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Situative approaches to online engagement, assessment, and equity Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Daniel T. Hickey
Abstract The articles in this special issue on Improving Online Learning Theory, Research, and Practice characterize online learning using a set of “diverse lenses.” Most of these articles draw primarily from modern socio-constructivist perspectives and applied psychological constructs derived from more basic research. My strong embrace of situated cognition and design-based methods led to questions
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Making insights from educational psychology and educational technology research more useful for practice Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Barbara Means
Abstract Articles in this special issue on “Diverse Lenses on Improving Online Learning Theory, Research, and Practice” begin to address the gap between (1) research on psychological constructs that are too abstract to guide many instructional decisions and (2) empirically derived guidance that is quite concrete but limited in explanatory value and generalizability. Needed now is a multi-level framework
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Foundations of online learning: Challenges and opportunities Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2022-07-13 Christine Greenhow, Charles R. Graham, Matthew J. Koehler
Abstract Online learning—learning that involves interactions that are mediated through using digital, typically internet-based, technology—is pervasive, multi-faceted, and evolving, creating opportunities and challenges for educational research in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. In this special issue, we advance an interdisciplinary agenda for online learning research at the intersection of educational
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Building bridges to advance the Community of Inquiry framework for online learning Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2022-07-13 Peter Shea, Jennifer Richardson, Karen Swan
Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic forced institutions of higher education around the world to quickly transition to forms of distance education, including synchronous and asynchronous online learning. Often lacking conceptual, empirical, and practical understanding of online pedagogy, many institutions have met this endeavor with mixed success. It seems inevitable that online learning will continue to
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Online learner engagement: Conceptual definitions, research themes, and supportive practices Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2022-07-13 Florence Martin, Jered Borup
Abstract Online learning has increased in prominence across all levels of education, despite reported learner engagement being lower online than during in-person learning. Most learner engagement research and frameworks have focused on in-person learning environments but new frameworks and strategies for online learner engagement are emerging. In this article, we integrate scholarship from educational
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Design-based research: What it is and why it matters to studying online learning Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2022-07-01 Christopher Hoadley, Fabio C. Campos
Abstract The ever-changing nature of online learning foregrounds the limits of separating research from design. In this article, we take the difficulty of making generalizable conclusions about designed environments as a core challenge of studying the educational psychology of online learning environments. We argue that both research and design can independently produce empirically derived knowledge
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Equity in online learning Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2022-06-10 Tamara Tate, Mark Warschauer
Abstract Online learning outcomes have indicated both a gap between online and face-to-face learning and the amplification of this gap for low-income and minority learners. Evidence from studies across K–16 reveals equity issues regarding access to online courses; student attendance and achievement; and, most recently, the impact of the pandemic. This article uses Warschauer’s conceptual framework
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Pillars of online pedagogy: A framework for teaching in online learning environments Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2022-06-10 Leanna Archambault, Heather Leary, Kerry Rice
Abstract The growing shift toward online learning has brought new expectations for teachers, including skills needed to combine content knowledge with engaging pedagogical strategies that leverage the affordances of technology. As a result, online pedagogy has become increasingly relevant in modern-day schools. The challenge is understanding the nature of online pedagogy, the skills needed for teachers
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Can educational psychology be harnessed to make changes for the greater good? Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2022-04-08 Francesca López
Abstract As the American Psychological Association and Division 15 committed to addressing systemic racism after the 2020 summer of racial reckoning, orchestrated political attacks that vilify pedagogical approaches aimed at addressing racial injustice have thwarted schools' efforts across the nation. Against this context, the overarching aim of this article is a call to action for educational psychology
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The complex social ecology of academic development: A bioecological framework and illustration examining the collective effects of parents, teachers, and peers on student engagement Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2022-04-05 Ellen A. Skinner, Nicolette P. Rickert, Justin W. Vollet, Thomas A. Kindermann
Abstract In this article, we aimed to contribute to a fuller understanding of the complex social ecologies that shape students’ academic development by focusing on richer and more precise conceptualizations of mesosystem effects. First, building on bioecological models, we argued for the importance of collective influences, defined as influences from multiple microsystems that act in concert to shape
