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Hannah K. Burke; Pat L. Sample; Anita C. Bundy; Shelly J. Lane – Journal of Occupational Therapy Education, 2024
Many models of professional thinking exist within occupational therapy, but the relationships among reasoning, reflective practice, and evidence-based practice as essential skills for practice are not clear. Because occupational therapy educators impart these skills to students, understanding how educators conceptualize relationships among skills…
Descriptors: Occupational Therapy, Abstract Reasoning, Reflection, Evidence Based Practice
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Samira Alirezabeigi; Sara Magaraggia – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2024
Calvino's reflection on "quickness" brings the reader through a zig-zag journey without a predefined destination, crossing the history of literature in order to think about writing and the relationship between physical speed and speed of mind. To discuss quickness as a virtue, Calvino refers to the potentiality of human reasoning and…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Acceleration (Education), Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes
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Fynn R. Dobler; Malte R. Henningsen-Schomers; Friedemann Pulvermüller – Language Learning, 2024
Concrete symbols (e.g., "sun," "run") can be learned in the context of objects and actions, thereby grounding their meaning in the world. However, it is controversial whether a comparable avenue to semantic learning exists for abstract symbols (e.g., "democracy"). When we simulated the putative brain mechanisms of…
Descriptors: Semantics, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Concept Formation, Abstract Reasoning
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Heather Lynn Johnson; Courtney Donovan; Robert Knurek; Kristin A. Whitmore; Livvia Bechtold – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2024
Using a mixed methods approach, we explore a relationship between students' graph reasoning and graph selection via a fully online assessment. Our population includes 673 students enrolled in college algebra, an introductory undergraduate mathematics course, across four U.S. postsecondary institutions. The assessment is accessible on computers,…
Descriptors: Models, Graphs, Cognitive Processes, Abstract Reasoning
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Amanda C. Brandone; Wyntre Stout – Child Development, 2024
As they learn to navigate the social world, children construct frameworks to interpret others' behavior. The present studies examined two such frameworks: a mentalistic framework, which construes behavior as driven by internal mental states; and a normative framework, which presumes people act in accordance with social norms. Participants included…
Descriptors: Children, Adults, Behavior Theories, Childrens Attitudes
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Alexandra List – Journal of Experimental Education, 2024
Students' evidence-based reasoning was examined across two studies. In Study 1, students were asked to evaluate newspaper excerpts including anecdotal, descriptive, correlational, and causal evidence provided in support of causal claims as well as to justify their quality ratings for two of these excerpts. In Study 2, students' justifications for…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Thinking Skills, Abstract Reasoning, Logical Thinking
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Michael D. Hicks – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2024
Despite the prominence of analogies in mathematics, little attention has been given to exploring students' processes of analogical reasoning, and even less research exists on revealing how students might be empowered to independently and productively reason by analogy to establish new (to them) mathematics. I argue that the lack of a cohesive…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Mathematics Skills, Mathematics Education, Algebra
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Ina Zaimi; Field M. Watts; David Kranz; Nicole Graulich; Ginger V. Shultz – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2025
Solving organic chemistry reactions requires reasoning with multiple concepts and data (i.e., multivariate reasoning). However, studies have reported that organic chemistry students typically demonstrate univariate reasoning. Case comparisons, where students compare two or more tasks, have been reported to support students' multivariate reasoning.…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Science, Organic Chemistry, Science Process Skills
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Margherita Piroi – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2025
This study aims at elaborating a well-established theoretical framework that distinguishes three modes of thinking in linear algebra: the analytic-arithmetic, the synthetic-geometric, and the analytic-structural mode. It describes and analyzes the bundle of signs produced by an engineering student during an interview, where she was asked to recall…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Engineering Education, Case Studies, Algebra
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Astrid Berg; Magnus Hultén – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2024
The importance of introducing students to mechanistic reasoning (MR) early in their schooling is emphasised in research. The goal of this case study was to contribute with knowledge on how early primary students' (9-10 year-olds) MR in chemistry is expressed and developed in a classroom practice framed by model-based inquiry. The study focuses on…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Abstract Reasoning, Chemistry, Scientific Concepts
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Charles Hohensee; Laura Willoughby; Sara Gartland – Mathematical Thinking and Learning: An International Journal, 2024
Backward transfer is defined as the influence that new learning has on individuals' prior ways of reasoning. In this article, we report on an exploratory study that examined the influences that quadratic functions instruction in real classrooms had on students' prior ways of reasoning about linear functions. Two algebra classes and their teachers…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Abstract Reasoning, Mathematical Concepts, Algebra
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Rachna B. Reddy; Henry M. Wellman – European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2024
In many cultural contexts, judging another as conscious or not has profound practical, legal, and philosophical consequences. However, little research focuses on how our ability to make such judgements arises. Thirty years ago a classic set of studies by Flavell et al. demonstrated that children do not develop a complex understanding of conscious…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Abstract Reasoning, Metacognition, Concept Formation
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Léo Picat; Salvador Mascarenhas – Cognitive Science, 2024
We investigate the articulation between domain-general reasoning and interpretive processes in failures of deductive reasoning. We focus on illusory inferences from disjunction-like elements, a broad class of deductive fallacies studied in some detail over the past 15 years. These fallacies have received accounts grounded in reasoning processes,…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Linguistics
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Rachel Wahl – Educational Theory, 2024
This article draws on the philosophical work on dialogic rationality offered by Charles Taylor as well as qualitative studies of dialogues between politically opposed college students to argue that these conversations succeed as tools of democracy precisely because they fail as interventions. That is, the democratic strength of such dialogue is…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Questioning Techniques, Dialogs (Language), College Students
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Merel Scholman; Marian Marchal; Vera Demberg – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2024
The comprehension of connectives is crucial for understanding the discourse relations that make up a text. We studied connective comprehension in English to investigate whether adult comprehenders acquire the meaning and intended use of connectives to a similar extent and how connective features and individual differences impact connective…
Descriptors: Adults, Reading Comprehension, Connected Discourse, Semantics
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