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The history and value of the distinction between intellect and intuitionAaron, Richard Ithamar January 1926 (has links)
No description available.
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The part played by kinaesthetic experience in perception and thinkingStrzałkowski, Wiesław January 1946 (has links)
No description available.
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Thinking style preference, emotional intelligence and leadership effectivenessHerbst, THH, Maree, KG 04 September 2008 (has links)
In this study, the researchers investigate the relationship between thinking style preference, emotional intelligence and leadership effectiveness in an institution of higher education. The measuring
instruments used were the Neethling Brain Preference Profile (NBPP) and the Mayer, Salovey and Caruso
Emotional Intelligence Test (MSCEIT), as well as the Kouzes and Posner Leadership Practices Inventory (LPI).
The sample comprised 138 managers within a higher education institution. The researchers found some evidence to support the relationship between thinking style, emotional intelligence (EI) and
leadership effectiveness. The researchers concluded that facets of brain dominance and emotional
intelligence may be potentially useful predictors of transformational leadership behaviours.
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Student mathermatics performance in relation to selected causal variables and a teaming process for improving higher order thinking skillsBattle, Danielle Sanders 01 May 2009 (has links)
It was proposed that student mathematics gain scores on the Georgia Criteria Referenced Competency Test (CRCT], motivation ant1 teacher expectation might be explained by teacher perceptions of the selected independent variables: Instructional I leadership, professional development, teacher methodology, achievement lesson planning, teacher instructional delivery and teacher college preparation. The correlation design did not include a control group. Thirty-seven of the 48 teachers responded to a 51 -item, five-point ordinal scale questionnaire in a metropolitan Atlanta elementary school. Significant correlations were student CRCT performance; motivation and teacher expectations were intercorrelated and all three variables were significantly correlated with the Achievement Lesson Planning system (ALPS), college preparation, instructional supervision, math grouping, and staff professional development. Higher order thinking skills (HOTS) were only significantly related to CRCT and teacher expectation. Based on these results. five third grade teachers were selected for treatment, and were asked to rate their 95 students' ability to respond to higher order thinking skills in addition to providing teacher and student demographic information. Based on the results of both surveys, a treatment was conducted to counteract the identified causal variables for low student responsiveness in teaching of higher order thinking skills in order to improve student mathematic performance. The researcher (the principal) trained the third grade teachers to function as a Grade Achievement 1em (GAT) on the Empowerment Management of meeting (EMOM) model and to utilize the ALPS to plan lessons so as to counteract the causal variables for low student performance and to teach for higher order thinking skills utilizing the Observation Based Instructional Assessment System (OBIA). The results of ANOVA indicated that all teachers made significant gains on the teaching of HOTS in mathematics. In a factor analysis, HOTS gain scores in mathematics were loaded in component I inversely only with teacher gender. The results of regression analysis indicated that student CRCT math performance was significantly predicted only by their Pre-CRCT score and teacher rating of their math performance. It was suggested that the principal provided professional development at the Grade Achievement Team (GAT) level in the Management of Meeting (EMOM) model for conducting Achievement Lesson Planning System (ALPS) and Observation Based Instructional Assessment (OBIA) on the teaching of higher order thinking skills (HOTS).
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Conditions which foster creativity in the individualCisneros, Leonard, 1950- January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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Digital-analogic thinking and its measurementDjap, Djam Dung. January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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Thought experiments in ethics : a contexualist approach to the grounding problemHarland, Anne 05 1900 (has links)
How can an experiment which occurs only in thought lead to new and accurate
conclusions about the world beyond thought? What makes thought experiments relevant
to the domains they are designed to explore?
One answer is that successful thought experiments are grounded. Explaining the
nature of this grounding relationship, especially as it applies to ethics, is the main task of
this dissertation.
A thought experiment is an experiment that occurs in thought. The "thought"
label distinguishes it from an ordinary physical experiment, while the "experiment" label
distinguishes it from other types of merely analogical, conjectural, or hypothetical
reasoning. Many of the components that are necessary for a successful physical
experiment are also necessary for a successful thought experiment. A thought
experiment, like a physical experiment, must isolate and vary variables in order to answer
a question within a given theoretical context. The result of the experiment has
repercussions for its theoretical context.
The grounding relationship holds between the components of the thought
experiment and the theoretical context of the thought experiment. In order for the
thought experiment to be successful, both the experimental set-up and our responses to it
need to be grounded in the thought experiment's theoretical context.
An experimental set-up will be grounded whenever it meets the following
conditions. The concepts used must be defined normally, dependent and independent
variables must be isolated and relevantly related, and the propositions of the thought
experiment (excepting those describing extraneous particulars) must be relevantly related
to the given theoretical context and the question under examination.
Grounding responses to thought experiments will then be largely a matter of
anticipating and disarming distorting influences. Factors influencing responses include
the individual's knowledge of the theoretical context, the state of development of that
context, the nature of the presentation of the thought experiment, and subjective filters.
It is sometimes difficult to ascertain whether a thought experiment in ethics is
grounded. This is largely due to the nature of the theoretical context of thought
experiments in ethics. In order to assess the relationship of thought experiments in ethics
to their theoretical context, I advocate employing a contextualist methodology involving
the process of wide reflective equilibrium. While contextualists use this approach to
arrive at considered judgements relating to specific ethical problems, I show that wide
reflective equilibrium can also be used to examine the grounding of thought experiments.
I conclude the dissertation with an examination of the relationship of thought
experiments to computer simulations, a study of various common thought experiment
distortions, and some tests and methods designed to aid constructing successful thought
experiments.
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Semantic change following verbal repetition.Pyke, Sandra W. January 1964 (has links)
Both laymen and psychologists have often observed that certain features of a familiar word change when it is continuously repeated. In the psychological literature, this phenomenon has been called "verbal satiation". The studies to follow are concerned with the effects of sustained repetition on the meaning of both familiar and unfamiliar words. [...]
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Inner City Students: Stamped, Labled and Shipped Out! Deficit Thinking and Democracy in An Age of NeoliberalismSharma, Manu 11 December 2009 (has links)
My thesis topic on deficit thinking, democracy and an ethic of care emerges as a
result of the clashes that take place under political and socio-economic agendas which are deeply connected with the conflicting interpersonal challenges that inner city students face. My thesis focuses on two major aspects regarding deficit thinking: 1. What are the different frameworks that create and support deficit thinking and deficit practices, and are there any philosophical inconsistencies or overlap amongst them? Moreover, what is the
conceptualization(s) of deficit thinking that arise from these different frameworks?
2. Why is deficit thinking toward inner city students philosophically problematic and
inconsistent with creating true democratic education possibilities? After presenting and
highlighting my concerns about deficit thinking practices, I briefly provide an alternative vision for education. This truly democratic vision of education is comprised of four main components: critical thinking, participatory democracy, moral responsibility, and an ethic of care.
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Teaching of History in the post-Revolutionary Iran: The Ideological, Political and Cultural Discourses Embedded in a Secondary School Contemporary History TextbookYazdanjoo, PARISA 04 October 2012 (has links)
This study explores the way in which the Iranian Post-Revolutionary political and religious authorities subordinate the teaching of History to their political agenda by analyzing the political, ideological, and cultural discourses embedded in the secondary school history course book, The Contemporary History of Iran (Tārīkh-i Muʿāṣir-i Iran), which is a mandatory textbook in the Iranian education system. / Thesis (Master, Education) -- Queen's University, 2012-10-02 18:44:57.313
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