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Showing 1 to 15 of 17 results Save | Export
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Yujun Xu; Junwei Qian – Sport, Education and Society, 2025
There is a paradox between the demands for safety and the productive value of risk in outdoor education and adventure learning. This seems particularly to be the case in Chinese culture, policy, and empirical practice of outdoor education. This paper aims to utilise the rich cultural context and philosophical perspectives of China to broaden the…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Religion, Safety, Risk
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Madhu Prabakaran – Higher Education for the Future, 2025
This article explores the diverse epistemic perspectives on intelligence, tracing its conceptual evolution across early Indian philosophy, Western philosophical thought and contemporary computational theories. Intelligence is examined as a dynamic, multifaceted phenomenon that transcends mere cognition, extending into embodied, ecological and…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Artificial Intelligence, Computer Software, Philosophy
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Emma Towers; Elizabeth A. C. Rushton; Simon Gibbons; Sarah Steadman; Richard Brock; Ye Cao; Carla Finesilver; Jane Jones; Alex Manning; Bethan Marshall; Christina Richardson – Educational Review, 2025
Teachers and teacher education are often presented as "problems" to be solved, with policy solutions that focus on ways to make teachers "better" and improve teacher "quality" by introducing prescriptive strategies. We investigate the ways COVID-19-related changes to university and school-based facets of Initial…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Educational Quality
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Rosie Goodman; Jon Ord – Educational Review, 2025
This UK-based study examines how people learned to identify digital misinformation. This included what experiences enabled this development, and the skills that were acquired in the process. This is a small-scale qualitative study of participants who self-reported as being confident in spotting digital misinformation and the data was analysed…
Descriptors: Misinformation, News Media, Media Literacy, Foreign Countries
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Yimmy Alexander Hoyos-Pipicano – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2025
This qualitative case study explores how rural teachers in the Colombian periphery perceive and appropriate national bilingual policies. I drew theoretically on coloniality/decoloniality, bilingualism, and teacher agency and collected data through questionnaires and in-depth interviews from four self-contained rural elementary school teachers.…
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Bilingualism, Federal Legislation, Foreign Countries
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Jill Bamforth; Elizabeth Levin; Jeff Waters; Sean Gallagher; Kristina Turner; Bin Wu – Higher Education Research and Development, 2025
Hybrid teaching & learning (T&L) environments in higher education are on the rise. This study adopts a qualitative exploratory approach to draw on data from interviews with 15 academics to examine their perspectives of hybrid T&L in a higher education, post COVID-19 context. In a unique application of both the Reset, Restore, Reframe…
Descriptors: Blended Learning, Learning Processes, Teaching Methods, COVID-19
Seda Sakar; Sema Tan – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2025
Many articles have been published in gifted education in recent years. This study aims to provide a comprehensive review of the evolution of academic studies in gifted education. In this context, the structural topic modeling (STM) method was used to analyze the topics and trends in the field. STM is a machine learning technique that utilizes…
Descriptors: Gifted Education, Educational Trends, Educational Research, Research Methodology
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Luyao Liang; Alice Chik; Hui Li – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
English as a foreign language (EFL) education has become increasingly ubiquitous in Eastern Asian early childhood education (ECE) settings, but the studies on this phenomenon have not been thoroughly reviewed. This scoping review investigates the scope and findings of the current literature regarding this under-researched phenomenon. Through a…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Early Childhood Education, Educational Policy, Educational Technology
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Zahid Naz – Policy Futures in Education, 2025
This article seeks to provide a new paradigm for questioning how quality and excellence in teaching practices are understood and evaluated. By combining ideas from complexity theory and Michel Foucault's conception of polymorphous correlations, I argue that a shift away from the forms of thought that engender reductionist evaluations can become a…
Descriptors: Evidence Based Practice, Educational Practices, Teaching Methods, Instructional Effectiveness
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Masatoshi Sato; Steven L. Thorne; Marije Michel; Theodora Alexopoulou; John Hellermann – Modern Language Journal, 2025
With a forward-looking and problem-solving mindset, this article aims to combine theoretical knowledge and empirical evidence from different schools of thought in the field of second language (L2) learning and teaching--namely, instructed second language acquisition, generative linguistics, and an ecological perspective that includes multiple…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Raquel M. Rall; Demetri L. Morgan; Felecia Commodore; Daniel A. Collier; Dan Fitzpatrick – Educational Policy, 2025
In an era where many states' postsecondary education governance dynamics are evolving, we set out to understand whether state-level governing boards with centralized governance functions affected institutions' decisions to engage in in-person instruction during the fall of 2020, the first fall of the COVID-19 pandemic. We examined sociopolitical…
Descriptors: Boards of Education, Educational Policy, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Mohammed A. E. Suliman; Wenlan Zhang; Rehab A. I. Suluman; Kamal Abubker Abrahim Sleiman – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
This study contributes to the knowledge about mobile learning among medical students in the context of developing countries. This research used the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) to study the preconditions for m-learning among medical students. A twenty-item self-reported survey was used to gather data from 387 medical students, and structural…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Student Attitudes, Information Technology, Technology Integration
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Kevin Proudfoot – Journal of Education Policy, 2025
Teachers' negative experiences of high-stakes accountability have been documented extensively, but the ways in which teachers are able to engage in tactics of resistance in response are less well known. This is most especially true in terms of the subtle, covert forms of resistance which occur through the practice of teachers' everyday working…
Descriptors: Resistance (Psychology), Teaching Experience, Teacher Attitudes, Negative Attitudes
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Samantha Leihsing; Ann Marie Ryan – Theory Into Practice, 2025
How can teachers engage students in participatory civic education in a state like Texas where education policy is interfering with the Rights of the Learner by refusing to allow educators to support students in becoming active participants in vital democratic processes? Texas Senate Bill 3, passed in 2021, prohibits teachers from directly…
Descriptors: Educational Legislation, Citizen Participation, Civics, Learner Engagement
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Sarah M. Stitzlein – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2025
While the teaching of controversial issues has generally been supported by schools and education scholars, new laws and public outcry have impacted whether and how controversial issues are taught. Calls to ban or limit teaching of controversial issues have largely been spurred by conservative parents, policymakers, and political groups. Some…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Democratic Values, Democracy
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