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Beyond utility value interventions: The why, when, and how for next steps in expectancy-value intervention research Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-11-29 Emily Q. Rosenzweig, Allan Wigfield, Jacquelynne S. Eccles
Abstract Motivational interventions grounded in Eccles and colleagues’ situated expectancy-value theory (SEVT) can promote students’ motivational beliefs and academic performance. However, most prior work has focused on one construct, perceived utility value. SEVT includes multiple constructs found to influence students’ academic motivation, performance, and choices. We therefore believe it is time
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The elusive links between teachers’ teaching-related emotions, motivations, and self-regulation and students’ educational outcomes Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-11-29 Fani Lauermann, Ruth Butler
Abstract Educational psychologists have traditionally been far more interested in the psychology of students than teachers. However, interest in conceptualizing and examining teachers’ emotions, motivations, and self-regulation, as well as corresponding implications for the instructional process and students’ educational outcomes, has increased in recent years. Accumulating evidence suggests that these
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Teacher emotions in the classroom and their implications for students Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-11-08 Anne C. Frenzel, Lia Daniels, Irena Burić
Abstract The present contribution provides a conceptualization of teacher emotions rooted in appraisal theory and draws on several complementary theoretical perspectives to create a conceptual framework for understanding the teacher emotion–student outcome link based on three psychological mechanisms: (1) direct transmission effects between teacher and student emotions, (2) mediated effects via teachers’
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Do teachers’ perceived teaching competence and self-efficacy affect students’ academic outcomes? A closer look at student-reported classroom processes and outcomes Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-11-08 Fani Lauermann, Inga ten Hagen
Abstract Teachers’ teaching-related competence beliefs such as perceived teaching ability and self-efficacy have been linked to their occupational well-being and external evaluations of instructional quality. However, researchers have struggled to establish a reliable empirical link between teachers’ competence beliefs and students’ academic outcomes. To clarify these puzzling results, this research
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Teacher motivation and student outcomes: Searching for the signal Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-11-11 Lisa Bardach, Robert M. Klassen
Abstract Recent years have witnessed a burgeoning interest in the study of teacher motivation. Although links between teacher motivation and teacher well-being, commitment to the profession, and other teacher-related outcomes are well-documented, prior research on associations between teacher motivation and student outcomes has been less consistent. This article focuses on teacher motivation as situated
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A conceptual framework and a professional development model for supporting teachers’ “triple SRL–SRT processes” and promoting students’ academic outcomes Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-11-16 Bracha Kramarski, Orna Heaysman
Abstract To address teachers’ difficulties in implementing effective self-regulated learning (SRL) for their professional knowledge and practice as well as for their students’ learning, a conceptual framework and a practical model for professional development is proposed that can help bridge theory, practice, and research on teachers’ SRL. Expanding on prior dual frameworks that differentiate teachers’
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Teachers need more than knowledge: Why motivation, emotion, and self-regulation are indispensable Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-11-29 Reinhard Pekrun
Abstract It is plausible to assume that teachers need motivation, emotions, and self-regulation to teach and promote students’ learning. However, as documented in this special issue, extant research is inconsistent and has documented weak effects of these teacher variables at best. I discuss possible reasons for this paradoxical failure to more fully document the importance of motivation, emotion,
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Teachers’ social-emotional characteristics and student outcomes: A commentary Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-11-29 Michele Gregoire Gill
Abstract The disconnect between educational theory and practice is problematic for our field. The purpose of this commentary was to explore how that disconnect is being addressed in current research on teachers’ social-emotional characteristics and their relation to student outcomes. Three questions framed the analysis underlying this review: What do we now know? What do we still need to know? What
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Metacognition matters in many ways Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-11-24 Deanna Kuhn
Abstract The construct of metacognition appears in an ever increasing number and range of contexts in educational, developmental, and cognitive psychology. Can it retain its status as a useful construct in the face of such diverse application? Or is it merely an umbrella term for diverse mental phenomena that are loosely if at all connected? Here I argue for metacognition playing many diverse roles
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Motivational and emotional impacts on public (mis)understanding of science Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-09-15 Gale M. Sinatra
Abstract The psychology of science resistance, doubt, and denial has never had clearer consequences than during the COVID-19 pandemic. This manuscript explores how misconceptions about climate change, vaccines, and COVID-19 cannot be understood apart from the conscious and unconscious motivations and emotions which contribute to public (mis)understanding of science. Drawing on research presented during
