642 results
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2. “How am I Supposed to Watch a Little Piece of Paper?” Literacy and Learning Under Duress.
- Author
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Hall, Carrie
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COVID-19 pandemic , *LITERACY , *LEARNING , *PREJUDICES , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has revealed the troubling fact that many students struggle to pay attention to literacy learning while they are in situations of extreme duress. This duress did not begin with pandemic, nor will it end with it. Neither is duress distributed at random; those negatively affected by the nation’s prejudices, as a general rule, are under more duress than those who reap the benefits of these systems. To achieve an equitable curriculum, we must teach with the attentional needs of those under duress in mind. This article explores how writing instructors can develop curricula that work with these needs. It looks at research on learning under duress as well as student work that was written in crisis, building upon the strengths of those under duress (who often, for example, write with a sense of urgency and keen awareness of their immediate surroundings) instead of trying to “cure” what we may perceive as weaknesses. A curriculum that speaks to the strengths of students with these experiences will be vital both during the pandemic and beyond it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
3. The Spectrum of Teaching Styles and models-based practice for physical education.
- Author
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Pill, Shane, SueSee, Brendan, and Davies, Michael
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PHYSICAL education , *TEACHERS , *CURRICULUM , *LEARNING , *ATHLETICS - Abstract
This paper provides a rationale for The Spectrum of Teaching Styles (The Spectrum) as a pedagogical model in teaching physical education (PE). Building on prior discussions/debates (SueSee et al., 2021), we will contest the view that the concept of teaching styles is different from that of a pedagogical model. In doing so, we highlight the most central aspects of The Spectrum and explain fundamental characteristics that warrant its representation with existing pedagogical models. The paper demonstrates for teachers how The Spectrum details the 'how', 'when' and 'why' of their pedagogical decisions, in understanding how they may meet educational outcomes for increased curriculum alignment, or successful enactment of models-based practices. The contention we present is The Spectrum is valuable to PE teachers in understanding the context-specific realities of teaching episodes and therefore improving teaching and learning practices in PE by helping teachers align their pedagogy with their desired learning outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Fact-Checking or Not? News Verification Behaviours of Young People in Hong Kong.
- Author
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Chu, Donna and Wong, Frankie Ho Chun
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YOUNG adults , *ANTI-extradition bill protests, Hong Kong, China, 2019 - Abstract
This paper discusses the factors affecting the behaviours for coping with fake news among young people. The data were collected from a survey conducted in late 2019, which sampled 2112 secondary school students from 21 partnering schools. This study aims to understand the opinions and behaviours of teenagers towards disinformation when fake news was prevalent during the anti-extradition bill protests in Hong Kong. It finds that awareness of the problem alone had limited influence in facilitating coping strategies. Civic awareness and interaction with social media were useful predictors of internal and external coping behaviours, respectively. Confidence about one's ability to detect fake news was a crucial factor, yet a concern for the value of truth stood out as the strongest predictor of fake news coping behaviours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. Troubling knowledges and difficult pedagogical moments for students learning.
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Quaid, Sheila and Williams, Helen
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CAREER development , *LEARNING , *WORLDVIEW , *RACIAL differences , *STUDENTS - Abstract
As HE professional educators in Social Sciences, we teach a curriculum which foregrounds inequalities. This includes inequalities related to diverse social groups and differences of race, class, gender, disability and sexuality, underpinned by global approaches. Learners are asked to reconsider the social world through a critical lens with perhaps very different explanations of inequalities and the (re)production of power. This paper illuminates early considerations arising from primary research of those teaching moments described as 'difficult' by our participants. The difficulty created for the teacher/student partnership is often experienced by us through the resistance by students who often cannot imagine a world view beyond their own. They can believe their way of knowing themselves in the world is how the world is for everyone. The critical educator recognises that in any given moment they are required to consciously manage the pedagogical illuminations of structural inequalities and individual agency. These difficult moments produce struggle for the student who is learning and pedagogical challenges for the lecturer. This paper captures a snapshot of some of the experiences of educators teaching diversity across a range of subject areas. We also reflect on the potential for professional development and possibilities for embedding best practice in preparing academic staff to deal with difficult moments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Teaching about curriculum and assessment through inquiry and problem-based learning methodologies: an initial teacher education cross-institutional study.
