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Language at the speed of sight : how we read, why so many can't, and what can be done about it
In Language at the Speed of Sight, internationally renowned cognitive scientist Mark Seidenberg reveals the underexplored science of reading, which spans cognitive science, neurobiology, and linguistics. As Seidenberg shows, the disconnect between science and education is a major factor in America's chronic underachievement. How we teach reading places many children at risk of failure, discriminates against poorer kids, and discourages even those who could have become more successful readers. Children aren't taught basic print skills because educators cling to the disproved theory that good readers guess the words in texts, a strategy that encourages skimming instead of close reading. Interventions for children with reading disabilities are delayed because parents are mistakenly told their kids will catch up if they work harder. Learning to read is more difficult for children who speak a minority dialect in the home, but that is not reflected in classroom practices. By building on science's insights, we can improve how our children read, and take real steps toward solving the inequality that illiteracy breeds.
Language Proficiency, Second Language Educational Experience, and Psychological Well-being Among International Students at U.S. Universities
by
Smart, Jonathan
,
Yu, Qiaona
,
Bingham, W. Patrick
in
Academic Achievement
,
Addition
,
Adjustment
2025
Study abroad comes with challenges, yet it is not clear how language proficiency may longitudinally predict students’ social engagement and well-being. Recent changes in international student demographics, including age decreases and increased international school backgrounds, may also affect students’ well-being. This study views language as a culturally specific symbolic tool that serves cognitive, social, and emotional interactions, both interpersonal and intrapersonal. By surveying 387 international students from 14 U.S. universities over 1.5 years, this study explored the role of English proficiency in facilitating students’ adaptability to psychosocial challenges and well-being. The findings suggested that both English proficiency and prior-to-admission second language educational experience predict well-being, while the latter may have afforded more nonacademic adjustment to international students’ continuous social engagement. In addition, the onset of social engagement and sense of belonging showed a likely importance which highlights the value of pre-study-abroad programming for facilitating international students’ continuous social engagement.
Journal Article
Motivational factors shaping Muslim students’ decisions to study abroad
by
Yorganci, Ilkay
,
Bayraktar, Fetine
in
Analysis
,
Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
,
College campuses
2025
This study investigates the motivational factors influencing Muslim students' decisions to pursue higher education in Northern Cyprus, with a focus on the interplay of cultural, religious, and academic considerations. Drawing on data from two leading institutions from North Cyprus, We explore students' academic, social, and cultural experiences within the context of educational tourism. Key drivers identified include the perceived quality of education, economic affordability, and the culturally safe environment offered by Northern Cyprus. While participants reported personal and professional growth, challenges such as limited cultural integration and restricted employment opportunities were highlighted. The findings provide actionable insights for universities and policymakers to enhance recruitment strategies and tailor support services to meet Muslim international students' needs better.
Journal Article
Factors Influencing Students’ Academic Self-Efficacy in Related Domains
by
Hinduja, Preeta
,
Siddiqui, Sohni
,
Fakir Mohammad, Razia
in
Ability
,
Academic Ability
,
Academic achievement
2024
The importance of a person’s belief in their own academic abilities cannot be overstated when it comes to pursuing further education and selecting a career aligned with their studies. This research investigates the influence of family dynamics and background, behavior and values, school experiences and out-of-school experiences on academic self-efficacy (ASE). The study also examines how sub-variables of behaviors and values mediate the development of self-efficacy. The research employs a quantitative cross-sectional survey with a convenience sample of 350 intermediate students from various academic domains. The data analyzed using Smart PLS 4 software, revealed that students’ behaviors and values, as well as their out-of-school experiences have a significant impact on the development of self-efficacy. All variables related to behaviors and values show a significant positive impact, except for decision-making skills, which have no significant effect. However, the indirect influence of technology is also noticed. On the other hand, most background factors and school experiences have no direct influence on ASE. This study offers valuable insights into the multifaceted factors that play a crucial role in family education, teacher education, and career counseling. Additionally, it provides a foundation for future research in this area and contributes to the understanding of adolescents; self-efficacy in academic domains.
Plain language summary
Believing in academic abilities is crucial for education and career choices. This study looked at how family, behavior, values, and out-of-school experiences influence students’ belief in themselves (academic self-efficacy). It involved 350 students from different academic fields. The results showed that positive behaviors, values, and out-of-school experiences have a significant impact on self-efficacy. However, background and school experiences had less direct influence. This research offers valuable insights for education and career counseling, helping us understand how students’ confidence in academics develops.
Journal Article
“I Just Feel Like the Teacher Understood Me, and She Knew What I Needed”: School Experiences of Autistic Students from Diverse Backgrounds
2025
Background and aims
Gathering Autistic young people's testimony is critical for understanding their lived experience of education and designing settings in which these students can thrive. Despite increasing knowledge in this field, we lack perspectives from a broad range of Autistic students which necessarily limits our ability to build inclusive, supportive environments for all. This study explored the educational experiences of preschool and school-aged Autistic students from diverse age groups, backgrounds, and educational settings.
