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Joanna Fursman – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2024
This article explores how lens-based practices can articulate and respond to art education phenomena. The affective turn in education and appearances of education in artists' film and moving-image are explored to help identify different appearances and experiences of art education pedagogy. Interspersed by clip descriptions from students and my…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Art Education, Films, Artists
Lucy Rodriguez Leon – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2024
Young children encounter a diverse range of written and multimodal texts in their play and everyday lives. Prior to formal education, children may not be considered 'readers' or 'writers' in the conventional sense, yet nonetheless, they engage creatively and agentively in everyday literacies. However, little is known about the motives and…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Learner Engagement, Creative Thinking, Preschool Children
Fezile Sibanda; Máiréad Dunne – Sage Research Methods Cases, 2024
This case study concerns the use of one-to-one storytelling inspired by Ubuntu philosophy as a research method. Ubuntu is a Bantu, Nguni (African) philosophy that is encapsulated in the saying, "I am because we are, and since we are, therefore I am." This inspired the use of one-to-one storytelling as a method, as it provided space for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Story Telling, African Culture, Personal Narratives
Using Constructs of 'Good' Writing to Develop 'a Voice of One's Own' in the Primary School Classroom
Victorina González-Diaz; Elizabeth Parr; Kristi Nourie – Literacy, 2025
Partly as result of the predominant 'narrow' view of writing in England's recent school curriculum and assessment, current primary school pupils often hold a skills-oriented view of 'good' writing for a substantially longer period than has traditionally been reported in the literature. This makes it difficult for teachers to promote and engage…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Writing Attitudes, Writing (Composition), Class Activities
T. Revell; W. Yeadon; G. Cahilly-Bretzin; I. Clarke; G. Manning; J. Jones; C. Mulley; R. J. Pascual; N. Bradley; D. Thomas; F. Leneghan – International Journal for Educational Integrity, 2024
Generative AI has prompted educators to reevaluate traditional teaching and assessment methods. This study examines AI's ability to write essays analysing Old English poetry; human markers assessed and attempted to distinguish them from authentic analyses of poetry by first-year undergraduate students in English at the University of Oxford. Using…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Authors, Integrity, Essays
Therova, Dana – Journal of International Students, 2022
Despite the extensive research into academic vocabulary in university student writing, little is known about academic vocabulary in international foundation-level students' assessed academic writing. Considering that academic vocabulary is regarded as a key element of academic writing style and that written assignment is one of the main forms of…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Academic Language, Foreign Students, Foreign Countries
Howard Scott; Pete Bennett; Craig Hammond – Prism: Casting New Light on Learning, Theory & Practice, 2023
This paper outlines the pedagogical approaches taken on a University Access course, teaching predominantly mature students on a 12-week 'inclusion in education' module. The methods aimed to validate and develop literacy and academic skills for students undertaking undergraduate courses. Practice on the programme of study, replicated over three…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Writing (Composition), Self Concept, Andragogy
Jayne Osgood; Viv Bozalek – Gender and Education, 2024
In this paper, we dwell amongst what was agitated from enacting Neimanis' (2012) hydrofeminism in an 'aqueous-body-writing-reading' experiment that unfolded in discrete but entangled locations (London and Cape Town) to actively disrupt and reformulate ideas about what it is to do scholarly work. We consider how we might dislodge anthropocentric…
Descriptors: Praxis, Feminism, Humanism, World Views
Collyer, Edward – English in Education, 2022
This paper reflects on the teaching of the unseen poetry element of the English Literature GCSE in 2022. It explores the author's reflections on the successes and limitations of using a less structured approach with a single Year 11 class, concluding that the pedagogies outlined were more successful than previous iterations in terms of pupil…
Descriptors: Poetry, Grade 11, Teaching Methods, High School Students
Guilfoyle, Liam; Hillier, Judith; Fancourt, Nigel – Research in Science & Technological Education, 2023
Background: Argumentation, that is the coordination of evidence and reasons to support claims, is an important skill for democratic society, developing subject-specific literacies, and can be embedded in multiple school subjects. While argumentation has been extensively researched in science education, interdisciplinary argumentation is less…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Science Education, Religious Education, Interdisciplinary Approach
Eva Shackel – Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, 2023
In-person, one-to-one verbal feedback has long been prioritised in learning development. However, there are instances where written feedback proves to be a more convenient option. This study investigated the reasons why students request, and how they perceive, the written feedback they receive from a writing centre at a university in the UK. To…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Verbal Communication, Foreign Countries, Laboratories
Taylor, Lucy; Clarke, Paula – Literacy, 2021
The extent to which children's reading experiences influence their writing production is not well understood. It is imperative that the connections between these literacy practices are elucidated in order to inform the development of stimulating curricula and to support children's development. This paper presents new data and key findings from a…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Recreational Reading, Writing (Composition), Reading Writing Relationship
Cunningham, Clare – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2022
A good research base exists on the benefits of structured writing retreats and similar provision for academic staff and postgraduate researchers, but to date little has been published about the worth of such events for undergraduate students. This is despite the fact that undergraduate student researchers also experience external pressures,…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Research, Researchers, Writing (Composition)
Guimaraes, Sofia – Early Child Development and Care, 2023
Learning to write is a complex process involving linguistic, cognitive, and socio-emotional factors. From a developmental perspective, little research has explored the content of young children's writings in terms of specific cognitive skills such as Theory of Mind (TOM). This study explores how young children's writing may foster representations…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Theory of Mind, Young Children, Cognitive Processes
Bradford, Helen; Wyse, Dominic – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2022
This paper reports the findings of in-depth qualitative research to investigate two-year-old and three-year-old children's writing. It focuses on nine families whose children attended the same early years pre-school setting. The research developed a clear understanding of what children of this age understand about the functions and purpose of…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Writing (Composition), Teacher Attitudes, Parent Attitudes