- Author
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Connolly, Cornelia, Logue, Pauline Anne, and Calderon, Antonio
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TEACHER education , *LEARNING , *ACTION research , *PROFESSIONAL education , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
It is well documented that the integration of inquiry-based learning (IBL) and problem-based learning (PBL) methodologies in initial teacher education (ITE) provides opportunities to enhance pre-service teachers' research skills. However, few studies articulate the processes by which teacher educators implement and sustain these approaches in cross-institutional collaboration. This paper explores the journey of two teacher educators and their pre-service teachers, within a cross-institutional study on curriculum and assessment, problematising aspects of the longitudinal application of IBL and PBL methodologies. Dialogical reflections by the teacher educators and a critical friend, along with student questionnaires, were analysed in this three-year action research study. Findings demonstrate an increase in pre-service teachers' research skills but limited transferability of learning to teaching. The papers' central contribution proposes that as ITE reconfiguration evolves programmes can capitalise upon cross-institutional professional collaborations between teacher educators. Collaborative IBL and PBL learning spaces can be creatively explored to enhance transferability, developing pre-service teachers as researchers, a core element of initial teacher education programme accreditation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. original paper Teaching and learning pathology: a critical review of the English literature.
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Marshall, Robert, Cartwright, Nicola, and Mattick, Karen
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TEACHING , *LEARNING , *MEDICAL sciences , *DOCTORAL programs , *MEDICAL education , *ENGLISH literature - Abstract
There are few publications summarising the main issues concerning pathology teaching and learning within undergraduate medical degrees. This article examines the themes that have emerged from the literature over the last 2 decades. A literature search was performed using PubMed, which identified 86 relevant papers in the English language. The themes discussed in the literature included the timing and duration of pathology courses, the appropriate pathology teacher for medical students, the teaching strategies used for pathology, and the methods used to assess learning. With the gradual increase of integrated medical curricula, it is important for pathology teachers to engage in the change process and help to shape the new-style courses. One of the positive aspects of change is that it can provide an opportunity to rethink current practice. It is hoped that this paper might stimulate discussion about how pathology is taught and learnt, leading to further developments in this area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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8. The need for specialty curricula based on core competencies: A white paper of the conjoint committee on continuing medical education.
- Author
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Jackson, Marcia J., Gallis, Harry A., Gilman, Stuart C., Grossman, Michael, Holzman, Gerald B., Marquis, Damon, and Trusky, Sandra
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CONTINUING medical education , *EDUCATION of physicians , *CORE competencies , *OUTCOME-based education , *LEARNING , *ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. - Abstract
Introduction: At present there is no curriculum to guide physician lifelong learning in a prescribed, deliberate manner. The Conjoint Committee on Continuing Medical Education, a group representing 16 major stakeholder organizations in continuing medical education, recommends that each specialty society and corresponding board reach consensus on the competencies expected of physicians in that specialty. Experts in a specialty will define content-based core competencies in the areas of patient care, medical knowledge, practice-based learning and improvement, interpersonal and communication skills, professionalism, and systems-based practice. These competencies, when cross-referenced with expertise, comprise a framework for specialty curricula and board maintenance of certification programs. The American Academy of Ophthalmology and the American Board of Ophthalmology already have implemented this recommendation. Their work is reported as a model for further development. A competency-based curriculum framework offers a foundation for continuing medical education in diverse practice settings and provider organizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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9. Original paper Exit learning outcomes for the PRHO year: an evidence base for informed decisions.
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Paterson Davenport, L A, Hesketh, E A, Macpherson, S G, and Harden, R M
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LEARNING , *DELPHI method , *MEDICAL education , *MEDICINE , *EDUCATION - Abstract
To evaluate potential learning outcomes for pre-registration house officer (PRHO) training and develop an evidence base for informed decision making. A 2-stage Delphi process was employed to establish the opinions of Scottish stakeholders with regard to learning outcomes for the PRHO year. Doctors involved in the provision of PRHO training, including deans, postgraduate tutors and general practitioners (GPs) with trainees, were invited to participate in the study. Respondents rated a range of outcomes according to which they believed should be included or excluded from the PRHO training year. Learning outcomes identified for PRHOs were grouped under the 12-domain framework of the 3-circle model: ‘What the doctor can do’, ‘How they approach their practice’ and ‘Their professionalism’. Based on the consensus opinions gained in the Delphi study, the ratings were classified into priority groupings. Priority 1 contained 45 of the original 81 learning outcomes, representing each area of the 3-circle model, with emphasis on the domains of clinical skills, patient investigation/management, communication, appropriate attitudes and personal development. Health promotion and disease prevention was the only domain not represented at priority 1. Priority 2 contained 24 outcomes with emphasis on the understanding of clinical skills, patient management and personal development. Priority 3 contained 12 outcomes indicating a lack of emphasis for some outcomes, particularly the role of the doctor and health promotion. Consensus on the learning outcomes for PRHO training has been achieved, providing an evidence base for curriculum planning. The relative priority assigned to these outcomes can facilitate the use of the evidence. This evidence base should be referred to when reviewing any PRHO training programme. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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10. Evaluation of the National Competence Based Catalogue of Learning Objectives (NKLM 2.0) for undergraduate medical education at the Medical School Hannover.