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A walk through the landscape of writing: Insights from a program of writing research Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-07-27 Steve Graham
Abstract This article is an expanded version of my presentation to Division 15 (Educational Psychology) of the American Psychological Association for the Career Achievement Award for Distinguished Psychological Contributions to Education in 2019. It provides an overview of research conducted by colleagues and I that examined the following four topics: (a) the role of writing knowledge, strategies,
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Domain-specific prior knowledge and learning: A meta-analysis Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-07-23 Bianca A. Simonsmeier, Maja Flaig, Anne Deiglmayr, Lennart Schalk, Michael Schneider
Abstract It is often hypothesized that prior knowledge strongly predicts learning performance. It can affect learning positively mediated through some processes and negatively mediated through others. We examined the relation between prior knowledge and learning in a meta-analysis of 8776 effect sizes. The stability of individual differences, that is, the correlation between pretest and posttest knowledge
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From old school to open science: The implications of new research norms for educational psychology and beyond Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-04-08 Hunter Gehlbach, Carly D. Robinson
Abstract Recently, scholars have noted how several “old-school” practices—a host of long-standing scientific norms—in combination, sometimes compromise the credibility of research. In response, other scholarly fields have developed several “open-science” norms and practices to address these credibility issues. Against this backdrop, this special issue explores the extent to which and how these norms
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Replication is important for educational psychology: Recent developments and key issues Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-03-31 Jonathan A. Plucker, Matthew C. Makel
Abstract Replication is a key activity in scientific endeavors. Yet explicit replications are rare in many fields, including education and psychology. In this article, we discuss the relevance and value of replication in educational psychology and analyze challenges regarding the role replications can and should play in research. These challenges include philosophical, methodological, professional
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Preregistration and registered reports Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-04-02 Justin Reich
Abstract Preregistration and registered reports are two promising open science practices for increasing transparency in the scientific process. In particular, they create transparency around one of the most consequential distinctions in research design: the data analytics decisions made before data collection and post-hoc decisions made afterwards. Preregistration involves publishing a time-stamped
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Open accessibility in education research: Enhancing the credibility, equity, impact, and efficiency of research Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-03-31 Jesse I. Fleming, Sarah Emily Wilson, Sara A. Hart, William J. Therrien, Bryan G. Cook
Abstract Openness is a foundational principle in science. Making the tools and products of scientific research openly accessible advances core aims and values of education researchers, such as the credibility, equity, impact, and efficiency of research. The digital revolution has expanded opportunities for providing greater access to research. In this article, we examine three open-science practices—open
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Improving norms in research culture to incentivize transparency and rigor Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-04-08 David Mellor
Abstract Improving research culture to value transparency and rigor is necessary to engage in a productive “Credibility Revolution.” The field of educational psychology is well positioned to act toward this goal. It will take specific actions by both grassroots groups plus leadership to set standards that will ensure that getting published, funded, or hired is determined by universally supported ideals
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Strengthening the foundation of educational psychology by integrating construct validation into open science reform Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-04-05 Jessica Kay Flake
Abstract An increased focus on transparency and replication in science has stimulated reform in research practices and dissemination. As a result, the research culture is changing: the use of preregistration is on the rise, access to data and materials is increasing, and large-scale replication studies are more common. In this article, I discuss two problems the methodological reform movement is now
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Implications of the open science era for educational psychology research syntheses Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-03-31 Erika A. Patall
Abstract Extensive debate of potentially common, yet questionable research practices that lead to biased findings within social and health sciences has emerged over the last decade. These challenges likely apply to educational psychology, though the field has been slow to address them. This article discusses current research norms, strategic solutions proposed under the broad rubric of “open science
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Open science reforms: Strengths, challenges, and future directions Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-04-21 Kathryn R. Wentzel
Abstract In this article, I comment on the potential benefits and limitations of open science reforms for improving the transparency and accountability of research, and enhancing the credibility of research findings within communities of policy and practice. Specifically, I discuss the role of replication and reproducibility of research in promoting better quality studies, the identification of generalizable
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Acknowledgments Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-04-21
(2021). Acknowledgments. Educational Psychologist: Vol. 56, Educational Psychology in the Open Science Era, pp. iii-iii.
