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Showing 106 to 120 of 224 results Save | Export
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Morales-Almazan, Pedro – PRIMUS, 2022
This article explores the parallels between improvisational theater, commonly known as improv, and active teaching. Specifically, it focuses in the impact of improv techniques on instructor and teaching assistant professional development. The implementation of an active teaching seminar is analyzed, where improv techniques were used in developing…
Descriptors: Creative Activities, Drama, Teaching Methods, Faculty Development
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Moore-Beyioku, Cheryl – Journal of Teaching and Learning with Technology, 2021
The need to quickly transition from face-to-face teaching using engaging, content-based activities to a new, online platform in just two weeks during the 2019 coronavirus disease (COVID19) pandemic, made it necessary to try to migrate familiar activities that the students enjoyed into a virtual classroom. The activity that proved to be the most…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Distance Education, Learner Engagement
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Geden, Michael; Emerson, Andrew; Carpenter, Dan; Rowe, Jonathan; Azevedo, Roger; Lester, James – International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education, 2021
Game-based learning environments are designed to provide effective and engaging learning experiences for students. Predictive student models use trace data extracted from students' in-game learning behaviors to unobtrusively generate early assessments of student knowledge and skills, equipping game-based learning environments with the capacity to…
Descriptors: Game Based Learning, Middle School Students, Microbiology, Secondary School Science
Alison M. Hill; Nicholas J. Harmer – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
Gamification has a strong track record of improving student engagement and learning in the chemical sciences. Meta-analyses of different approaches to gamification have highlighted that providing a game fiction, encouraging students to work in teams, and breaking games into smaller "quests" are particularly effective. Here, we aimed to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Chemistry, Science Instruction
Janice D. Gobert; Michael A. Sao Pedro; Haiying Li; Christine Lott – Grantee Submission, 2023
In this entry, we define Intelligent Tutoring Systems (ITSs) and present a description of their core components. We outline a history of the development of ITSs with a focus on key issues that have driven change and innovation in ITSs from their inception to present day. We also present a brief case study on a specific ITS, Inq-ITS (Inquiry…
Descriptors: Intelligent Tutoring Systems, Student Evaluation, Evaluation Methods, Natural Language Processing
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Paul, Rik; Ponnam, Abhilash; Bagchi, Shantanu Shanker – Marketing Education Review, 2022
Retailers are faced with the challenge of how many stores to operate in a potential or an existing market and where those stores should be located. Various factors influence this decision-making. For instance, the customer behavior and their demographic characteristics, customer travel times, presence of competitors, costs involved, location…
Descriptors: Retailing, Marketing, Decision Making, Purchasing
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Victoria Bonefont; Burton Carbino; Rana Zakerzadeh – Biomedical Engineering Education, 2022
This paper identifies an opportunity to integrate gamification in undergraduate biomedical engineering (BME) classrooms to alleviate student test anxiety and promote student perception of their academic performance. Gamification is a popular educational strategy that does not appear to be widely explored or adopted in higher education,…
Descriptors: Test Anxiety, Gamification, Undergraduate Students, Biomedicine
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Schiffman, James R. – History Teacher, 2020
Reacting to the past has emerged as a high-impact pedagogy that is attracting a growing following of academic practitioners. An expanding body of academic research explains why Reacting works and shows that students who take Reacting courses perform better in various assessment measures. Still, academic literature on Reacting lacks resources about…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Educational Games, Instructional Design, College Instruction
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Rathnakumar, D. – Shanlax International Journal of Education, 2020
We are witnessing tremendous changes day by day in the educational field, and new avenues of knowledge are opened up almost daily. Innovations in behavioral psychology and educational technology would certainly balance the disparity in learning that arises due to physical, economic, and social factors. There is an ability within every child, and…
Descriptors: Play Therapy, Children, Intellectual Disability, Mental Health
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Scott, Rebecca A.; Rutner, Stephen M. – Information Systems Education Journal, 2020
This article illustrates the benefits of off the shelf simulation software to increase learning for students in the classroom. Furthermore, the use of a computer game presents a unique opportunity for increased understanding of transportation fundamentals in a fun environment. Another benefit is that the use of the simulation helps Millennial…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Transportation, Teaching Methods, Supply and Demand
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van Esch, Chantal; Wiggen, Todd – Management Teaching Review, 2020
This article focuses on using the cooperative board game "Pandemic"® to teach management. In "Pandemic," players must work together to cure four diseases and save the world. In this article, we suggest how it can be used in the classroom to teach decision making and also give guidance on how the game can help students learn how…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Game Based Learning, Business Administration Education, Decision Making
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Smith, Wayne; Ovens, Alan; Philpot, Rod – Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, 2021
Background: For many years, skill learning has been an important component of primary school physical education (PE) with most lessons focused on the teaching of fundamental movement skills (FMS) or sports techniques (Kirk 2010). Increasingly, the generalist primary school teachers who are responsible for delivering the PE curriculum are facing…
Descriptors: Game Based Learning, Self Concept, Sense of Community, Elementary School Students
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Morgan, Lewis; Turner, Ian – Primary Science, 2021
"Dungeons and Dragons" is classified as a table-top role-playing game (TTRPG) and it is not surprising that TTRPGs exist for every genre and period that can possibly be imagined. TTRPGs are, as the name suggests, played around a table and benefit from not relying on some of the potential barriers players may perceive when playing…
Descriptors: Role Playing, Games, Academic Achievement, Elementary School Students
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Andrea Bertoni; Andrea Maffia – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2024
While the development of creativity, or creative thinking, in mathematics is considered important by many researchers, there are several difficulties in implementing creative tasks, especially before secondary school. Within the original context of a mathematical escape game, this paper reports two episodes exemplifying the difficulties met by…
Descriptors: Game Based Learning, Learner Engagement, Mathematics Education, Creativity
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McBride, Cherise; Smith, Anna; Kalir, Jeremiah Holden – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2023
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to re-center playfulness as a humanizing approach in teacher education. As teachers navigate the current moment of heightened control, surveillance, and systemic inequity, these proposed moves in teacher education can be transgressive. Rather than play as relegated to childhood or infancy, what does it look…
Descriptors: Play, Teacher Education Programs, Teaching Methods, Literacy Education
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