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Mikuteit, Marie, Just, Ingo, and Steffens, Sandra
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MEDICAL schools , *MEDICAL education , *LEARNING , *CATALOGS , *CURRICULUM evaluation ,UNDERGRADUATE education - Abstract
Background: The National Competence-Based Catalogue of Learning Objectives for Undergraduate Medical Education (NKLM) serves as the foundation for curricular development in undergraduate medical education in Germany. A new version of the NKLM was launched in 2021, and medical faculties are now evaluating the learning objectives (LOs). This paper describes the evaluation process used at Hannover Medical School. Methods: The evaluation process was structured in three steps. LOs were rated as "keep", "modify" or "delete". First, the 1133 LOs were compared with the mapping of the Hannover curriculum from 2017. Then, a small team from the Curricular Development Department conducted a pre-evaluation of the 1133 LOs. Finally, a group of clinical experts and students discussed and agreed on the ratings. Results: For 868 LOs, one or more counterparts were found in the mapping, but 265 new LOs were not found and thus, classified as new. In the first rating, 779 LOs were kept, 300 were modified (172 due to wording), 45 were deleted, and there was no rating for 9 LOs. The expert group changed 47 of the pre-evaluation decisions. The final rating was to keep 738 LOs, modify 356, and delete 39 LOs. Conclusion: This method effectively evaluated the LOs from NKLM 2.0 while balancing expert knowledge and an overview of the curriculum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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11. Hierarchical Curriculum Learning for No-Reference Image Quality Assessment.
- Author
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Wang, Juan, Chen, Zewen, Yuan, Chunfeng, Li, Bing, Ma, Wentao, and Hu, Weiming
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CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks , *IMAGE reconstruction , *LEARNING , *SEMANTICS , *CURRICULUM , *PRIOR learning - Abstract
Despite remarkable success has been achieved by convolutional neural networks (CNNs) in no-reference image quality assessment (NR-IQA), there still exist many challenges in improving the performance of IQA for authentically distorted images. An important factor is that the insufficient annotated data limits the training of high-capacity CNNs to accommodate diverse distortions, complicated semantic structures and high-variance quality scores of these images. To address this problem, this paper proposes a hierarchical curriculum learning (HCL) framework for NR-IQA. The main idea of the proposed framework is to leverage the external data to learn the prior knowledge about IQA widely and progressively. Specifically, as a closely-related task with NR-IQA, image restoration is used as the first curriculum to learn the image quality related knowledge (i.e., semantic and distortion information) on massive distorted-reference image pairs. Then multiple lightweight subnetworks are designed to learn human scoring rules on multiple available synthetic IQA datasets independently, and a cross-dataset quality assessment correlation (CQAC) module is proposed to fully explore the similarities and diversities of different scoring rules. Finally, the whole model is fine-tuned on the target authentic IQA dataset to fuse the learned knowledge and adapt to the target data distribution. Experimental results show that our model achieves state-of-the-art performance on multiple standard authentic IQA datasets. Moreover, the generalization of our model is fully validated by the cross-dataset evaluation and the gMAD competition. In addition, extensive analyses prove that the proposed HCL framework is effective in improving the performance of our model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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12. Effective instruction conditions for educational robotics to develop programming ability of K‐12 students: A meta‐analysis.