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Research self-efficacy: A meta-analysis Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-03-03 Raluca Livinƫi, George Gunnesch-Luca, Dragoș Iliescu
Abstract Research self-efficacy represents the adaptation of the social cognitive concept of self-efficacy to the field of academic and scientific research and is one of the best predictors of successfully engaging in research activities. The current meta-analysis focuses on the relationship between research self-efficacy and 14 other relevant variables suggested by Social Cognitive Career Theory and
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The Multidimensional Knowledge in Text Comprehension framework Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-02-05 Kathryn S. McCarthy, Danielle S. McNamara
Abstract Prior knowledge is one of the strongest contributors to comprehension, but there is little specificity about different aspects of prior knowledge and how they impact comprehension. This article introduces the Multidimensional Knowledge in Text Comprehension framework, which conceptualizes prior knowledge along four intersecting dimensions: amount, accuracy, specificity, and coherence. Amount
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The Multidimensional Knowledge in Text Comprehension framework Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-02-05 Kathryn S. McCarthy, Danielle S. McNamara
Abstract Prior knowledge is one of the strongest contributors to comprehension, but there is little specificity about different aspects of prior knowledge and how they impact comprehension. This article introduces the Multidimensional Knowledge in Text Comprehension framework, which conceptualizes prior knowledge along four intersecting dimensions: amount, accuracy, specificity, and coherence. Amount
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What educational psychology means to me: The journey of a reading researcher Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-12-04 Joanna P. Williams
Abstract This article was adapted from the E. L. Thorndike Address that I delivered at the August, 2019 meeting of the American Psychological Association in Chicago. I trace my career as an educational psychologist in the context of the enormous changes, both theoretical and societal, that occurred during my years as an active researcher. Reading, the focus of my research (both beginning reading and
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Autonomy-supportive teaching: Its malleability, benefits, and potential to improve educational practice Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-02-01 Johnmarshall Reeve, Sung Hyeon Cheon
Abstract Autonomy-supportive teaching is the adoption of a student-focused attitude and an understanding interpersonal tone that enables the skillful enactment of seven autonomy-satisfying instructional behaviors to serve two purposes—support intrinsic motivation and support internalization. Using self-determination theory principles and empirical findings, researchers have developed and implemented
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A critical review of the refutation text literature: Methodological confounds, theoretical problems, and possible solutions Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-01-24 Allison Zengilowski, Brendan A. Schuetze, Brady L. Nash, Diane L. Schallert
Abstract Refutation texts, rhetorical tools designed to reduce misconceptions, have garnered attention across four decades and many studies. Yet, the ability of a refutation text to change a learner’s mind on a topic needs to be qualified and modulated. In this critical review, we bring attention to sources of constraints often overlooked by refutation text researchers. Methodological issues we identified
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Autonomy-supportive teaching: Its malleability, benefits, and potential to improve educational practice Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2021-01-02 Johnmarshall Reeve,Sung Hyeon Cheon
Abstract Autonomy-supportive teaching is the adoption of a student-focused attitude and an understanding interpersonal tone that enables the skillful enactment of seven autonomy-satisfying instructional behaviors to serve two purposes—support intrinsic motivation and support internalization. Using self-determination theory principles and empirical findings, researchers have developed and implemented
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Critical integrative argumentation: Toward complexity in students’ thinking Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-11-19 E. Michael Nussbaum
Abstract Collaborative argumentation in education, where students work together to construct and critique arguments, is an important social practice in many disciplines and can also develop conceptual understanding. This article addresses the evolution of my research agenda on collaborative argumentation from just scaffolding the generation of counterarguments and rebuttals in students’ discourse toward
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Individual preparation for collaborative learning: Systematic review and synthesis Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-10-22 Stephan Mende, Antje Proske, Susanne Narciss
Abstract Collaboration provides learners with opportunities to develop an understanding beyond what they could achieve alone. To this end, learners need to build on each other’s knowledge to draw new conclusions. This requires successful retrieval, inferencing, and mutual referencing during collaboration. Although individual preparation is considered as effective means to foster these processes it
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Why talk about qualitative and mixed methods in educational psychology? Introduction to special issue Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-09-08 Debra K. Meyer, Paul A. Schutz
