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Education Sciences

Education Sciences is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal on education, published monthly online by MDPI.
The European Network of Sport Education (ENSE) is affiliated with Education Sciences and its members receive discounts on the article processing charges.
Quartile Ranking JCR - Q1 (Education and Educational Research)

All Articles (7,580)

This study investigated the narratives of teachers of children and youth orchestras regarding their identity as educators. A qualitative phenomenological approach was employed to compare the experiences of teachers from two orchestral programs in Mexico within two different contexts. One group of teachers from each program participated. Each group consisted of nine orchestra teachers who had at least two years of experience in their respective programs. Additionally, a coordinator from each program was interviewed. The study aimed to understand the subjective representations of what it means to be a teacher in interaction with each educational music context. Fieldwork was conducted between August 2021 and August 2022. Empirical data were obtained through autobiographical multimethodology, which allowed for data triangulation across participants’ narratives. Interpretative analysis was conducted in accordance with Kelchtermans’ conceptual framework of teachers’ self-understanding, which encompasses five components: self-image, self-esteem, task perception, job motivation, and future perspective. The findings reveal differences between the two studied contexts, mainly regarding their opportunities for teacher training and professional development. Similarities were also found between the narratives of the teachers from both programs, finding that task perception and job motivation are associated with the socio-emotional support they provide to students. Teacher narratives highlight training needs and working conditions that require attention to enhance the development of similar programs.

12 February 2026

Summary of teachers’ answers to the “Who am I as a teacher?” research technique.

Foreign Language Learning Environment and Communicative Competence Development in Kazakhstan

  • Assel Karimova,
  • Engilika Zhumataeva and
  • Diana Akizhanova
  • + 1 author

This study examines the effectiveness of a purposefully constructed Foreign Language Learning Environment (FLLE) in developing foreign language communicative competence within Kazakhstani higher education. Focusing on four interrelated components—pedagogical resources, physical learning space, motivational strategies, and ICT integration—the study addresses the limited opportunities for authentic English communication characteristic of EFL contexts. A quasi-experimental design involving 69 undergraduate students was employed, with participants divided into experimental and control groups. Statistical analysis using the Mann–Whitney U test revealed significantly higher post-test results in the experimental group, particularly in speaking performance. The findings demonstrate that communicative competence development can be significantly enhanced when (1) instructional materials prioritize authentic, task-based communication, (2) classroom spaces are organized to facilitate face-to-face interaction, (3) motivational support is provided through speaking activities and extracurricular activities, and (4) ICT tools, including conversational AI, are used to extend communicative interaction beyond classroom time.

12 February 2026

Q–Q plot of total communicative competence scores for the CG at the pre-test stage (max. score = 100).

Occupational Safety and Health as Assessable Transversal Competence in Higher Education

  • Sorin Mihai Radu,
  • Daniel Onut Badea and
  • Victoria-Rodica Cioca

Occupational safety and health appears in many higher education programs. Universities rarely state what students must be able to do in situations involving occupational risk. This study analyses how occupational safety and health is defined and assessed in research on curriculum design, competence frameworks, and educational evaluation. The analysis used competence mapping, alignment checks, and cross-level tracing to examine learning outcomes, teaching activities, and assessment formats. The results suggest that safety is treated as knowledge of hazards and rules. Assessment depends on recall and procedural compliance. Judgment, decisions under real conditions, and responsibility allocation are not evaluated. A framework is derived that defines safety through three forms of performance, risk interpretation, action selection, and decision justification, organized across non-equivalent levels of evidence. Learning outcomes, learning activities, and assessment are connected to these performance requirements. Progression can be defined and checked across program stages. Occupational safety and health become a form of transversal academic competence when it is defined through evidence from performed tasks instead of topic coverage or regulatory content.

12 February 2026

Analytical mapping of curriculum components and competence dimensions in occupational safety and health education.

Developing children’s number sense is an important aspect of early mathematical education and has been the focus of multiple studies targeting the kindergarten stage. We investigated the impact of reading mathematical stories on the number sense of kindergarten children. A small-scale intervention study was conducted with 46 kindergarten children aged 5–7 years. The study employed a non-equivalent quasi-experimental design involving comparison and intervention groups. The intervention involved eight mathematical stories presented in interactive reading environments during their class storytime. Therefore, both the books and the interactive reading style were considered core components of the intervention in this study. A pretest, posttest, and delayed test measured the children’s number sense, and the resulting data was analysed with ANCOVA. The results showed the intervention to have a promising effect on their number sense: the experimental group significantly outperformed the control group on both the posttest and delayed test. We consider it important that teachers be encouraged to make the maximum use of kindergarten storytelling sessions to further children’s early mathematical understanding. With acknowledgement of the limited sample size and its implications for the statistical generalisability of the findings, this study should be regarded as an exploratory investigation that can inform and encourage future large-scale research. In addition, the findings offer meaningful pedagogical implications that may support teachers and curriculum designers in early childhood education and provide valuable insights into the potential effects of reading mathematical stories interactively with children in kindergarten in authentic classroom contexts.

11 February 2026

Test Item Results by Group and Test Stage.

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Artificial Intelligence and Blended Learning
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Artificial Intelligence and Blended Learning

Challenges, Opportunities, and Future Directions
Editors: Will W. K. Ma
Empowerment of Science Education for Young Children
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Empowerment of Science Education for Young Children

Current Research and Implications for Learning
Editors: Alice Delserieys Pedregosa, Maria Kampeza

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Educ. Sci. - ISSN 2227-7102