- Author
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Sun, Lihui and Zhou, Danhua
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TEACHING methods , *META-analysis , *PROBLEM solving , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *CURRICULUM , *COGNITION , *ROBOTICS , *HUMAN services programs , *ABILITY , *PSYCHOLOGY of middle school students , *LEARNING , *MATHEMATICS , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *PSYCHOLOGY of high school students , *SCHOOLS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *PROGRAMMING languages , *PSYCHOLOGY of school children , *LITERATURE reviews , *INTERDISCIPLINARY education , *TECHNOLOGY , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *INTELLIGENCE tests , *CHILDREN , *ADULTS , *ADOLESCENCE ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Background: As one of the mainstream forms of programming education, educational robotics (ER) have been a crucial way to develop K‐12 students' programming ability. Objectives: The purpose of this study is to clarify the content of programming ability, to verify the effectiveness of ER as a teaching method to improve students' programming abilities and the conditions for more effective instructional design. Methods: The method of meta‐analysis was adopted to conduct this study. 4180 K‐12 students from 36 studies with a total of 85 effect sizes were captured. Based on the contents of included literature, an ER programming ability model was put forward, which was composed of essential ability and generative ability. The meta‐analysis of essential ability (N = 22) and generative ability (N = 64) was carried out respectively. Results and conclusion: The results showed that ER activity has a positive effect on the essential ability (Hedges' g = 0.539 CI [0.327, 0.752], p < 0.001) and generative ability (Hedges' g = 0.535 CI [0.426, 0.643], p < 0.001). Additionally, the results of moderator analysis showed that utilizing ER to solve mathematics problems is able to more effectively develop students' essential ability, while the STEM interdisciplinary ER instruction had the largest effect on generative ability. Simultaneously, the individual programming form is conducive to students' essential ability, while the generative ability is significantly affected by the cooperative programming form. No matter for the evaluation of essential ability or generative ability, ER had the greatest effect on kindergarten children' programming ability. Moreover, the intervention duration ranging from 1 to 5 weeks, the samples size less than 50 and the choice of measurement scale can effectively improve students' programming ability. Implications: This research enriched the theoretical basis of programming ability, and provided reference and guidance for K‐12 programming teaching practitioners and researchers in ER teaching design and practise. Lay Description: What is (not) known about the subject matter?: Educational robotics (ER) is one of the mainstream form of K‐12 programming education.K‐12 students develop various abilities by coding ER.Different instruction conditions in ER education may affect the teaching effect. What is the contribution of this paper?: This study sorted out the specific content of programming ability in ER activities, and classified programming ability into essential ability and generative ability.This study respectively validated the effectiveness of ER activity on improving essential ability and generative ability of K‐12 students.This study considered discipline integration, cooperation degree, grade level, intervention duration, sample size and assessment tools as moderator variables, and analyzed their effects sizes on ER developing programming ability. What are the implications for practitioners?: This paper clarified the specific content of programming ability in K‐12 ER education, and enriched the theoretical basis of programming ability.It provided evidence for the effectiveness of K‐12 ER education.This study provided an reference and guidance for ER instructional design for K‐12 programming teachers and researchers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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13. Curriculum learning and evolutionary optimization into deep learning for text classification.
- Author
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Elías-Miranda, Alfredo Arturo, Vallejo-Aldana, Daniel, Sánchez-Vega, Fernando, López-Monroy, A. Pastor, Rosales-Pérez, Alejandro, and Muñiz-Sanchez, Victor
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- *
DEEP learning , *ARTIFICIAL neural networks , *NATURAL language processing , *LEARNING , *LEARNING strategies , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
The exponential growth of social networks has given rise to a wide variety of content. Some social content violates the integrity and dignity of users, therefore, this task has become challenging. The need to deal with short texts, poorly written language, unbalanced classes, and non-thematic aspects. These can lead to overfitting in deep neural network (DNN) models used for classification tasks. Empirical evidence in previous studies indicates that some of these problems can be overcome by improving the optimization process of the DNN weights to avoid overfitting. Moreover, a well-defined learning process in the input examples could improve the order of the patterns learned throughout the optimization process. In this paper, we propose four Curriculum Learning strategies and a new Hybrid Genetic–Gradient Algorithm that proved to improve the performance of DNN models detecting the class of interest even in highly imbalanced datasets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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14. Knowledge and the New Zealand curriculum 'refresh'.