This article is an introduction to a special issue on qualitative and mixed methods research in educational psychology. In this special issue, we focus on contemporary research by educational psychologists who are using qualitative and mixed methods to highlight the complexity and rigor of their approaches and how their methodological choices are expanding the field of educational psychology. The articles
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Multilevel mixed methods research and educational psychology Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-08-12 Matthew T. McCrudden, Gwen Marchand
We discuss possible uses of multilevel mixed methods (M3) research in educational psychology. To begin, we describe M3 research and how such research can enable researchers to investigate potential variation at the group level and at the subgroup/individual level. We discuss why M3 research designs are well-suited to investigate contextualized, nested phenomenon in education. Then, we describe the
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Unpacking complex phenomena through qualitative inquiry: The case of teacher identity research Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-07-07 Ji Hong, Dionne Cross Francis
Despite the key contributions of qualitative inquiry in developing deeper understandings of people’s lived experiences within varied contexts, the field of educational psychology has not been fully engaged in understanding, advancing, and advocating qualitative inquiry. In this article, we unpacked the processes, affordances, and challenges in conducting qualitative studies in the context of researching
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Using interpretive phenomenological analysis to advance theory and research in educational psychology Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-07-13 Alyssa Emery, Lynley H. Anderman
Researchers in the field of health psychology developed interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA) to explore how individuals make sense of, and meaning from, experiences of personal significance. We describe our approach to using IPA to explore whether current theories of achievement motivation adequately account for the experiences of students with disabilities, and expand the theories so that
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The role of mixed methods in conducting design-based research Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-08-14 Suna Ryu
In this article, I address a specific methodological issue, namely the analysis of interaction that researchers undertaking design-based research (DBR) face when adopting a traditional approach to context. I first describe my methodological worldview in which the meaning of context is continuously negotiated by participants from sociocultural perspectives. I explain how pragmatic and dialectical stances
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Using critical race mixed methodology to explore the experiences of African Americans in education Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-08-12 Jessica T. DeCuir-Gunby
The goal of this article is to explore the relationship between a researcher’s inquiry worldview and methodological choices. In the analysis, I explicate my own racialized positionality and Critical Race Theory (CRT) inquiry worldview. Also, I explain my use of critical race mixed methodology (CRMM), the combining of CRT and mixed methods. In doing so, I give specific examples from my program of research
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Using state space grids to analyze teacher–student interaction over time Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-08-12 Julianne C. Turner, Andrea L. Christensen
In this article, we explain how our inquiry worldview informs one methodological approach we have used to better understand classroom processes and change, State Space Grids (SSGs). We describe our approach to measuring a fundamental classroom process, that of teacher–student interaction, and its influence on a valued educational outcome, student engagement. Drawing from Complex Dynamic Systems theory
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Challenging research norms in educational psychology Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-09-08 Susan Bobbitt Nolen
In this commentary, I identify some common themes in the six articles in this special issue, including the importance of aligning research methods with research questions and embracing the complexity of educational phenomena. Then, I reflect on some differences in how authors responded to the request to discuss the role of their inquiry world view and their own take on the meaning of equity in research
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Using state space grids to analyze teacher–student interaction over time Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-08-12 Julianne C. Turner, Andrea L. Christensen
In this article, we explain how our inquiry worldview informs one methodological approach we have used to better understand classroom processes and change, State Space Grids (SSGs). We describe our approach to measuring a fundamental classroom process, that of teacher–student interaction, and its influence on a valued educational outcome, student engagement. Drawing from Complex Dynamic Systems theory
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Using critical race mixed methodology to explore the experiences of African Americans in education Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-08-12 Jessica T. DeCuir-Gunby
The goal of this article is to explore the relationship between a researcher’s inquiry worldview and methodological choices. In the analysis, I explicate my own racialized positionality and Critical Race Theory (CRT) inquiry worldview. Also, I explain my use of critical race mixed methodology (CRMM), the combining of CRT and mixed methods. In doing so, I give specific examples from my program of research
