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Akbari, Morteza; Danesh, Mozhgan; Moumenihelali, Hadi; Rezvani, Azadeh – Education and Information Technologies, 2023
Despite e-learning's rapid growth and significant benefits, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, retaining students in this educational environment is a critical challenge in the post-corona era. Therefore, our research was conducted to explore how we can promote the continuance use of e-learning (CUEL) platforms. More specifically, this study…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Educational Technology, Self Efficacy, Self Concept
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Tagay, Özlem; Circir, Osman – International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies, 2022
The aim of the current study is to conduct the validity and reliability studies of the Academic Inertia Scale for Adolescents (AAIS). Inertia is that occurs from not adapting to the current situation, lack of motivation, insufficient self-control and lack of socializing. It has been stated that living in inertia is a result of the individual's…
Descriptors: Test Validity, Test Reliability, Student Motivation, Self Efficacy
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Alanoglu, Muslim; Karabatak, Songül – Educational Process: International Journal, 2023
Background/purpose: This study aims to determine the effect of faculty members' psychological empowerment on their change orientation and the mediating role of knowledge inertia (learning and experience) in this effect. Materials/methods: A cross-sectional research design was used to achieve this goal. The opinions of 398 faculty members working…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Empowerment, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes
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Akpolat, Tuba – International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies, 2023
The ability of organizations to adapt quickly to change and take action in uncertain situations brought about by a crisis or change is vital for their development and continuity. Teachers, who are education workers, form the basis of the education system by producing education services. Therefore, the power of the education system to take action…
Descriptors: Teacher Motivation, Teacher Attitudes, Organizational Change, Foreign Countries
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Hinrichsen, Peter F. – Physics Teacher, 2022
Modern MEMs gyros/accelerometers allow the angular velocity of pendula to be precisely measured and the angular acceleration to be calculated. For a compound pendulum, "I"[subscript p][umlaut over theta]=-"mga" sin[theta]Ip[umlaut over theta]=-mgasin[theta], where "a" is the distance of the center of mass from the…
Descriptors: Motion, Scientific Concepts, Physics, Measurement
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Deemer, Eric D.; Derosa, Pedro A.; Duhon, Stacey A.; Dotterer, Aryn M. – Journal of Career Development, 2021
Building upon psychological momentum theory, we draw an analogy between motivational constructs proposed herein and the physical principles of mass, inertia, and momentum. From these principles, we derived constructs representing academic inertia in states of both low and high momentum. The sample consisted of 105 African American college students…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, College Students, African American Students, STEM Education
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Palacios Gómez, Jesús; Villagómez, Roque André Eleazar Arroyo – Physics Teacher, 2023
Here, a relatively simple laboratory experiment of a physical pendulum, suitable for students of science and engineering in the first courses of university physics, is presented to illustrate its dynamic behavior and to determine its inertia moment. To this end, a long wooden rod of length L = 99.8 cm and cross-section radius R = 1.73 cm was used…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, Motion
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Liao, Ming-Ray; Anderson, Brian A. – Learning & Memory, 2020
Previously reward-associated stimuli persistently capture attention. We attempted to extinguish this attentional bias through a reversal learning procedure where the high-value color changed unexpectedly. Attentional priority shifted during training in favor of the currently high-value color, although a residual bias toward the original high-value…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Rewards, Color, Task Analysis
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Balta, Nuri – School Science Review, 2020
Teaching through discrepant event activities increases student interest in science. In this article, I will introduce a well-known 19th century demonstration, the Tissandier experiment, to stimulate curiosity among students learning the concept of inertia. In this demonstration, a hard object (e.g. a wooden rod) placed on fragile supports is…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Demonstrations (Educational), Motion
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Preisler, Vanessa; Shume, Esayas; Talbot, Jean – Physics Teacher, 2022
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, in the spring of 2020 many physics programs were forced to quickly transition all of their classes and laboratories to a completely online learning environment. The need for simple and engaging remote physics laboratories became apparent. One relatively low-cost remote lab system is Macmillan's iOLab device. This…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Science Instruction, Physics
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Pereira, Eliane – Physics Teacher, 2021
In this article, we present a low-cost lab experience, enhanced by new technologies and easy to execute. The objective of the experiment is to explore the moment of inertia of a fidget spinner quantitatively. Our choice was to integrate the teaching of physics with the use of a popular toy, the fidget spinner, very popular among young people and…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education
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Hughes, Andrew J.; Merrill, Chris – Technology and Engineering Teacher, 2020
Design is often accepted as a fundamental aspect of engineering (Dym, et al., 2005). The design process is frequently portrayed as a set of steps. However, the design process is more complex than just a set of steps in a relatively fixed process. The complex nature of design, design thinking, questioning, and decision making is exactly what…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, STEM Education, Design, Manufacturing
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Lemay, David John; Basnet, Ram B.; Doleck, Tenzin – Education and Information Technologies, 2022
Open-source software movement presents a viable alternative to commercial operating systems. Linux-based operating systems are freely available and a competitive option for computer users who want full control of their computer software. Thus, it is relevant to inquire on how the open-source movement might influence user technology switching…
Descriptors: Open Source Technology, Computer Software, Intention, Influences
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Kandiko Howson, Camille; Cohen, Eliel; Viola, Julianne K. – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
There is a contradiction of intensive national policy efforts and the slow pace of change in widening participation in England. This paper focuses on the use of contextual data in STEM subjects, where there has been less progress in widening access and a more rigid entry pathway through A-level study. Interviews with admissions tutors suggest a…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Student Participation, Academic Standards, Social Justice
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Wang, Jinhui; Ricardo, Bernard – Physics Teacher, 2019
Moments of inertia (MOIs) are usually derived via substantial integration and may intimidate undergraduates without prior backgrounds in calculus. This paper presents an intuitive geometric operation, termed "squashing," that transforms an object into an equivalent one with a reduced dimension, whose MOI is simpler to determine. The…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Mechanics (Physics), Geometric Concepts, Science Process Skills
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