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JournalISSN: 0144-3410

Educational Psychology 

Taylor & Francis
About: Educational Psychology is an academic journal published by Taylor & Francis. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Academic achievement & Cognitive style. It has an ISSN identifier of 0144-3410. Over the lifetime, 1931 publications have been published receiving 71770 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of peer learning can be found in this article, focusing mainly on peer tutoring, cooperative learning, and peer assessment, together with questions of implementation integrity and consequent effectiveness and cost-effectiveness.
Abstract: Developments in forms of peer learning 1981–2006 are reviewed, focusing mainly on peer tutoring, cooperative learning, and peer assessment. Types and definitions of peer learning are explored, together with questions of implementation integrity and consequent effectiveness and cost‐effectiveness. Benefits to helpers are now emphasised at least as much as benefits to those helped. In this previously under‐theorised area, an integrated theoretical model of peer learning is now available. Peer learning has been extended in types and forms, in curriculum areas and in contexts of application beyond school. Engagement in helping now often encompasses all community members, including those with special needs. Social and emotional gains now attract as much interest as cognitive gains. Information technology is now often a major component in peer learning, operating in a variety of ways. Embedding and sustainability has improved, but further improvement is needed.

1,273 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Mark Carter1
TL;DR: Visible learning as discussed by the authors is a review of over 800 metaclass metamodel metamatches from the Visible Learning project. But the review is limited to two metaclasses.
Abstract: by John Hattie, London, Routledge, 2009, 392 pp., US$80.00 (paperback), ISBN 978‐0‐415‐47618‐8. In the book Visible learning, Hattie extends his previous work by presenting a review of over 800 met...

1,273 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors considered the nature of styles and strategies and then surveyed work on cognitive styles, and suggested that the labels may be grouped into two principal cognitive styles: the Wholist-Analytic and Verbialiser-Imager dimensions.
Abstract: This review article considered the nature of styles and strategies and then surveyed work on cognitive styles. Different researchers have used a variety of labels for the styles they have investigated. Analysis of the way in which they assessed style, its effect on behaviour and performance, and studies of the relationship to other labels, suggested that the labels may be grouped into two principal cognitive styles. These were labelled the Wholist‐Analytic and Verbialiser‐Imager dimensions. A computer presented method of assessing the position of an individual on these dimensions was described.

1,188 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The area of learning style has been active for around four decades as mentioned in this paper, with recent years seeing a particularly marked upturn in the number of researchers working in the area and a variety of disciplines from which the research is emerging.
Abstract: Although its origins have been traced back much further, research in the area of learning style has been active for—at a conservative estimate—around four decades. During that period the intensity of activity has varied, with recent years seeing a particularly marked upturn in the number of researchers working in the area. Also of note is the variety of disciplines from which the research is emerging. Increasingly, research in the area of learning style is being conducted in domains outside psychology—the discipline from which many of the central concepts and theories originate. These domains include medical and health care training, management, industry, vocational training and a vast range of settings and levels in the field of education. It is of little wonder that applications of these concepts are so wide ranging given the centrality of learning—and how best to do it—to almost every aspect of life. As a consequence of the quantity of research, the diversity of the disciplines and domains in which the...

960 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors found that teachers who have been implementing inclusive programmes, and therefore have active experience of inclusion, possess more positive attitudes towards the inclusion of children with special needs in the ordinary school were surveyed soon after the release of the Green Paper.
Abstract: Attitudes of mainstream teachers towards the inclusion of children with special needs in the ordinary school were surveyed soon after the release of the Green Paper. The survey was carried out in one Local Education Authority in the south-west of England and the sample comprised of 81 primary and secondary teachers. The analysis revealed that teachers who have been implementing inclusive programmes, and therefore have active experience of inclusion, possess more positive attitudes. Moreover, the data showed the importance of professional development in the formation of positive attitudes towards inclusion. In particular, teachers with university-based professional development appeared both to hold more positive attitudes and to be more confident in meeting the IEP requirements of students with SEN. The role that training at both pre-service and post-service levels has in the development of teachers' support for inclusion is discussed.

841 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
202324
202269
202192
202089
201978
201879