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Said Hashim, Khadijah; Mohd Radz, Fatin Aliana; Wan Yunus, Farhana; Dahlan, Nadia Ainuddin; Silah, Sumardianshah; Abdul Wahab, Rohaya – Asian Journal of University Education, 2021
This paper examines peer interactions among preschoolers while playing the board game known as "Buaya di Bawah Jambatan" (BDBJ) particularly in learning "adab" and moral values. Additionally, this study is guided by two research objectives focusing on the nature (types) of interactions among players during the game and…
Descriptors: Peer Relationship, Game Based Learning, Games, Ethical Instruction
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Hah, Sixian – Studies in Higher Education, 2021
This paper contributes a discursive perspective on how academics employ self-deprecating humour and laughter to talk about and construct the struggles they faced in academia. Underpinned by ethnomethodological approaches to studying spoken interactions, the paper argues that just as utterances accomplish social actions, academic struggles are…
Descriptors: Humor, Self Esteem, Linguistics, Psychological Patterns
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Shrodes, Addie – Reading Research Quarterly, 2021
The author contributes new insights into everyday literacies in participatory cultures using a multimodal analysis of three LGBTQ+ reaction videos on YouTube. LGBTQ+ reaction videos respond, often comedically, to oppressive media forms and technologies. In the analysis, the author considers how reaction video makers draw on seven meaning-making…
Descriptors: Humor, Critical Literacy, Media Literacy, LGBTQ People
Emily Rose Lake – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This dissertation asks what young children do with style at a time when their social and linguistic worlds begin to expand beyond the home, into the peer group. Grounded in a yearlong ethnography of a preschool classroom in the San Francisco Bay Area, I show how play moved gradually from indoors to outdoors as children got older. This shift…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Preschool Education, Play, Peer Relationship
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Madison L. Straup; Kalyn Prothro; Abigail Sweatt; Jabeen F. Shamji; Sharon R. Jenkins – Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory & Practice, 2024
Present-day college students are particularly impacted by the disconcerting effects of COVID-19 because of their vulnerability towards mental health struggles. The current study identified coping strategies used by students in the United States and how those strategies are associated with trauma-related distress. Results showed acceptance,…
Descriptors: College Students, Coping, Trauma, Stress Management
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Tras, Zeliha; Kabakci, Büsra; Baltaci, Umay Bilge – Research in Pedagogy, 2021
The aim of this study is to examine the psychological resilience in teacher candidates in terms of sense of humor and life satisfaction. Correlational research model was used in the study. The dependent variable of the research is psychological resilience and independent variables are sense of humor and life satisfaction. The research was carried…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Preservice Teachers, Humor, Personality Traits
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Reizer, Abira; Koslowsky, Meni; Antilevich-Steg, Rivki – Australian Journal of Career Development, 2021
In recent years, several investigations of the medical clowning profession have appeared in the literature. However, few studies have focused on factors associated with turnover among medical clowns early in their careers. The current study examined whether individual differences in humor disposition predicted turnover behavior. Participants were…
Descriptors: Labor Turnover, Humor, Individual Differences, Predictor Variables
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Jackson, Marianne L.; Nuñez, Rocio M.; Maraach, Dana; Wilhite, Chelsea J.; Moschella, Jp D. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2021
Various forms of humor are an important aspect of social interactions, even at an early age. Humor comprehension is a repertoire that is said to emerge between the ages of 7 and 11 years, and this is primarily attributed to a child's level of cognitive development. The behavioral literature has suggested that various forms of complex verbal…
Descriptors: Humor, Teaching Methods, Language Processing, Interpersonal Relationship
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Maybury, Algene – Voices in Education, 2021
A low level of anxiety is common, as it is a healthy reaction to the unknown for most people. However, unforeseen circumstances such as a pandemic, can heighten anxiety to unhealthy levels thus impacting an individual's ability to function. Germani et al. (2020) states, "Uncertainty and instability are emotions… that generate worries about…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Coping, Stress Management
Ivan Jay Wayne – ProQuest LLC, 2021
The relevant literature concerning the relationship between humorous intervention and academic performance features conflicting evidence. Authors present evidence that humor is able to directly benefit student academic performance (Ford et al., 2012), while other authors suggest humorous distraction may actually worsen performance (Bieg et al.,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Humor, Intervention, Short Term Memory
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Barnett, Lynn A. – American Journal of Play, 2019
Research about playfulness in adults has viewed it as something that emanates from personality and other individualized characteristics, and therefore many previous studies adopted a trait approach to predict playfulness, largely ignoring gender differences. The author conducted a facet-level analysis of the so-called big-five personality…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Undergraduate Students, Gender Differences, Humor
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Masek, Alias; Hashim, Suhaizal; Ismail, Affero – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2019
Literature reveals that the inclusion of humour in lecture sessions has been accepted differently, especially by adult learners. Previous studies reported that humour was associated with students' engagement, while some studies reported that humour interrupted learning sessions and distracted students' attention from learning. Consequently, this…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Humor, Learner Engagement, Student Attitudes
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Elisa Gironzetti; Salvatore Attardo; Lucy Pickering – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2019
This study investigates the function of smiling intensity as a nondiscrete marker of humor in conversation. The smiling intensity of participants in eight conversational dyads was measured relative to the occurrence of humorous and nonhumorous events in the conversation. A relationship was found between higher smiling intensity and the occurrence…
Descriptors: Humor, Interpersonal Communication, Nonverbal Communication, Affective Behavior
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Taniguchi, Emiko – Journal of American College Health, 2022
Objectives: To examine how the degree of mental illness disclosure and disclosure strategies are associated with psychological and physical well-being among college students. Participants: Participants were 181 undergraduate students from two American universities who self-identified as having been diagnosed with mental illness. Method:…
Descriptors: Mental Disorders, Self Disclosure (Individuals), Well Being, Undergraduate Students
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Matsumoto, Yumi; Lee, Jay Jo; Kim, Eunhee – Classroom Discourse, 2022
Using multimodal conversation analysis, this study closely examines moments when an instructor's embodied explanations elicit laughter from his students -- which we refer to as laughing moments -- in an English as a second language classroom. Such laughing moments can exhibit students' attention to the teacher's explanation and also illuminate…
Descriptors: Humor, English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction, Language Teachers
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