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Chong, Sin Wang – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2021
In response to the paradigm shift of feedback from information to process, the notion of 'student feedback literacy', which refers to students' capacities and dispositions to use feedback, has been increasingly promulgated in the higher education assessment literature recently. Student feedback literacy has been conceptualized into three…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Knowledge Level, Ability, College Students
Williams, Julian – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2016
This paper aims to critique and develop neo-Vygotskian work in mathematics education from (i) within the Vygotskian and activity theoretic tradition, and where necessary from (ii) a Bourdieusian perspective. First, I critique Roth and Radford's (2011) version of Cultural-historical Activity Theory, suggesting that a classroom episode presented as…
Descriptors: Alienation, Educational Theories, Criticism, Cultural Capital
Maina-Okori, Naomi Mumbi; Koushik, Jada Renee; Wilson, Alexandria – Journal of Environmental Education, 2018
We seek to understand how issues of intersectionality are addressed in environmental and sustainability education (ESE) literature, focusing on how gender is discussed in relation to other social identities such as class, race, sexuality, and ability. Our analysis draws from feminist and decolonizing frameworks, and uses intersectionality to…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Sustainability, Social Theories, Feminism
Miles, Pauline – ProQuest LLC, 2013
Although federal and state departments of education have provided funding, programs, and policies to address barriers to technology integration, the frequency to which technology is used in classrooms for teaching and learning remains relatively unchanged. Without justification for continued funding, districts stand to lose a portion of their…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Correlation, Technology Integration, Social Cognition
Mazzoli Smith, Laura – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2014
Sociological work on high ability is framed by social constructionist theorising and/or takes a social justice approach, and hence particular analytical intellectual traditions are foregrounded. Whilst these approaches have contributed the main critique of essentialist psychological understandings of high ability, they can eclipse normative…
Descriptors: Sociology, Ability, High Achievement, Academically Gifted
van Compernolle, Rémi A.; Williams, Lawrence – Classroom Discourse, 2013
This article explores the notion of "active reception" during small-group collaborative interaction in the foreign language classroom, focusing on the embodied participation of a secondary (nonspeaking) interactant, Diane. Drawing on Vygotskian sociocultural theory, we argue that within small-group work, a Zone of Proximal Development…
Descriptors: Interaction, Small Group Instruction, Second Language Instruction, Problem Solving
Miller, Suzanne – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2011
Orally and later in written form, stories have been used to identify and reinforce the values of a culture. The parables of the Bible and the vocalization of articulate animals in Aesop fables continue to be used to teach morals to children. While the majority of existing research investigates the effective use of animals as a tool in character…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Story Telling, Fantasy, Animals
Marsh, George E., II; Ketterer, John J. – Online Journal of Distance Learning Administration, 2005
Social constructivist theory has advanced the notion that distance education is inferior, because effective learning is thought to require immersion in a cognitive apprenticeship under the guidance of a mentor. Effective learning is said to be situated in activity, context, and culture as a collaboration in a community of practice. Administrators…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Distance Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Educational Theories
Moore, Don A. – Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 2007
Recent research calls into question the generally accepted conclusion that people believe themselves to be better than average. This paper reviews the new theories that have been proposed to explain the fact that better-than-average effects are isolated to common behaviors and abilities, and that people believe themselves to be below average with…
Descriptors: Prediction, Beliefs, Self Evaluation (Individuals), Individual Differences

Weiner, Bernard – Review of Educational Research, 1994
Research documents that attributions of failure resulting from lack of ability result in less punishment from others than do ascriptions to lack of effort. This paper provides a conceptual analysis of these empirical findings, guided by a taxonomy of causal thinking. Process and functional understandings of achievement strivings are distinguished.…
Descriptors: Ability, Achievement Need, Attribution Theory, Causal Models

Tziner, Aharon E. – Small Group Behavior, 1986
Two social psychological theories--similarity theory and equity theory--are employed to elucidate the relationship between group members' abilities and group performance on tasks involving high levels of interdependence. Contrasting hypotheses are drawn regarding specific ability compositions that should evoke performance above or below the simple…
Descriptors: Ability, Foreign Countries, Group Behavior, Group Structure
Garrison, Mark J. – Scholar-Practitioner Quarterly, 2004
The author of this article challenges a common assumption made by both critics and defenders of standardized-testing technology (or psychometry), namely that standardized tests "measure" something (culture, ability, etc.). It argues that psychometric practice cannot be classified as a form of measurement and instead is best understood as…
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Social Values, Psychometrics, Standardized Tests