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Showing 31 to 45 of 496 results Save | Export
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Fishman, Stephen M.; McCarthy, Lucille – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
Nel Noddings claims that there is an important normative element in happiness. For support, she points to the Aristotelian idea of the "eudaimonic" life, a concept that is often translated into English as "the happy life". However, in light of the wide divergence between the Aristotelian view of "eudaimonia" as a life…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Well Being, Satisfaction, Emotional Response
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Tan, Seng-Chee – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2013
In this forum, I take a learning sciences perspective to examine the paper by Bellocchi, Ritchie, Tobin, Sandhu and Sandhu ("Cultural Studies of Science Education," doi:10.1007/s11422-013-9526-3, 2013) titled "Examining emotional climate of preservice science teacher education." I characterize their approach as a social…
Descriptors: Sociocultural Patterns, Emotional Response, Teachers, Outcomes of Education
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Blair, R. J. R. – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2013
There have long been suggestions that reduced levels of empathy are associated with an increased risk for antisocial behavior (e.g., Miller & Eisenberg, 1988). The article by Rhee and colleagues on typically developing children (Rhee et al., 2012) is important because it is one of the few studies to longitudinally examine the relationship…
Descriptors: Empathy, Antisocial Behavior, Correlation, Risk
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Lench, Heather C.; Bench, Shane W.; Flores, Sarah A. – Psychological Bulletin, 2013
Lindquist, Siegel, Quigley, and Barrett (2013) critiqued our recent meta-analysis that reported the effects of discrete emotions on outcomes, including cognition, judgment, physiology, behavior, and experience (Lench, Flores, & Bench, 2011). Lindquist et al. offered 2 major criticisms--we address both and consider the nature of emotion and…
Descriptors: Evidence, Emotional Response, Criticism, Affective Behavior
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Lindquist, Kristen A.; Siegel, Erika H.; Quigley, Karen S.; Barrett, Lisa Feldman – Psychological Bulletin, 2013
For the last century, there has been a continuing debate about the nature of emotion. In the most recent offering in this scientific dialogue, Lench, Flores, and Bench (2011) reported a meta-analysis of emotion induction research and claimed support for the natural kind hypothesis that discrete emotions (e.g., happiness, sadness, anger, and…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Meta Analysis, Emotional Response, Physiology
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Gordon, Mordechai – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2012
The connection between humor and aesthetic experience has already been recognized by several thinkers and aesthetic educators. For instance, humor theorist John Morreall writes that "humor is best understood as itself a kind of aesthetic experience, equal in value at least to any other kind of aesthetic experience." For Morreall, both humor and…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Curriculum Development, Humor, Correlation
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Berlin, Gail Ivy – College English, 2012
The encounter with literature of the Holocaust, saturated as it is with unfathomable grief, loss, terror, and death, presents its readers with difficulties rare in literatures not dealing with the extreme. Specifically, usual academic discourse lacks a register for addressing the intense emotions that Holocaust narratives or poetry may generate.…
Descriptors: World History, Altruism, Empathy, Poetry
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Broadway, Francis S.; Leafgren, Sheri L. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2012
Through exploration of public mask/private face, the authors trouble violence and its role in science education through three media: schools, masculinity, and science acknowledging a violence of hate, but dwelling on a violence of caring. In schools, there is the poisonous "for your own good" pedagogy that becomes a "for your own good" curriculum…
Descriptors: Science Education, Violence, Teaching Methods, Science Instruction
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Vázquez-Recio, Rosa – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 2014
Defending emotions is neither banal nor senselessness. It is not falling into sentimentality (Camps, 2011, p. 33) would say. Emotions take shape within human actions and imply leadership, not just in a purely mechanistic sense, but in the sense set out by Sartre (1973), dealing with the way the individual understands emotions and the role they…
Descriptors: Leadership, Leadership Qualities, Educational Administration, Emotional Experience
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Kroeber, Karl – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2012
This article presents the address delivered by the author to Columbia college students elected to the Phi Beta Kappa Society on May 18, 2009. In the address, the author talks about the work he had done that might be of interest to these students. He emphasizes two kinds of work that are interlocking, yet distinct: (1) teaching; and (2)…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Reaction, Teaching (Occupation), Scholarship
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Zembylas, Michalinos – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2013
This article joins discussions concerning education as a means of cultivating compassion and pays explicit attention to the emotional complexities of teaching for/with compassion to help students become active and critical compassionate citizens. After reviewing the emotional aspects that establish feelings of pity and a sentimental relationship…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Teaching Methods, Caring, Emotional Response
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Overskeid, Geir – Psychological Record, 2012
Historically, researchers have never quite been able to agree as to the role of emotions, if any, when behavior is selected by its consequences. A brief review of findings from several fields suggests that in contingency-shaped behavior, motivating events, often unconscious, seem needed for reinforcement to select behavior. In rule-governed…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Psychological Patterns, Reinforcement, Emotional Response
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Boyce-Tillman, June – Music Educators Journal, 2013
Since early times, human beings have searched for spiritual experiences that provide connections to their hearts and souls. People sometimes find these connections through experiencing music--perhaps the last remaining ubiquitous spiritual experience in Western culture. And yet, material values rule our world, even in music education. Is music in…
Descriptors: Music Education, Mythology, Greek Civilization, Western Civilization
Richardson, Joan – Phi Delta Kappan, 2014
Reading scholar Maryanne Wolf believes that every child needs an array of digital skills in their learning repertoire. Her research focuses on how best to introduce technology in terms of reading acquisition so children can develop deep reading skills over time. Educators must focus on a carefully considered trajectory in order to develop a truly…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Teaching Methods, Reading Instruction, Reading Skills
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Miles, Eleanor; Sheeran, Paschal; Webb, Thomas L. – Psychological Bulletin, 2013
Augustine and Hemenover (2013) were right to state that meta-analyses should be accurate and generalizable. However, we disagree that our meta-analysis of emotion regulation strategies (Webb, Miles, & Sheeran, 2012) fell short in these respects. Augustine and Hemenover's concerns appear to have accrued from misunderstandings of our inclusion…
Descriptors: Effect Size, Meta Analysis, Accuracy, Self Control
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