Methods
Thirty-six Autistic students (aged 4–18 years) from Chinese, Vietnamese, Somali, Lebanese, and White Australian backgrounds shared their thoughts and experiences of their education. Through semi-structured interviews, students told their stories using words and pictures. Interview transcripts were analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis.
Results
Students described experiencing significant overwhelm within education settings, which led them to value access to safe spaces and having autonomy over decisions in their school day. A strong sense of fairness and justice was reported with students frustrated by inequitable application of school rules, as well as being discouraged by educators’ low expectations of them. Students preferred teachers who were clear and direct in their communication and genuinely cared about them as individuals. Students were mindful of others’ differences and perspectives, striving for mutual respect and friendship with their peers.
Conclusions
Findings from this research indicate that to thrive academically, emotionally and socially, Autistic students need thoughtfully designed education settings with high expectations for every student, together with individualistic care from teachers.
Implications
Our findings reinforce how classroom design and education practices must consider the needs of all students for Autistic students to thrive. From a practice perspective, promoting student autonomy around aspects of their educational environment—such as the ability to use headphones in class or provision of spaces in which to retreat to prevent or manage sensory/social overwhelm—could be “quick wins” for schools wanting to foster safer, more secure settings for Autistic learners. Broadly, educators should aim to embed as much certainty as possible into Autistic students’ educational environments to lay a solid foundation for learning. This foundation is likely to be most effective when educators are partners in discovery with each individual Autistic student, seeking to understand their unique strengths, needs, personalities and identities, and build trusting student–teacher relationships. While our research examined the perspectives of a diverse range of Autistic students, future research should attempt to elicit the educational experiences of both younger Autistic children (e.g., preschoolers) and non- or semi-speaking children, exploring methods suited to this purpose.
Journal Article
Learning Analytics Intervention Using Prompts and Feedback for Measurement of e-Learners’ Socially-Shared Regulated Learning
by
Muchemi, Lawrence
,
Oboko, Robert
,
Akinyi, Grace Leah
in
Academic guidance counseling
,
At Risk Students
,
Collaboration
2024
The future of university learning in Sub-Saharan Africa has become increasingly digitally transformed by both e-Learning, and learning analytics, post-COVID-19 pandemic. Learning analytics intervention is critical for effective support of socially-shared regulated learning skills, which are crucial for twenty-first-century e-Learners. Socially-shared regulation is the major determinant of successful collaborative e-learning. However, most e-learners lack such skills thereby facing socio-cognitive challenges, due to the unavailability of intelligent support during learning. This research aims to investigate and understand the effect of Learning Analytics instructional support using feedback and prompts, on e-learners’ SSRL indicators. A theoretical model was derived from these factors and built from selected features. Both survey data and behavioral trace data were employed in the Learning analytics-based intervention. In this paper, only a segment of the data is discussed. The e-learners’ perceptions and feedback confirmed that Learning Analytics-based interventions using prompts and feedback are effective in promoting SSRL in collaborative e-learning contexts. The findings indicated that the success of SSRLA-based intervention be tied to support from instructors and academic counselors, particularly feedback on previous problems and quizzes. This will improve e-learners’ SSRL skills for quality educational experience, hence motivate e-learners, and help lecturers to identify at-risk learners in web programming problem-based courses. In conclusion, without adequate utilization of the Learning Analytics interventional trace data, critical information about learners’ behavior patterns in terms of their online interactivity with the course activities and their SSRL profiles and strategies cannot be disclosed leading to little improvement of e-Learning interventions.
Journal Article
Leveraging remote learning during the Covid‐19 pandemic to enhance student understanding of biodiversity
by
Schmits, Sarah
,
Weilhoefer, Christine L.
in
Academic Practice in Ecology and Evolution
,
Biodiversity
,
Biology
2022
We evaluated whether individual nature‐based ecological (NBE) study used in tandem with group collaboration enhanced undergraduate student understanding of ecological concepts and pro‐environmental perceptions. In response to the Covid‐19 pandemic, we developed a multiweek unit on the latitude diversity gradient (LDG) for fully online instruction that leveraged the unique situation of students learning in disparate geographic locations. Student understanding of the LDG and pro‐environmental perceptions were assessed with surveys administered both pre‐ and post‐activity in an introductory‐level biology laboratory course. Student understanding of the geographic location where biodiversity is the highest was high prior to the start of the laboratory unit and exhibited only a small improvement after the unit. In contrast, students’ higher order thinking around the LDG was enhanced by the lab activity. Student environmental perceptions shifted toward ecocentric views and away from anthropocentric views after the laboratory unit. The greatest gains in ecological understanding and shifts toward ecocentric viewpoints occurred in the group of students who visited their field sites most often. Our results provide further evidence as to the value of NBE for the introductory biology laboratory, even in an online learning setting. The lab unit described in this study provides a potential approach to teaching ecology in an online format that could easily be adapted to fit the needs of a particular curriculum. Student understanding of ecological concepts and pro‐environmental perceptions were enhanced after a multiweek field study developed for an online ecology course. Improvements were highest in the group of students who visited their field sites most often.
