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Showing 1 to 15 of 167 results Save | Export
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Stemler, Steven E.; Naples, Adam – Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 2021
When students receive the same score on a test, does that mean they know the same amount about the topic? The answer to this question is more complex than it may first appear. This paper compares classical and modern test theories in terms of how they estimate student ability. Crucial distinctions between the aims of Rasch Measurement and IRT are…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Test Theory, Ability, Computation
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Anne Van de Vijver; Sven Mathijssen – Roeper Review, 2024
High ability and talent development literature present different and sometimes competing or contradictory goals for talent development. One side emphasizes that talents should be developed to enable individuals with high abilities to make societal contributions, while the other side focuses on the individual's personal life goals. This article…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Talent Development, Ability, Theories
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Raykov, Tenko – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2023
This software review discusses the capabilities of Stata to conduct item response theory modeling. The commands needed for fitting the popular one-, two-, and three-parameter logistic models are initially discussed. The procedure for testing the discrimination parameter equality in the one-parameter model is then outlined. The commands for fitting…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Models, Comparative Analysis, Item Analysis
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Warburton, Victoria Emily; Spray, Christopher Mark – Journal of Teaching in Physical Education, 2017
Purpose: In light of the extensive empirical evidence that implicit theories have important motivational consequences for young people across a range of educational settings we seek to provide a summary of, and personal reflection on, implicit theory research and practice in physical education (PE). Overview: We first provide an introduction to…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Ability, Learning Theories, Misconceptions
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Migliarini, Valentina; Stinson, Chelsea – TESOL Quarterly: A Journal for Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages and of Standard English as a Second Dialect, 2021
Until very recently, ability and whiteness as relational systems have been uninterrogated by TESOL research, policy, practice, and teacher education. Consequently, monolingual teachers often use students' proximity to whiteness and nondisabled status as a metric for ascertaining their ability or belonging in certain language learning spaces.…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Critical Theory, Race, Second Language Learning
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Corrado, Gail – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2016
Capability theory improves our understanding of well being because it takes account of the "conversion" problem: income/wealth/commodities. (IWCs) need to be made effectively available to really increase well being. However, just as IWCs need to be converted into functionings in order to be effective in bringing additional possibilities…
Descriptors: Achievement, Well Being, Equal Education, Democracy
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Molenaar, Dylan – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2015
A new and very interesting approach to the analysis of responses and response times is proposed by Goldhammer (this issue). In his approach, differences in the speed-ability compromise within respondents are considered to confound the differences in ability between respondents. These confounding effects of speed on the inferences about ability can…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Item Response Theory, Ability, Inferences
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Williams, Julian – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2016
This paper aims to critique and develop neo-Vygotskian work in mathematics education from (i) within the Vygotskian and activity theoretic tradition, and where necessary from (ii) a Bourdieusian perspective. First, I critique Roth and Radford's (2011) version of Cultural-historical Activity Theory, suggesting that a classroom episode presented as…
Descriptors: Alienation, Educational Theories, Criticism, Cultural Capital
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Villa-Nicholas, Melissa – Education for Information, 2018
Recently there have been calls to study and apply critical theory and tools around social justice, and intersectional approaches of race, anti-racism, gender, sexuality, disability and accessibility, and class in Library and Information Studies (LIS). But applying lasting techniques in the LIS classroom require pedagogies that are intersectional,…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Library Education, Information Science, Social Justice
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Bolsinova, Maria; Tijmstra, Jesper – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2015
Goldhammer (this issue) proposes an interesting approach to dealing with the speededness of item responses. Rather than modeling speed as a latent variable that varies from person to person, he proposes to use experimental conditions that are expected to fix the speed, thereby eliminating individual differences on this dimension in order to make…
Descriptors: Ability, Reaction Time, Measurement, Models
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Kellogg, David; Shin, Ji-young – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2018
Vygotsky measured his 'zone of proximal development' in years. To do this, he needed a scheme of age periods, and a set of tasks that could diagnose the next age period without defining it. In this paper, we compare the age periods in his late lectures with Halliday's categories of logico-semantic expansion as used by three adolescent…
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Adolescent Development, Problem Solving, Ability
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Guseva, Liudmila G.; Solomonovich, Mark – International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education, 2017
This article overviews the theoretical and applied works of the psychologist and pedagogue Leonid Zankov. Zankov's model of teaching is based on Vygotsky's theory that appropriate teaching methods stimulate cognitive development, whose core notion is the Zone of Proximal Development. This educational psychology research was verified by large scale…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Ability, Teaching Methods, Cognitive Development
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Page, Susan – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2014
Indigenous Studies can be both exciting and challenging for teachers and students. This article will examine how an existing learning theory can be harnessed to help teachers better understand these challenges and manage some frequently seen student behaviours. Much of the discussion in Indigenous Studies pedagogy to date has focused on the…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Student Behavior, Cultural Awareness
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Vella, Stewart A.; Cliff, Dylan P.; Okely, Anthony D.; Weintraub, Dana L.; Robinson, Thomas N. – Quest, 2014
Implicit beliefs about the nature of human abilities have significant motivational, behavioral, and affective consequences. The purpose of this article was to review the application of implicit beliefs to the youth sport context and to provide theoretically derived and evidence-based instructional strategies to promote adaptive implicit beliefs…
Descriptors: Athletics, Educational Strategies, Ability, Evidence
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Gang, Xu – English Language Teaching, 2015
Due to the outmoded teaching method and the popularity of utilitarianism nowadays, the marginalization of British and American literature courses has become a prominent problem for the education of English majors in colleges and universities, but the American postmodern curriculum theorist, Prof. William E. Doll, Jr.'s pedagogical theory, which…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, United States Literature, English Literature, Postmodernism
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