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Showing 16 to 30 of 112 results Save | Export
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Bozalek, Vivienne – Education as Change, 2022
Understanding how indeterminacy is different from uncertainty is crucial to posthumanism and has major implications for reconfiguring curriculum. Uncertainty has to do with "epistemology," about not knowing whether a state of affairs is or is not; for instance, one would not know whether something is here or there, now or then.…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Ambiguity (Context), Humanism, Epistemology
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Slez, Adam – Sociological Methods & Research, 2019
Young and Holsteen (YH) introduce a number of tools for evaluating model uncertainty. In so doing, they are careful to differentiate their method from existing forms of model averaging. The fundamental difference lies in the way in which the underlying estimates are weighted. Whereas standard approaches to model averaging assign higher weight to…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Models, Ambiguity (Context), Computation
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Smagacz-Poziemska, Marta; Bukowski, Andrzej; Martini, Natalia – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2021
Praxeological turn in social research resulted in many examples of empirical studies using the concept of social practice. They are mostly case studies of a single or clearly defined practices, such as cooking, dancing or energy consumption. There is a lack of studies employing this concept as a framework for research on complex, dynamic and…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Urban Areas, Housing, Foreign Countries
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Kirby, Perpetua; Webb, Rebecca – Educational Review, 2023
This predominantly conceptual paper explores "uncertainty": it foregrounds students engaged with climate change, in all its socio-political and more-than-human complexity, as political subjects within and beyond the school. It combines conceptual work on Rancièrian political philosophy with empirical work on teaching climate change in a…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Ambiguity (Context), Climate, Environmental Education
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Williams, Kevin – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2021
The argument of this paper is that many texts of the Western literary canon rather than being vehicles of establishment values are critical of these values. Teaching these texts allows educators to challenge the interests of those who hold power in society as well as conventional sexual morality and gender stereotypes. Many important works of…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Literature, Ethnocentrism, Literary Criticism
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Young, Cristobal – Sociological Methods & Research, 2019
The commenter's proposal may be a reasonable method for addressing uncertainty in predictive modeling, where the goal is to predict "y." In a treatment effects framework, where the goal is causal inference by conditioning-on-observables, the commenter's proposal is deeply flawed. The proposal (1) ignores the definition of…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Predictor Variables, Research Methodology, Ambiguity (Context)
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Dawood, Clark – About Campus, 2019
People hate the feeling of uncertainty; if not managed or addressed properly, it can lead to confusion, frustration, or worse--and that is a bad thing. Equally bad, however, is running from ambiguity, leaping to solution based on assumption, and failing to take the time to explore what is unknown and learning to be comfortable in, and taking the…
Descriptors: Reflection, Transitional Programs, Academic Achievement, Higher Education
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Bjørndal, Christian Thue; Ronglan, Lars Tore – Sport, Education and Society, 2021
The development of young athletes is a complex process characterised by dynamic changes and uncertainty [Abbott, A., Button, C., Pepping, G.-J., & Collins, D. (2005). Unnatural selection: Talent identification and development in sport. "Nonlinear Dynamics, Psychology, and Life Sciences," 9(1), 61-88]. Talent development systems are…
Descriptors: Talent Development, Athletes, Youth, Team Sports
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White, Boyd Eric – McGill Journal of Education, 2020
This article takes its direction from notable educators such as John Dewey and Elliot Eisner who argue in favour of endorsing uncertainty and related responses within educational practice. The argument is a push­back against current emphasis on standardization, with its accompanying focus on single right answers that don't do justice to the…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Educational Practices, Ambiguity (Context), Standards
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Mejias, Sam; Thompson, Naomi; Sedas, Raul Mishael; Rosin, Mark; Soep, Elisabeth; Peppler, Kylie; Roche, Joseph; Wong, Jen; Hurley, Mairéad; Bell, Philip; Bevan, Bronwyn – Science Education, 2021
As an emerging field of theory, research, and practice, STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics) has received attention for its efforts to incorporate the arts into the rubric of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) learning. In particular, many informal educators have embraced it as an inclusive and…
Descriptors: Art Education, STEM Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Transformative Learning
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McCormack, Brian – Issues in Interdisciplinary Studies, 2018
Color has been considered as a special problem in several disciplines, notably art and music, but also philosophy and literature. Given that color is also a central feature of some scientific thought (think of Newton and the color spectrum, for example), the question "What color is the interdisciplinary?" seems to be a golden opportunity…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Color, Epistemology, Philosophy
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Aldinucci, Alice; Valiente, Oscar; Hurrell, Scott; Zancajo, Adrián – Journal of Vocational Education and Training, 2023
The interest in educational and professional aspirations of students transiting to post-secondary education has gained prominence in academic debates and policy agendas internationally. Political interventions for raising aspirations quite often draw on narrow instrumental and rationalistic assumptions of individual decision-making that, as we…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Vocational Education, Aspiration
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Besand, Anja – Journal of Social Science Education, 2020
People learn when they have to learn. This quite simple but antiquated insight of motivational psychology can be interpreted in various ways. First of all, it can be understood in a very traditional way as an argument for authoritarian class-management and educational control through external incentives like grades, shame and punishments. On the…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Disease Control, Teaching Methods, Informal Education
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Morgan, David L. – Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 2018
Recently, a debate has arisen around what can be called the "indistinguishability thesis," that is, the claim that it is impossible to distinguish between qualitative and quantitative research. In contrast, this article argues that the inability to define simple, sharp boundaries around qualitative and quantitative research does not…
Descriptors: Research Problems, Ambiguity (Context), Qualitative Research, Mixed Methods Research
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McCulloch, Gary – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2020
On the occasion of its sesquicentenary, which coincides with an extended period of school closures imposed due to the effects of a global virus pandemic, this paper analyses the Elementary Education Act of 1870, and in particular in relation to its implications for compulsory attendance at school. It did not introduce compulsory schooling but…
Descriptors: Attendance, Educational History, Educational Legislation, Court Litigation
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