Journal Article
Popular education before and after covid: Neapolitan experiences
2023
In this article, we will try to follow a narrative trajectory that, through the first-person story of Marta as a volunteer educator, introduces some of the territorial educational experiences organized by local commons in the city of Naples. The nature of these spaces tries to put the needs of the common individual at the center and each educational reality narrated, each in its own way, tries to create community through dialogic actions with the people living in the neighborhood, engaging in the promotion of paths of mutual help, built from below starting by sharing practices of community support. In the story of educational experiences, experiences that have abruptly interrupted with the pandemic, we will let ourselves be supported by the theoretical frame of reference of Paulo Freire’s critical pedagogy, just as we will try to reflect, in terms of spaces as horizons of educationally sustainable possibilities, the post-pandemic situation. L’educazione popolare prima e dopo il covid: esperienze partenopee. In questo articolo cercheremo di percorrere una traiettoria narrativa che, attraverso il racconto in prima persona di Marta in qualità di educatrice volontaria, introduca ad alcune delle esperienze educative territoriali organizzate dai beni comuni presenti nel territorio di Napoli. La natura di questi spazi prova a mettere al centro i bisogni del cittadino ed ogni realtà educativa narrata, ognuna a suo modo, cerca di creare comunità attraverso azioni dialogiche con gli abitanti dei diversi quartieri, impegnandosi nella promozione di percorsi di mutuo aiuto, costruiti dal basso a partire dalla condivisione di pratiche a supporto della comunità. Nel racconto delle esperienze educative, esperienze che si sono interrotte bruscamente con la pandemia, ci lasceremo supportare dalla cornice di riferimento teorico della pedagogia critica di Paulo Freire, così come proveremo a riflettere, in termini di spazi quali orizzonti di possibilità educativamente sostenibili, la situazione post-pandemica.
Journal Article
Improving teacher professional development for online and blended learning a systematic meta-aggregative review
by
Philipsen, Brent
,
Roblin, Natalie Pareja
,
Zhu, Chang
in
Active Learning
,
Beliefs
,
Blended Learning
2019
In order to fully realise the potential of online and blended learning (OBL), teacher professional development (TPD) strategies on how to teach in an online or blended learning environment are needed. While many studies examine the effects of TPD strategies, fewer studies target the specific important components of these strategies. This study addresses that gap by conducting a systematic review of qualitative data consisting of 15 articles on TPD that targets OBL. Using a meta-aggregative approach, six different synthesised findings were identified and integrated into a visual framework of the key components of TPD for OBL. These synthesised findings are the base for the action recommendations which present specific and contextualised suggestions. Taken together, the findings can inform in-service teachers and trainers, together with further research and development efforts that are concerned with TPD for OBL.
Journal Article
Potential to use metaverse for future teaching and learning
by
Pradhan, Anup
,
Onu, Peter
,
Mbohwa, Charles
in
Adaptive learning
,
Augmented Reality
,
Computer Appl. in Social and Behavioral Sciences
2024
Metaverse, a virtual shared space integrating augmented reality and virtual reality technologies, is often hailed as the “Internet of the future” for its potential to revolutionize online communication, collaboration, learning, and work. However, despite its promising strategic and business applications, there is a dearth of empirical evidence for evaluating its educational value. This qualitative study examined the impact of Metaverse on teaching and learning by examining its advantages and challenges. The outcomes highlight Metaverse’s remarkable potential for personalized and adaptive learning thanks to its immersive and interactive capabilities. An analysis of the existing literature suggests that Metaverse can create engaging learning experiences in which students can explore tailored virtual environments and interact within them. Semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted to confirm the perception of metaverse-based education among students, educators, and program administrators, who view it as an innovative and effective educational delivery method. Several barriers require attention to ensure the successful integration of Metaverse in education, such as network connectivity, reliability, standardization and certification, organizational readiness, and the specialized skills necessary to leverage Metaverse’s potential. This study offers a comprehensive understanding of Metaverse’s potential, limitations, and critical factors contributing to its education success. By providing immersive and interactive learning experiences tailored to individual student needs, Metaverse holds the power to revolutionize teaching and learning. However, addressing challenges related to interoperability and the need for more evidence on its efficacy requires further research and development efforts. The significance of this study hinges on the continued exploration of Metaverse to enhance educational experiences, offering a novel and innovative approach to teaching and learning.
Journal Article