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Ken A. Fujimoto; Carl F. Falk – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2024
Item response theory (IRT) models are often compared with respect to predictive performance to determine the dimensionality of rating scale data. However, such model comparisons could be biased toward nested-dimensionality IRT models (e.g., the bifactor model) when comparing those models with non-nested-dimensionality IRT models (e.g., a…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Rating Scales, Predictive Measurement, Bayesian Statistics
Zembylas, Michalinos – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2024
The aim of this paper is to bring into conversation the concept of 'affective witnessing' and the notion of 'vulnerability' as an affective relation to reconceptualise the framework for understanding affective witnessing of vulnerability in pedagogical theory and practice. In particular, the paper explores how paying close attention to affectivity…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Educational Practices, Psychological Patterns, Social Justice
Fumio Ono – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
The aim of this paper is to examine the relationship between education and technological rationality from the perspective of the philosophy of education, and to show that while education is deeply related to technique, skills, or technology, it can never be reduced to technical knowledge, and that there are things in education that overflow…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Correlation, Influence of Technology, Individual Development
Maya B. Mathur – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Meta-analyses can be compromised by studies' internal biases (e.g., confounding in nonrandomized studies) as well as publication bias. These biases often operate nonadditively: publication bias that favors significant, positive results selects indirectly for studies with more internal bias. We propose sensitivity analyses that address two…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Attribution Theory, Publications, Bias
Sanguinetti, Rachael D. – Journal of General Music Education, 2024
Student motivation is frequently an issue in general music classrooms, and many long-standing theories designed to increase motivation have the opposite effect. This article introduces Self-Determination Theory, first developed by Edward Deci and Richard Ryan, as a theory of human motivation. A key element of Self-Determination Theory is the…
Descriptors: Music Education, Self Determination, Theories, Personal Autonomy
David W. Jardine – Educational Theory, 2024
This paper is a combination of a grandfather's musings over his grandson's drawings, combined with a reconsideration of hermeneutics as an early childhood educational theory.
Descriptors: Hermeneutics, Early Childhood Education, Educational Theories, Freehand Drawing
Emily T. Noyes; Jared A. Davis; Robert C. Schlauch – Journal of Drug Education, 2024
Objective: While college student drinking has been studied utilizing many different theories and approaches, it is unclear how these theories may overlap in their explanation of problematic drinking. Rather than relying on one theory, examining overlap between multiple theories of alcohol use may lead to a better understanding of the motivational…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Drinking, College Students, Profiles
Junhuan Wei; Qin Wang; Buyun Dai; Yan Cai; Dongbo Tu – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2024
Traditional IRT and IRTree models are not appropriate for analyzing the item that simultaneously consists of multiple-choice (MC) task and constructed-response (CR) task in one item. To address this issue, this study proposed an item response tree model (called as IRTree-MR) to accommodate items that contain different response types at different…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Models, Multiple Choice Tests, Cognitive Processes
Anna Wagner – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2024
In the face of calls for the standardization and professionalization of leadership education, a sub-field in higher education, it is important to understand who leadership educators are and how they come to understand themselves as belonging to this sub-field. Recent critiques have arisen about the overwhelming whiteness that permeates the…
Descriptors: Leadership Training, Higher Education, Critical Theory, Whites
Rachel Lee – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Classical item analysis (CIA) entails summarizing items based on two key attributes: item difficulty and item discrimination, defined as the proportion of examinees answering correctly and the difference in correctness between high and low scorers. Recent insights reveal a direct link between these measures and aspects of signal detection theory…
Descriptors: Item Analysis, Knowledge Level, Difficulty Level, Measurement
Kara C. Oatman; Nancy A. Price – American Biology Teacher, 2024
The Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) engage students in the epistemic, or knowledge building, components of science through three-dimensional learning. Each scientific domain has its own epistemic aspects that result from different social groups going about science in different ways to conceptualize different bodies of knowledge; education…
Descriptors: Science Education, Biological Sciences, Teaching Methods, Theory Practice Relationship
Marley-Payne, Jack – Theory and Research in Education, 2021
Ameliorative analysis is a powerful new approach to understanding concepts, stemming from cutting-edge work at the intersection of philosophy of language, philosophy of mind and metaphysics. It offers the potential to improve our understanding of a range of subject matters. One topic to which it has not yet been applied is the concept of…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories, Linguistic Theory, Justice
Jessica M. Cassidy; Michael T. Willoughby – Child Development Perspectives, 2025
Early childhood is characterized by rapid increases in both motor skills and executive function skills. Rather than simply codeveloping, the development of motor and executive function skills may be linked causally. In this article, we introduce corticomuscular coherence as a paradigm for psychologists interested in testing mechanistic questions…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Psychomotor Skills, Executive Function, Skill Development
Burtenshaw, Rebecca – Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia, 2023
Behaviourism proposes successful learning to be dependent on the performance of conditioned behaviours that are distinctly observable and objectively measurable. Over the past 100 years, various behaviourist concepts have been superseded by sociocultural and cognitive learning theories, but the entwined areas of assessment in mathematics education…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Success, Behavior Theories, Behavior Patterns
Ruffman, Ted – Child Development Perspectives, 2023
In this article, I briefly review theories about the development of theory of mind, and then examine evidence for minimalism, the idea that infants initially understand only behaviors. To this end, I consider the need for a wide variety of species to predict the behaviors of other animals and that human infants are not unique in this regard. I…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Infants, Evidence, Comprehension