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Saris, Brenda; Doyle, Stephanie; Loveridge, Judith – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2023
Previous theoretical frameworks used to research and explain creative design processes tend to privilege individual expression and not address the context in which the process occurs. This is problematic due to the ways in which creative activities are embedded in and shaped by socio-cultural and historic contexts. In this article we focus on the…
Descriptors: Creativity, Design, Self Expression, Creative Activities
Bennett, Dawn; Knight, Elizabeth; Li, Ian – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2023
Much research on the employability development of university students and the employability experience of graduates treats learners as experientially homogenous and ignores the potential impact of pre-entry work experience on either students' confidence or their employability-related behaviours. This study explored the confidence of commencing…
Descriptors: College Students, Employment Potential, Work Experience, Self Esteem
Cher Hill; Margaret MacDonald – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2023
Using new materiality theory, we analyzed teachers' and administrators' descriptions of educational practices and everyday life in schools during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. During this time, the virus and the Provincial Health Authority were agential parts of classrooms that both restricted pedagogical possibilities, as well as…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Educational Practices, Teachers
Yoo, Ha Na; Smetana, Judith G. – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Understanding distinctions between morality and conventions is an important milestone in children's moral development. The current meta-analysis integrated decades of social domain theory research (Smetana, 2006; Turiel, 1983) on moral and conventional judgments from early to middle childhood. We examined 95 effect sizes from 18 studies (2,707…
Descriptors: Social Theories, Moral Development, Moral Values, Age Differences
Cliff, Alan; Walji, Sukaina; Jancic Mogliacci, Rada; Morris, Neil; Ivancheva, Mariya – Teaching in Higher Education, 2022
The focus of this paper is on the contestations and dilemmas emergent in the higher education curriculum in a context of increasing processes of unbundling, digitisation and marketisation. The paper explores the notion of contestation through the theoretical lens of Cultural-Historical Activity Theory. It points to illustrative examples of this…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Curriculum, Foreign Countries, Social Theories
Ha, Heesoo; Ha, Minsu – International Journal of Science Education, 2022
Creativity is considered a key element of the scientific infrastructure and a driving force of scientific advancement. This study aims to present Korean scientists' voices regarding scientific creativity by investigating their perceptions of scientific creativity and education for it. Extending the phenomenography lens through activity theory, we…
Descriptors: Science Education, Creativity, Scientists, Attitudes
Moore, Brooke A. – SAGE Open, 2022
The idea of "normal" in schools is problematic. It arbitrates the way educators think about ability, achievement, and behavior. Normal implies a hierarchy of student abilities, suggesting that some can achieve and some cannot. For students who cannot achieve at the same rate as their peers, they are blamed as many assume the problem is…
Descriptors: Ideology, Beliefs, Student Diversity, Social Theories
Heidur Hrund Jónsdóttir; Kristjana Stella Blöndal – Educational Psychology, 2024
Upper secondary school students with a strong academic self-concept are more likely to complete their studies and thus increase their well-being in the future. Previous research on the big-fish-little-pond-effect (BFLPE) has thoroughly established the negative contrast effect of average group academic achievement on students' academic…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Self Concept, Group Structure, Academic Ability
Catherine-Laura Dunnington – International Journal for Talent Development and Creativity, 2024
As textiles continue to feature heavily in discussions of sustainability, and young students continue to be positioned as saviors of the planet, this paper joins the call for assemblage thinking in early years research that decenters humans and foregrounds relationships. What follows is a subset of a larger study, where one preschool classroom…
Descriptors: Textiles Instruction, Creative Thinking, Preschool Education, Preschool Children
Social Constructivist Pedagogy in Business Studies Classrooms -- Teachers' Experiences and Practices
Naidoo, Devika; Mabaso, Mbali – Perspectives in Education, 2023
Social constructivism is the dominant pedagogical theory endorsed in educational discourse today. This study set out to examine teaching and learning in Grade 11 business studies classrooms from a social constructivist perspective. The data were obtained through document analysis, semi-structured interviews, and classroom observations. While the…
Descriptors: Business Education, Grade 11, Constructivism (Learning), Social Theories
Pryor, Robert G. L.; Bright, Jim E. H. – Australian Journal of Career Development, 2022
In acknowledging the contribution of the Australian Journal of Career Development (AJCD's) continuing work to the career development field, this paper briefly outlines the Chaos Theory of Careers (CTC) and its empirical support. Issues relating to closed and open system validation are canvassed. Two types of COVID-19 case study are analysed: a…
Descriptors: Systems Approach, Career Development, COVID-19, Pandemics
Yu, Xin; Fu, Yulian – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
The study of phenomenological Marxism in China can be divided into three stages up to the present. The first stage spanned from the 1980s to the second half of the 1990s. During this period Luo Keting consciously set up the project of combining phenomenology with Marxism, and the boom in Sartre studies brought about the wide spread of existential…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Phenomenology, Political Attitudes, Social Systems
Shamila Ramsookbhai – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2023
This critical qualitative study focused on what are the factors that contribute to high learner performance at a public school in South Africa. Purposive sampling was used and the data was produced via interviews with the participants (the principal, ten teachers, five ex learners and two parents) as well as observations of various school…
Descriptors: Principals, High Achievement, Academic Achievement, Public Schools
Ida Martinez Lunde – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2024
This article explores how responses to a generic skills framework are materialised in Irish schools, and the main aim is to shed light on multiple dimensions of policy enactment. The Key Skills Framework (KSF) was introduced as part of a curricular reform in Irish lower secondary schools -- a reform that has met substantial resistance locally and…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Public Sector, Private Sector, Partnerships in Education
Guillermina Tormo-Carbó; Elies Seguí-Mas; Victor Oltra – Education & Training, 2024
Purpose: Drawing on the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TBP) and Social Cognitive Theory (SCT), this study delves into how, in entrepreneurship-unfriendly environments, university students' entrepreneurial intention (EI) is shaped, focusing particularly on the role of entrepreneurship education (EE) and an entrepreneurial family context (EFC).…
Descriptors: Social Theories, Entrepreneurship, Intention, Business Administration Education