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Multilevel mixed methods research and educational psychology Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-08-12 Matthew T. McCrudden, Gwen Marchand
We discuss possible uses of multilevel mixed methods (M3) research in educational psychology. To begin, we describe M3 research and how such research can enable researchers to investigate potential variation at the group level and at the subgroup/individual level. We discuss why M3 research designs are well-suited to investigate contextualized, nested phenomenon in education. Then, we describe the
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A review of educational responses to the “post-truth” condition: Four lenses on “post-truth” problems Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-08-06 Sarit Barzilai, Clark A. Chinn
Abstract Educators have been increasingly concerned with what can be done about “post-truth” problems—that is, threats to people's abilities to know what is true—such as the spread of misinformation and denial of well-established scientific claims. The articles and commentaries in this special issue present diverse perspectives on how “post-truth” problems related to scientific and socio-scientific
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Post-truth and science identity: A virtue-based approach to science education Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-06-19 Daniel Lapsley, Dominic Chaloner
Post-truth trades on the corruption of argument and evidence to protect ideological commitment and social identity. We distinguish two kinds of post-truth environments, epistemic bubbles and echo chambers, and argue that facets of post-truth are countered the more science (and general) education encourages the development of intellectual virtues and internalization of science identity. After first
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Sealing the gateways for post-truthism: Reestablishing the epistemic authority of science Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-08-06 Dorothe Kienhues, Regina Jucks, Rainer Bromme
Science’s role in society is being threatened, as misinterpretation and denial of scientific evidence and the rejection or ignorance of scientific expertise are gaining prominence. This endangered role of science in society is characteristic of post-truthism. To deconstruct this process, we analyze how three potential gateways allow people to discount the epistemic authority of science. These gateways
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Individual truth judgments or purposeful, collective sensemaking? Rethinking science education’s response to the post-truth era Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-06-19 Noah Weeth Feinstein, David Isaac Waddington
Abstract Science education is likely to respond to the post-truth era by focusing on how science education can help individuals use scientists’ epistemological tools to tell what is true. This strategy, by itself, is inadequate for three reasons. First, science does not actually offer foundational truth, and incautious assertions about scientific truth can make the problems of the post-truth era worse
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Disagreeing about how to know: The instructional value of explorations into knowing Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-08-06 Clark A. Chinn, Sarit Barzilai, Ravit Golan Duncan
Events worldwide have heightened concerns that education is failing to prepare students for a “post-truth” world. A core “post-truth” challenge is the prevalence of deep epistemic disagreements: people fundamentally disagree about appropriate ways of knowing. We provide a new analysis of deep epistemic disagreements and propose an educational response based on the Apt-AIR framework of the goals of
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Post-truth GPS: Detour at truth, take the long route to useful knowledge Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-08-06 Iris Tabak
It would be easier to navigate our information world if we had a navigational system to guide us. Absent such a system, the authors of the five articles in this special issue propose different ways to help learners engage with scientific information, in light of the post-truth condition. I suggest that the contribution of these articles lies in their emphasis on encouraging deliberation-oriented practices
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Practical reasoning and decision making in science: Struggles for truth Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-08-06 Richard A. Duschl
Knowledge building dynamics are central to scientific communities and involve dialog, debate, inquiry, and contested reasoning. Refining and developing knowledge is an oft missing dynamic in precollege educational programs. Practical reasoning and human decision making are essential epistemic and social dynamics in knowledge-building struggles and quests for the truth. Implications are presented for
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Using interpretive phenomenological analysis to advance theory and research in educational psychology Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-07-13 Alyssa Emery, Lynley H. Anderman
Researchers in the field of health psychology developed interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA) to explore how individuals make sense of, and meaning from, experiences of personal significance. We describe our approach to using IPA to explore whether current theories of achievement motivation adequately account for the experiences of students with disabilities, and expand the theories so that
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Coeditors’ statement Educ. Psychol. (IF 8.209) Pub Date : 2020-01-30 Jeffrey A. Greene, Lisa Linnenbrink-Garcia
(2020). Coeditors’ statement. Educational Psychologist: Vol. 55, No. 1, pp. 50-51.