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Application of First-Person Education to a Multiple-Section Undergraduate Educational Psychology Course for Teacher Education Majors
Author(s) -
Asghar IranNejad,
William H. Stewart,
Cecil Robinson
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
international journal of educational psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.484
H-Index - 6
ISSN - 2014-3591
DOI - 10.17583/ijep.2015.896
Subject(s) - hindsight bias , revelation , paragraph , psychology , learning cycle , mathematics education , sentence , pedagogy , social psychology , literature , art , philosophy , computer science , linguistics , world wide web
This is a semester-long study of the development of first-person biofunctional understanding in educational psychology for teacher education majors. We defined biofunctional under-standing as a spontaneous intellectual capacity. To reach its deep biological levels, sculpted by countless evolutionary millennia, students identified and dwelled in writing on their biggest idea of every week for a semester. They stated the idea in a simple sentence and followed by writing a concise paragraph to contemplate on it. Control sections equated their biggest idea with one most important to learn through the conventional learning-testing cycle of deliberate knowledge internalization or construction. Experimental sections fought the learning-testing-cycle urge and sought by hindsight the biggest idea of the most striking revelation (MSR) delivered to their awareness spontaneously by the biofunctional<>psycho-logyical spiral of their intuition>revelation<>reflection cycle. Results showed that experimental condition outperformed the control in the development of their insightful understanding measured by a Levels of Revelatory Strikingness Scale (LRSS) suggesting that learners change their understanding as a function of their 1 st -person revelations than 2 nd /3 rd -person evidence

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