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Martin, Jack; Sokol, Bryan W.; Elfers, Theo – Human Development, 2008
Despite being eclipsed in recent years by simulation theory, theory of mind and accounts of executive functioning, social-relational approaches to perspective taking and coordination based on the ideas of Jean Piaget and George Herbert Mead have never completely disappeared from the literature of developmental psychology. According to the…
Descriptors: Perspective Taking, Cognitive Processes, Interpersonal Competence, Social Cognition
Mortiboys, Alan – Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2011
The way teachers shape and handle their own feelings and those of their learners is central to the success of learning. Now in its second edition, "Teaching with Emotional Intelligence" shows how to manage this influential yet neglected area of learning and teaching. This practical book looks at how lecturers and teachers can develop and use their…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Teaching Methods, Textbook Content, Classroom Communication
Dillon, Bobbie – National Association of College and University Business Officers (NJ3), 2011
In February 2009, the National Association of College and University Business Officers, with generous support from Aetna, Inc., brought together business officers from a wide range of academic institutions to identify practical solutions to the challenges facing their campuses. The specific objective of the group: to develop an understanding of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Colleges, Campuses, Work Environment
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Schillinger, Trace – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2011
In 2006, a secondary English and feminist studies teacher created a course and designed a study around a reading exchange for eighth-grade girls from two vastly different communities. Girls from a school in a northeastern state read young adult novels and wrote about their reading and related topics with girls from Washington, DC on a wikispace…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Females, Background, Differences
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Nail, Allan – English Journal, 2009
One reason zombie films are so frightening, and perhaps so popular, is because zombies represent a unique type of monster. Rather than frightening people because they are so alien to the world as people understand it, zombies are horrifying in how closely they resemble people. Zombies are people and represent the potential of zombie…
Descriptors: Films, Human Body, Death, Mobility
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Man, Glenn – Educational Perspectives, 2009
The author describes how he instructs students in his introductory film course to show how one can reveal a film's ideological dimensions in teaching. In this article, the author traces the progress of his student's arc of learning, from their relative lack of awareness of film's influence on the construction of identity to a more sophisticated…
Descriptors: Films, Film Study, Art Appreciation, Audience Response
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Duarte, Fernanda – Journal of Management Education, 2009
Based on the reflections and insights of a sociologist teaching in a school of management, this article invites management educators to rekindle the "sociological imagination," which, albeit more than five decades old, is a concept that has not lost its relevance to make sense of organizational phenomena. It is my contention that C. Wright Mills's…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Imagination, Sociology, Industrial Psychology
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Peterson, Kristina – Journal of Staff Development, 2010
National education reform happens with or without teacher input, but teachers are increasingly finding ways to enter the policy dialogue. In addition to traditional union representation and direct contact with elected representatives, emerging web 2.0 tools have created a new level of interaction between teachers and policy makers. In this…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Educational Change, Teaching (Occupation), Public Officials
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Ruth, Damian – London Review of Education, 2010
The metaphor of "monoculture on the intellectual landscape" is used to analyse the effects of large-scale research management regimes. The metaphor of "monoculture on the intellectual landscape", derived from Shiva's "monocultures of the mind", is developed and illustrated with respect to gender and ethnicity. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Research Administration, Performance Based Assessment, Figurative Language
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Wilson, Maja – Educational Leadership, 2008
Wilson asserts that the quest for absolute objectivity in scoring student writing--including the use of rubrics--creates harmful distance between reader and writer and ignores the unique, transactional characteristics of writing. She puts forth the view of Rosenblatt and other literacy theorists that meaning and value of texts are not rigidly…
Descriptors: Writing Evaluation, Scoring, Reader Text Relationship, Perspective Taking
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Bruce, David L. – English Journal, 2011
Storyboards deliver a narrative through discrete visual representations. The purpose of the storyboards was always to "scaffold" the final product and students were free to add, delete, or adapt those images that were most helpful to their project. The storyboards served as a brainstorming activity, much like a prewriting exercise for a written…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Visual Aids, Instructional Materials, Planning
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Caron, Rosemary M.; Serrell, Nancy – Applied Environmental Education and Communication, 2009
Wicked problems are multifactorial in nature and possess no clear resolution due to numerous community stakeholder involvement. We demonstrate childhood lead poisoning as a wicked problem and illustrate how understanding a community's ecology can build community capacity to affect local environmental management by (1) forming an academic-community…
Descriptors: Social Environment, Community Problems, Difficulty Level, Children
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Reeve, Johnmarshall; Halusic, Marc – Theory and Research in Education, 2009
We discuss how K-12 teachers can put motivational principles from self-determination theory into practice. To explain the "how to" of autonomy-supportive teaching, we answer eight frequently asked questions from teachers: What is the goal of autonomy-supportive teaching? How is autonomy-supportive teaching unique? Does autonomy support mean…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Teacher Motivation, Educational Principles, Self Determination
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Charon, Rita – Journal of Applied Communication Research, 2009
By talking with patients in specialized ways and by touching their bodies in specialized ways, doctors may come to some provisional conclusions about the patients' medical conditions and then make some preliminary decisions about what diagnostic tests to have them endure and what medical treatments to initiate. In this article, the author…
Descriptors: Physician Patient Relationship, Intimacy, Human Body, Tactual Perception
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Griffith, Susan C. – Language Arts, 2009
Early twentieth-century social activist Jane Addams is best known for her work at Hull House, the settlement house she founded with Ellen Gates Starr in 1889. Adams was also a pacifist, storyteller, writer and philosopher. Through her actions, stories, and writing, Addams modeled a philosophy of democracy-in-action based in imagination and…
Descriptors: Activism, Advocacy, Social Action, Social Justice
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