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McPhail, Graham, Ormond, Barbara, and Siteine, Alexis
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CURRICULUM , *CURRICULUM planning , *TEACHING , *LEARNING , *EDUCATION research , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper examines the extent to which there has been a shift towards disciplinary knowledge in recently developed curriculum documents in New Zealand and evaluates whether a new 'Understand, Know, Do' structure for the curriculum has the potential to facilitate coherent design of teaching programmes and 'deep learning'. Using a social realist lens, Bernsteinian theories on knowledge structures and recontextualization, and the principles of a Curriculum Design Coherence Model, the analysis identifies instances of both conceptual coherence and epistemic confusion which raises questions about the underlying principles upon which the curriculum documents are being developed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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15. Putting the action into Politics: embedding employability in the academic curriculum.
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Jones, Alistair and Lishman, Ros
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EMPLOYABILITY , *PRACTICAL politics , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
Employability is one of these concepts that polarises opinion. There are those who see it as an integral part of student education and learning, and those who see it as undermining conventional academic study. In this paper, we argue it is a key part of student learning experiences and use a case study of a particular module—'Politics in Action'—to highlight the potential benefits to students. This should be seen in conjunction with the rest of a degree programme, where employability maybe embedded but not prioritised. Student feedback reinforces the potential benefits of prioritising employability in one part of a degree programme, while acknowledging the beneficial spillover into other areas of study. There is, however, potential resource cost in adopting this type of approach to delivering such a bespoke module. It is far from being a conventional module, but the impact and benefits to student learning and understanding are clear. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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16. Assessing learning related to an intersectional feminist perspective: an instrument of analysis (La evaluación de aprendizajes relacionados con una perspectiva feminista interseccional: un instrumento de análisis).
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Nieto, Mara, Martín, Elena, and Solari, Mariana
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INTERSECTIONALITY , *FEMINISTS , *PERSPECTIVE (Philosophy) , *LEARNING , *FEMINISM - Abstract
There is a broad consensus about the need to educate students in ecosocial skills and intersectional feminist perspectives, which implies designing, developing and assessing interventions that address this learning in different curricular subjects. Initiatives to educate in these issues generally lack tools to assess what students have learned. In this conceptual and methodological paper, we present a theoretically grounded and empirically verified tool based on the theoretical framework of teaching and learning conceptions and designed to analyse and assess what the students have learned related to an intersectional feminist perspective. The tool distinguishes three dimensions of learning: functionality (with domains such as inequality, sexist violence and feminism), complexity and generalization, each of them with different competence levels. This makes it possible to study the impact of feminist educational interventions and can guide teachers in the design of proposals of this type. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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17. Incorporating Stillness During Physical Education Class.
- Author
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Bernstein, Eve
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TRAINING of physical education teachers , *CURRICULUM , *PHYSICAL activity , *LEARNING , *RESPONSIBILITY , *BODY movement , *STUDENT attitudes , *MOTOR ability , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) - Abstract
SHAPE America has outlined proactive ways to approach movement opportunities during physical education class. These possibilities can range from structuring the student learning experience to how teachers implement instruction. While movement provides a foundation for many of the activities offered, what is not discussed is how to use stillness, an absence of movement, to scaffold learning. Using stillness can provide an augmented learning experience, during the limited time offered in the gymnasium, by empowering students as they understand the movement, maintain body control in appropriate situations, and stop the movement with intention. Instructor focus should not only be on teaching movement, but also having awareness of being still in appropriate situations. This paper will explore how stopping movement may enhance learning by: (a) stillness and lesson plans, (b) using stillness for different skill levels, and finally, (c) incorporating stillness in assessment and accountability (d) assessment, stillness, and curriculum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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18. Learning About the Soviet State: The Establishment of Soviet Educational Cartography in the 1920s and 1930s.
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Gavrilova, Sofia
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CARTOGRAPHY , *NINETEENTH century , *CURRICULUM , *LEARNING , *MAPS - Abstract
This paper presents an overview of the development and the establishment of Soviet educational cartography, using the example of school world atlases. Geography, as a compulsory school subject, began to be implemented in the curriculum only after 1934, putting maps right at the centre of the educational process. This triggered the formation of new governmental committees and centralized map production, introducing new approaches to school atlases and new content that was aligned to the newly developed programme. This paper, therefore, examines the changes in the cartographic production and content of school world atlases from the late nineteenth century until 1937 against the context of changes in managing and perceiving the Russian and Soviet spaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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19. Optimization Algorithm for Ideological and Political Curriculum Environment in Colleges Using Data Analysis and Neighborhood Search Operator.
