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Michèle Verdonck; Hattie Wright; Anita Hamilton; Jane Taylor – Active Learning in Higher Education, 2024
Although there is growing evidence that the flipped classroom approach (FCA) positively impacts the student learning experience and outcomes, much less is known about the educator's experience. This study aimed to explore how educators across several disciplines in a regional Australian University describe their experience of using the FCA.…
Descriptors: Teaching Experience, Flipped Classroom, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes
Natascha Klocker; Charles Gillon; Leah Gibbs; Jennifer Atchison; Gordon Waitt – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2023
Human geographers engage students in learning about a world characterized by environmental and social disarray. It follows that our students are exposed to deeply confronting topics: climate change, global inequality, food insecurity, and racism, to name a few. Prompted by scholarly debate on the effects of painful emotions elicited by public…
Descriptors: Human Geography, Geography Instruction, Grief, Psychological Patterns
Harrison, Neil; Burke, Jacqueline; Clarke, Ivan – Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
This paper presents the results of a three-year study of the impacts of teaching about the experiences of trauma on students studying to become teachers. The project's overarching objective is to develop an effective trauma-informed pedagogy that can support students who learn about the experiences of the 'Stolen Generations', the Holocaust, wars,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preservice Teachers, Trauma Informed Approach, Trauma
Steph Houghton; Jillian Garvey; Liz Conor; Brooke Wilmsen; Julia Dehm; Ruth Gamble; Ben Habib; Katie Holmes; Jacqueline Millner; Keir M. Strickland – Environmental Education Research, 2024
The current anthropogenic climate crisis presents unique challenges to the higher education classroom. Pedagogy in the context of climate change must be attuned to complex and varied student experiences that can contend with feelings of anxiety, disconnection, distress and hopelessness. As educators and researchers, we collate our pedagogical…
Descriptors: Humanities, Social Sciences, Climate, Interdisciplinary Approach
Messy Mapping: Activating Student Lifeworlds through the Handmade Visual Analysis of a Literary Text
Magner, Brigid – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2022
Visual analysis is a commonplace technique in geography pedagogy yet it is rarely used in the Australian literary studies context. This article explores the potential for visual analysis to contribute to the shared understanding of a work of literature in a university classroom setting. The use of visual analysis geography can encourage students…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Geography Instruction, Literature, Undergraduate Students
Yoshida, Reiko – Foreign Language Annals, 2020
The present study examines the kinds of emotional scaffolding that occurred in online text chats in Japanese between 19 learners of Japanese at an Australian university and 19 native-speaking students at a Japanese university, together with the emotions that the learners experienced in relation to the scaffolding. The learners chatted in Japanese…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Japanese, Second Language Learning, Native Speakers
Sharp, Heather; Öztürk, Talip; Öztürk, Filiz Zayimoglu – International Journal of Progressive Education, 2020
Given the broad public appeal of WWI commemorations and in consideration of their inclusion in school curriculum, the question is raised of how do Turkish and Australian students view the importance and ways of commemorating the Gallipoli campaign? This comparative study, the first of its kind approaches this current gap in understanding how high…
Descriptors: War, Teaching Methods, Cross Cultural Studies, High School Students
Harvey, Marina; Baumann, Chris; Fredericks, Vanessa – Higher Education Research and Development, 2019
Reflective practice can support student learning by enabling praxis: the bridging of the theory of the classroom with the students' learning experience. Students' written reflections are the most common mode for practising and documenting reflection. Available typologies for coding the level of student written reflections focus on the cognitive…
Descriptors: Taxonomy, Learning Experience, Cross Cultural Studies, Teaching Methods
Cahill, Helen; Dadvand, Babak – Gender and Education, 2021
In this paper, we use the Deleuzian notion of assemblage as an analytico-methodological framework to examine different types of 'labour' that teachers are called upon to perform when they implement a programme that teaches about gender-based violence. Drawing on interview data gathered from 129 teachers from primary and secondary schools in the…
Descriptors: Violence, Prevention, Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy
Hill, Barbara; Tulloch, Marian; Mlcek, Susan; Lewis, Melinda – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2020
This paper explores the impact of self-reflective processes of staff at Charles Sturt University (CSU) while undertaking an online Indigenous Cultural Competency Program (ICCP). The ICCP was designed for completion by all university staff to enhance their knowledge and understanding of Indigenous cultures, histories and contemporary realities.…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Universities, Indigenous Populations, Metacognition
Richards, Rosemary Doris – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2018
Four young Australian children participated in research in which they shared their photographs and narratives of art experiences in their homes, early childhood centre and school. Drawing on Dewey's theories on art as experience, this article analyses some of the ways these 4- and 5-year-old children enjoyed satisfying art experiences, primarily…
Descriptors: Artists, Art, Preschool Children, Foreign Countries
Wu, Ling; Kim, Minkang – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2019
Ongoing research is providing new insights into the biological rudiments of empathy and its neurobiological underpinnings. There is also growing awareness that tablet technology, when used educationally and ethically, can aid adolescents and young-adults' empathic learning. However, there has been little attempt globally to translate this new…
Descriptors: Empathy, Handheld Devices, Learning Processes, Preschool Children
[Insert Image Here]: A Reflection on the Ethics of Imagery in a Critical Pedagogy for the Humanities
Carniel, Jessica – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2018
Using the controversial image of Syrian toddler Alan Kurdi as its provocation, this paper reflects upon the ethics of images used in teaching in a time of high-volume image circulation via social media, as well as a time when debates about content and trigger warnings are starting to gain more traction in the Australian tertiary sector. It…
Descriptors: Ethics, Imagery, Prosocial Behavior, Educational Theories
Sadler, Kirsten; Selkrig, Mark; Manathunga, Catherine – Higher Education Research and Development, 2017
Universities are built upon the collaborative work of academic staff and students, yet the nature of this work has been undergoing profound and rapid change. Pressures within Australia's higher education sector have led to a fracturing of traditional academic roles and growing feelings of disconnection. While there have been many narrative,…
Descriptors: Colleges, Higher Education, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes
Hall, Stephen J.; Walsh, Christopher S. – Australian Association for Research in Education, 2015
Given the Digital Technologies rationale of the Australian Curriculum, it is critical that both teachers and students use design thinking to be creative and innovative producers of digital solutions and knowledge. Teachers and students are increasingly being required to self-produce films and digital content across subject areas. Their productions…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Design