Learning Technologies, Science and Mathematics Education, and Online Learning

In this issue, we focus on learning technologies, science and mathematics education, online learning, and several additional topics. We begin with four articles related to learning technology. The articles include an examination of the ways to integrate immersive-learning tools into practice-orient...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Clayton Smith
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Windsor 2025-07-01
Series:Journal of Teaching and Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jtl.uwindsor.ca/index.php/jtl/article/view/10201
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850070567019872256
author Clayton Smith
author_facet Clayton Smith
author_sort Clayton Smith
collection DOAJ
description In this issue, we focus on learning technologies, science and mathematics education, online learning, and several additional topics. We begin with four articles related to learning technology. The articles include an examination of the ways to integrate immersive-learning tools into practice-oriented learning, a bibliometric analysis of global trends in learning technology within the field of psychology, the intersection of generational characteristics and AI integration in master’s education, and a description of an innovative initiative that created a publicly accessible e-book comprising digital media research assignments. Then, we present two articles on science and mathematics education, including one that discusses the results of an environmental scan of secondary science education programs across Canada regarding the inclusion of the nature, history, and philosophy of science in course descriptions, and another that presents a meta-analysis examining the effect of technology on statistics learning. We then share two articles on online learning, including one that reviews the obstacles students and lecturers faced during the COVID-19 pandemic regarding online learning and teaching at two institutions in Afghanistan and Indonesia, and another that examines the factors affecting the effectiveness of online learning. Four additional articles are presented on chronic absenteeism, teacher professional development, cross-cultural competence within teacher education programs, and the perspectives of early-career teachers on well-being practices. This issue concludes with four book reviews.
format Article
id doaj-art-27dbc682ee1a40d986fdc78cfdfe0164
institution DOAJ
issn 1911-8279
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher University of Windsor
record_format Article
series Journal of Teaching and Learning
spelling doaj-art-27dbc682ee1a40d986fdc78cfdfe01642025-08-20T02:47:29ZengUniversity of WindsorJournal of Teaching and Learning1911-82792025-07-0119310.22329/jtl.v19i3.10201Learning Technologies, Science and Mathematics Education, and Online LearningClayton Smith0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7611-9193University of Windsor In this issue, we focus on learning technologies, science and mathematics education, online learning, and several additional topics. We begin with four articles related to learning technology. The articles include an examination of the ways to integrate immersive-learning tools into practice-oriented learning, a bibliometric analysis of global trends in learning technology within the field of psychology, the intersection of generational characteristics and AI integration in master’s education, and a description of an innovative initiative that created a publicly accessible e-book comprising digital media research assignments. Then, we present two articles on science and mathematics education, including one that discusses the results of an environmental scan of secondary science education programs across Canada regarding the inclusion of the nature, history, and philosophy of science in course descriptions, and another that presents a meta-analysis examining the effect of technology on statistics learning. We then share two articles on online learning, including one that reviews the obstacles students and lecturers faced during the COVID-19 pandemic regarding online learning and teaching at two institutions in Afghanistan and Indonesia, and another that examines the factors affecting the effectiveness of online learning. Four additional articles are presented on chronic absenteeism, teacher professional development, cross-cultural competence within teacher education programs, and the perspectives of early-career teachers on well-being practices. This issue concludes with four book reviews. https://jtl.uwindsor.ca/index.php/jtl/article/view/10201Learning TechnologiesScience EducationMathematics EducationOnline Learning
spellingShingle Clayton Smith
Learning Technologies, Science and Mathematics Education, and Online Learning
Journal of Teaching and Learning
Learning Technologies
Science Education
Mathematics Education
Online Learning
title Learning Technologies, Science and Mathematics Education, and Online Learning
title_full Learning Technologies, Science and Mathematics Education, and Online Learning
title_fullStr Learning Technologies, Science and Mathematics Education, and Online Learning
title_full_unstemmed Learning Technologies, Science and Mathematics Education, and Online Learning
title_short Learning Technologies, Science and Mathematics Education, and Online Learning
title_sort learning technologies science and mathematics education and online learning
topic Learning Technologies
Science Education
Mathematics Education
Online Learning
url https://jtl.uwindsor.ca/index.php/jtl/article/view/10201
work_keys_str_mv AT claytonsmith learningtechnologiesscienceandmathematicseducationandonlinelearning