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Gottschalk, Belinda; Hopwood, Nick – Journal of Workplace Learning, 2022
Purpose: Clinical supervision is a crucial workplace practice for professional learning and development. Research is needed to investigate in detail what happens in supervision to understand how this practice contributes to learning. This paper aims to examine how professionals work with knowledge and navigate epistemic challenges in working with…
Descriptors: Workplace Learning, Professional Education, Supervision, Epistemology
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Navneet Kaur; Chandan Dasgupta – Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2024
Background: Dealing with uncertainties is inherent in the engineering design process and often poses challenges for young learners. This necessitates providing learners with adequate support to navigate their uncertainties effectively. However, achieving this requires a deeper understanding of the factors influencing learners' uncertainty…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Cooperative Learning, Engineering Education, Design
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Nurit Novis-Deutsch; Etan Cohen; Hanan Alexander; Liat Rahamian; Uri Gavish; Ofir Glick; Oren Yehi-Shalom; Gad Marcus; Ayelet Mann – Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2024
Background: This paper explores K-12 interdisciplinary learning in the humanities (IL-Humanities), an area that, until now, has seen limited research focus compared to its STEM counterparts. We asked: (1) What are the outcomes of IL-Humanities in terms of interdisciplinary competences? (2) How do learners in these environments engage in…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Humanities, Humanities Instruction, Competence
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Milner, Marleen; Wolfer, Terry A. – Journal of Social Work Education, 2023
Research suggests that most college and beginning graduate students lack the cognitive complexity required to engage in effective practical and ethical reasoning. Studies on cognitive development support the view that how people approach complex problems varies significantly depending on the underlying epistemic assumptions they use to guide their…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Social Work, Counselor Training, Ethics
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Christina Areizaga Barbieri; Elena M. Silla – Journal of Experimental Education, 2024
Prior research highlights a positive effect of incorrect worked examples on mathematics learning. Yet the mechanisms underlying these benefits are unclear. To investigate potential mechanisms of the benefits of various worked example types, we examined process data from a previously published classroom-based experiment. More specifically, we…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Ethnic Diversity, Racial Relations, Public Schools
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Bian Wu; Yiling Hu; Xiaoxue Yu; Meng Sun; Haoran Xie; Zongxi Li; Minhong Wang – Knowledge Management & E-Learning, 2023
STEM education emphasizes improving student learning by linking abstract knowledge with real-world problems and engaging students in authentic projects to solve real-world problems. Accordingly, project-based learning has been widely promoted in STEM programs and has shown a promising impact on student learning. However, solving real-world…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Problem Solving, STEM Education, Epistemology
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Connolly, Cornelia; Cosgrove, Tom – Action Learning: Research and Practice, 2022
The educational benefits of challenge- or problem-based approaches to learning are now well established. Action Research (AR) and Action Learning (AL) together provide educators with an ethic, a research methodology and a pedagogical strategy for harnessing and developing the motive power of purposeful activity for reflective enquiry in teaching…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes
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Hunter, Kevin H.; Rodriguez, Jon-Marc G.; Becker, Nicole M. – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2021
Beyond students' ability to manipulate variables and solve problems, chemistry instructors are also interested in students developing a deeper conceptual understanding of chemistry, that is, engaging in the process of sensemaking. The concept of sensemaking transcends problem-solving and focuses on students recognizing a gap in knowledge and…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Process Skills, Problem Solving, Comprehension
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Ellis, Amy B. – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2022
The development and use of learning trajectories is a body of research that has made enormous contributions to the field of mathematics education, offering insight into the teaching and learning of topics at all levels. Simultaneously, the work of building learning trajectories can benefit from explicitly adopting an anti-deficit stance,…
Descriptors: Learning Trajectories, Mathematics Education, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes
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Delahunty, Thomas; Kimbell, Richard – British Educational Research Journal, 2021
Today's learners are engaging in study where access to knowledge is easier than it ever has been in human history. Rapid advancement of technology and the increasing ease with which communication and interaction can occur has dramatically changed the landscape in which teachers of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) operate.…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Learning Processes, Independent Study, Self Determination
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Agustian, Hendra Y. – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2022
This article seeks to provide researchers and practitioners in laboratory education, particularly those involved in the curriculum design and implementation of teaching laboratories at university level, with a conceptual framework and a working model for an integrated assessment of learning domains, by attending to a more holistic approach to…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Laboratory Experiments, Curriculum Design
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Alves, Francisco Regis Vieira; Silva Camilo, Aline Maria da; Fontenele, Francisca Cláudia Fernandes; Catarino, Paula Maria Machado Cruz – Acta Didactica Napocensia, 2021
This work presents a discussion about the Didactic Training Engineering (EDF) methodology, of French origin, emphasizing the role of the teacher, during his initial or continuous training, through the conception and structuring of a didactic situation, organized by such methodology and based on the Theory of Didactic Situations (TSD). Therefore,…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Engineering Education, Teacher Role, Geometry
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Doussot, Sylvain – Educational Action Research, 2020
Key studies in history education (from France and the USA) are discussed and compared in order to explore their methodological issues in terms of the types of knowledge they can generate about teaching and learning. An epistemological framework that relates the history of historians as an inquiry to that of the classroom provides the criteria for…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Action Research, Cross Cultural Studies, Comparative Education
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Lespiau, Florence; Tricot, André – Educational Psychology Review, 2019
According to Geary's evolutionary approach, humans are able to easily acquire primary knowledge and, with more efforts, secondary knowledge. The present study investigates how primary knowledge contents can facilitate the learning of formal logical rules, i.e., secondary knowledge. Framing formal logical problems in evolutionary salient contexts…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Learning Motivation, Abstract Reasoning, Logical Thinking
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Stapleton, Andrew J. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2018
In response to the authors, I demonstrate how threshold concepts offer a means to both contextualise teaching and learning of quantum physics and help transform students into the culture of physics, and as a way to identify particularly troublesome concepts within quantum physics. By drawing parallels from my own doctoral research in another area…
Descriptors: Quantum Mechanics, Physics, Science Education, Imagery
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