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Cizmar, Anne M.; Holt, Benjamin Tyler – Journal of Political Science Education, 2023
Reading is critical to success in college. Faculty members often decry students who come to class without reading, and unprepared for the lessons of the day. Yet, relatively little empirical research assesses how to best stimulate collegiate reading and what types of reading assessments provide the best student learning outcomes. This paper…
Descriptors: Reading Tests, Randomized Controlled Trials, Critical Reading, Assignments
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Secora, Kristen; Smith, David H. – Teaching and Learning in Communication Sciences & Disorders, 2023
Although pedagogy focused on social justice, power, and privilege have been included in teacher preparatory programs for a number of years, such topics are much newer and relatively unexplored within the context of Communication Sciences and Disorders (CSD) preprofessional programs. This reflection provides information on use of a living document…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Undergraduate Students, Audiology, Speech Language Pathology
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Akbar, Surya; Putri, Yolanda Karina; Rizdanti, Sabilla – International Journal of Research in Education and Science, 2023
Writing an undergraduate thesis will inevitably encounter various obstacles and problems. A high adversity quotient is needed to complete an undergraduate thesis. Other psychological abilities need to be analyzed in relation to increasing the adversity quotient. The aim of this study is to analyze other factors that affected the adversity quotient…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Theses, Success, Stress Variables
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Phelps, Sean; Milstein, Sloane; French, Patrice – College Student Journal, 2023
Many academic programs often require work integrated learning (WIL) in the form of internships, fieldwork, and practicums. As a method of preparing students for entry level employment, WIL experiences have been found to be beneficial by the student, employer, and advisors. However, researchers and academics commonly cite the need for additional…
Descriptors: Work Experience Programs, Career Readiness, Assignments, Learning Activities
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Lussier, Catherine M.; Ditta, Annie S.; Speer, Annika C. – Psychology in the Schools, 2023
Students are often unmotivated to engage with their online coursework. Research has shown that concretely visualizing one's goals (e.g., photo-taking) can improve motivation to learn. This study explored the effect of taking a photo of one's study space (i.e., a "studygram" photo similar to a post on Instagram) on students' motivation to…
Descriptors: Visualization, Visual Aids, Learning Motivation, Learner Engagement
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Kim, J. B.; Zhong, Chen; Liu, Hong – Journal of Information Systems Education, 2023
Cybersecurity education is becoming increasingly important in modern society, and hands-on practice is an essential element. Although instructors provide hands-on labs in their cybersecurity courses, traditional lab exercises often fail to effectively motivate students. Hence, many instructors desire to incorporate gamification in hands-on…
Descriptors: Gamification, Information Security, Class Activities, Active Learning
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Barron J. Montgomery; Argenta M. Price; Carl E. Wieman – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2024
A major goal of physics education is to develop strong problem-solving skills for students. To become expert problem solvers, students must have opportunities to deliberately practice those skills. In this work, we adopt a previously described definition of problem solving that consists of a set of 29 decisions made by expert scientists. We…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Physics, Decision Making, Science Education
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Freeden Blume Oeur – Teaching Sociology, 2024
A silence in the resurgence of scholarship on W. E. B. Du Bois has been his work as an instructor. This article uses Du Bois's early teaching experiences and reflections on the "ugly" progress of schooling to ask: What should guide the pedagogy of sociology instructors when racial progress is so ugly? I sketch here a pedagogy inspired by…
Descriptors: Racism, Propaganda, Undergraduate Students, Assignments
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Ávila, JuliAnna – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2021
In this article, the author describes utilizing Instagram as a reading response activity in an undergraduate English course to increase student engagement with challenging texts. Using a shared class account, students created a menu of prompts that they then chose from to create posts after reading fictional, theoretical, and philosophical texts;…
Descriptors: Social Media, Photography, English, Reading Assignments
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Dayna O. H. Walker; Milan Larson – Journal of Management Education, 2025
The introduction of generative artificial intelligence (AI) technology is rapidly changing the field of human resource management (HRM). Management educators are called to prepare students for the opportunities and challenges this new technology will bring. Thus, our aim is to provide management educators with an assignment to introduce students…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Human Resources, Labor Force Development, Occupational Information
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Bäulke, Lisa; Dresel, Markus – Educational Psychology, 2023
Procrastination is a widespread phenomenon in higher education. Recently, specific aspects of the higher education course context have been theoretically linked to procrastination. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to integrate specific course characteristics (e.g., feedback structure, social norms, clarity of assignments), examine in…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Course Content, Time Management, Need Gratification
Derek John Herrmann Meyers – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The current study was conducted to examine undergraduate psychology students' feedback processes associated with developing a research proposal paper. Previous research has investigated how feedback can be effective for student learning, but it has been limited by not considering the effectiveness of multiple, smaller assessments and the frequent…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Psychology, Undergraduate Students, Research Proposals
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Irma E. Stevens – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2023
Researchers have recommended using tasks that support students in reasoning covariationally to build productive meanings for graphs, rates of change, exponential growth, and more. However, not many recent studies have been done to identify how students reason when engaging in covariational reasoning tasks in undergraduate precalculus courses. In…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Mathematics, Calculus, Graphs
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Hollander, Pam; Dawson, Duke; Haller, Charlotte; Briesacher, Erika; Collins, Caroline; Rearick, Kristina; Lemieux, Elise – Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education, 2022
Professors and students have contradictory views of course reading. Professors believe that reading outside of the classroom is essential in optimizing learning. However, students often find the readings to be time-consuming, not necessary to pass the class, and an option rather than a requirement. We surveyed 449 undergraduate university students…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Student Attitudes, Reading Assignments
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Salinas, Juan L. – Teaching Sociology, 2022
This article is a reflective analysis of an assignment in which undergraduate students developed dystopian, postapocalyptic, fantasy, and fictional short story parables to illustrate their understanding of sociological theory. In a social theory course, students were assigned a final paper in which they designed a short story that integrated…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Sociology, Social Theories, Teaching Methods
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