New Labour government. The research was concerned to understand the extent to which schools delivered a diverse curriculum…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Values, Cultural Pluralism, Teacher Attitudes
Pearce, Warren – Evidence & Policy: A Journal of Research, Debate and Practice, 2014
Climate policy is typically seen as informed by scientific evidence that anthropogenic carbon emissions require reducing in order to avoid dangerous consequences. However, agreement on these matters has not translated into effective policy. Using interviews with local authority officials in the UK's East Midlands region, this paper argues that the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Climate, Public Policy, Evidence Based Practice
Preston, John; Chadderton, Charlotte; Kitagawa, Kaori – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2014
The term "state of exception" has been used by Italian political theorist Giorgio Agamben to explain the ways in which emergencies, crises and disasters are used by governments to suspend legal processes. In this paper, we innovatively apply Agamben's theory to the way in which countries prepare and educate the population for various…
Descriptors: Natural Disasters, Theories, Emergency Programs, Governance
Dimensions of Knowing: A Conceptual Alternative to an Unhelpful Polarity between Knowledge and Skill
Rand, Jane – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2015
This paper reports research that responded to my experience of teacher trainees' perception of a polarity between knowledge and skill in English post-compulsory education and training (PCET). I developed a model of knowing designed to promote an alternative to this binary conceptualisation. The research set out to operationalise "Dimensions…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Knowledge Level, Knowledge Base for Teaching, Teacher Education
Cameron, Harriet; Nunkoosing, Karl – Teaching in Higher Education, 2012
The aim of this study was to explore lecturers' experiences with and perspectives on dyslexia and dyslexic students to inform the wider debate about the issues of dyslexia support in higher education. Data were collected and analysed using an abbreviated constructivist grounded theory method. Participants were categorised as "positive",…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Dyslexia, Foreign Countries, Grounded Theory
Moore, Allison; Prescott, Phil – Journal of Youth Studies, 2013
Current youth policy in England and Wales utilises "transition" as the major framework for understanding young people's movement from "youth" to "adulthood". Underpinning this are developmental assumptions about who young people are and who they "should" become, especially with regard to sexuality.…
Descriptors: Sexuality, Risk, Youth, Public Policy
Sales, Rachel – Practitioner Research in Higher Education, 2014
For a novice academic, the first experience of marking can be as memorable as preparing for and giving the first teaching session. Yet, while academic reflections and narratives abound for the latter, there is a paucity of literature regarding the former. This study begins to address this lack of literature through an exploration of six newly…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Feedback (Response), Teacher Attitudes, Teaching Experience