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Darabi, A.; Arrastia, M. C.; Nelson, D. W.; Cornille, T.; Liang, X. – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2011
Some scholars argue that students do not achieve higher level learning, or cognitive presence, in online courses. Online discussion has been proposed to bridge this gap between online and face-to-face learning environments. However, the literature indicates that the conventional approach to online discussion--asking probing questions--does not…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Computer Mediated Communication, Online Courses, Asynchronous Communication
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Bond, Emma – Childhood: A Global Journal of Child Research, 2010
This article explores English children's use of mobile phones in managing and maintaining friendships and relationships in their everyday lives. Based on the accounts of 30 young people aged between 11 and 17, this research adopts a social constructivist perspective to offer a theoretical framework which explores how children themselves actually…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Telecommunications, Foreign Countries, Friendship
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Ghobadi, Arezoo; Fahim, Mansoor – System: An International Journal of Educational Technology and Applied Linguistics, 2009
Since the early 1980s, researchers have established that the foreign language learners' development of various aspects of pragmatic competence may be facilitated by the instruction of pragmatic routines and strategies in the foreign language classroom (Kasper and Rose, 2001). Consistent with this line of research this study, using conversations…
Descriptors: Second Languages, Native Speakers, English (Second Language), Pragmatics
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Hrastinski, Stefan; Watson, Jason – Campus-Wide Information Systems, 2009
Purpose: This paper aims to identify, through a literature review, key issues regarding how online role plays can be designed and to apply them when designing a role play on conflict management. Design/methodology/approach: By drawing on the key issues identified in the literature review, a role play on conflict management was designed and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Electronic Learning, Role Playing, Conflict Resolution
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Pozzi, Francesca – International Journal of Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning, 2011
This paper illustrates the experience gained within an online course, where a collaborative technique, namely Role Play, was used within an asynchronous text-based environment to trigger collaboration and interactions among students. In a pilot study, the technique was analyzed using an evaluation model and two different means: on the one hand,…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Online Courses, Learning Processes, Content Analysis
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Chakrabarty, Namita – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2012
Based on extracts from an ethnography produced during the ESRC 2009-10 research project, ""Preparedness Pedagogies" and Race: An Interdisciplinary Approach," this article explores the racialized culture of civil defence in the UK whilst also critiquing the world of higher education. The ethnographic artefacts of interviews,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Race, Figurative Language, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Horrocks, Erin L.; Morgan, Robert L. – Teacher Education and Special Education, 2011
A multicomponent training package (live training, video modeling, role playing, and feedback) was used to train teachers to conduct assessment and to instruct students with profound multiple disabilities. Phase 1 of the study involved training seven teachers to conduct assessment in three areas: (a) preference assessment (i.e., identification of…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Feedback (Response), Inservice Teacher Education, Role Playing
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Kamboj, Pooja; Singh, Sushil Kumar – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2015
Effective teaching in schools requires flexibility, energy and commitment. Successful teaching also requires that teachers are able to address learner's needs and understand the variations in learner's styles and approaches. Teachers can accomplish these requirements while creating an optimal teaching-learning environment by utilizing a variety of…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Instructional Effectiveness, Educational Strategies, Cognitive Style
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Bengtson, Teri J.; Sifferd, Katrina L. – Journal of Political Science Education, 2010
Simulations in political science and pre-law courses are used as a tool for student engagement and classroom interaction and to get students interested in politics and law by engaging them in either the political or legal process. Much of the literature addresses how to conduct various simulations for particular classes, what the students learned…
Descriptors: Law Related Education, Political Science, Interaction, Lawyers
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Chen, Hsiang-Ping; Lien, Chi-Jui; Annetta, Len; Lu, Yu-Ling – Educational Technology & Society, 2010
This study develops an educational computer game, FORmosaHope (FH), to explore the influences that an educational computer game might have on children's cultural identities. FH is a role-playing game, in which children can actively explore a mini-world to learn about science, technology, and society. One hundred and thirty sixth-graders, about…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Quasiexperimental Design, Educational Games
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Grant, Katrina; Mistry, Malini Tina – Education 3-13, 2010
This paper investigates role-play activities and how they can be used within learning for English as an Additional Language (EAL) pupils in a Key Stage 2 setting in England. Through observations, results showed effective role-play activities can be beneficial to EAL pupils, allowing them to practice words and phrases in a relaxed atmosphere…
Descriptors: Role Playing, Foreign Countries, Classroom Environment, Elementary School Students
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Cahill, Helen – Research in Drama Education, 2010
Drama is often used as a tool to investigate experience and to assist people to rehearse for change. Dramatic portrayals, however, can reinforce rather than challenge limiting stereotypes, and there is the potential for a positivist approach to research through drama to contribute to a pathologising of the subject and to limit the possibility of…
Descriptors: Females, Prevention, Foreign Countries, Drama
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Perera, Jennifer; Mohamadou, Galy; Kaur, Satpal – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2010
Feedback is essential to guide students towards expected performance goals. The usefulness of teacher feedback on improving communication skills (CS) has been well documented. It has been proposed that self-assessment and peer-feedback has an equally important role to play in enhancing learning. This is the focus of this study. Objectively…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Medical Students
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Loui, Michael C. – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2009
In a small course on technology and society, students participated in an extended role-play simulation for two weeks. Each student played a different adult character in a fictional community, which faces technological decisions in three scenarios set in the near future. The three scenarios involved stem cell research, nanotechnology, and privacy.…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Role Playing, Simulation, Science and Society
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Moser, Jason; Harris, Justin; Carle, John – ELT Journal, 2012
This article reports on a teacher-talk training course for Japanese primary school teachers, who are preparing to teach "communicative English" for the first time. The article argues that teacher-talk training is important for communicative classes with young students because most of the input and interaction is by default teacher…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Language Teachers, Second Language Instruction, Foreign Countries
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