- Author
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Luo, Chaoyuan
- Subjects
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RESEARCH , *CURRICULUM , *EVALUATION research , *LEARNING , *COMPARATIVE studies , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *ALGORITHMS - Abstract
In the context of the new era, the distinctive function of BD (big data) analysis and prediction also introduces a new way of thinking to university IPE (ideological and political education), broadens the domain of university IPE, and enhances the curricular offerings of IPE universities. In order to enhance the intelligence and personalization of the intelligent teaching system, this paper describes in detail the design and implementation processes for each component of the system. It also uses the association mining rule algorithm of data mining. To maintain population diversity, a population initialization method and a neighborhood-based search operator are used, both of which are based on a thorough consideration of the characteristics of complex networks. The neighborhood search strategy enhances the local search capability of the TLBO (Teaching-Learning Based Optimization) algorithm. The optimized TLBO algorithm presented in this paper achieves the highest average modularity value of 0.5238 through testing on real-world data sets. The outcomes demonstrate that the algorithm performs well and is successful in identifying problems in the community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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20. Professionalisation in a play-based curriculum.
- Author
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Pompert, B., van der Meer-Wijnands, S. L., and De Waard, H.
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PLAY , *PROFESSIONALIZATION , *CURRICULUM , *ACTIVITY theory (Sociology) , *PROFESSIONAL employees , *LITERACY , *LEARNING , *SCHOOL children - Abstract
This paper first reviews the roles, concepts and practices within SBBD. The paper continues with two single case studies and a survey on the three main phases used in the Netherlands to aid educational institutes in developing a play-based curriculum. In the first case educational professionals (EPs) recognise that the play-based approach helped them learn about, experience and understand the implications and effects of SBBD while making a transition from a fixed, programmed approach of reading to a play-based approach of literacy. In the research on the second case, EPs mention that their development in practice has improved during the implementation phase. The reasons and the main bottlenecks are mentioned. The final case elaborates on hypothetical learning processes by writing learning stories. This case shows how this is an important tool for EPs and also a way to involve the child's parents and caregivers in the learning community. The paper illustrates how SBBD trainers use play but also enact in a playful way when working with the EPs wanting to implement a play-based curriculum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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21. A curriculum of mathematical practices.
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Grootenboer, Peter, Edwards-Groves, Christine, and Kemmis, Steven
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MATHEMATICS education , *CURRICULUM , *COVID-19 pandemic , *LEARNING , *THEORY of knowledge - Abstract
This paper argues for reconceptualising an educational curriculum that locates its primacy in practices. The argument is framed around the core purpose of education: to help people 'live well in a world worth living in'. Living well and learning about what this means is typically guided by epistemologically based curricula, and conversely, school curricula determine the substance of education. We argue that this understanding of education is too narrow, and as a consequence, it severs the relationship between knowing and practising. We propose that a curriculum of mathematical practices is required for human flourishing, where the focus is on mathematical practices rather than predominantly on knowledge. To demonstrate our position, we consider different kinds of mathematical practices needed during the Covid-19 crisis. We examine how a practice-approach forms the basis for a future-oriented curriculum which might better equip individuals and societies to respond to conditions which disrupt their everyday circumstances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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22. The Impact of Technology on Improving the Learning Process in Physical Education Lessons for Medically-Exempt Pupils.
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Pârvu, Carmen, Ungurean, Bogdan Constantin, Zamfir, Cristina Gabriela, Khamraeva, Zukhro Bahadirovna, and Alistar, Daniel Gabriel
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LEARNING , *PHYSICAL education teachers , *PHYSICAL education , *SECONDARY education , *LEAD time (Supply chain management) , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
Background and Study Aim. The focus of our attention lies on the medically exempt students, who more often than not take part in physical education (P.E.) classes as spectators, without any tasks to complete in accord with the collective work of their classmates or the objective of the lesson. The purpose of the present research is to develop and implement the application Info-Scutit-Sport in the P.E. lesson to the purpose of teaching and assessing medically-exempt students, who are present, but do not take part in the lesson. Material and Methods. The present paper emphasises the usefulness of the Info-ScutitEfort [Info-Exempt-Effort] application aimed at the active and mindful inclusion of 55 students (aged=11.29±1.84), who have a medical exemption (58.2% total and 42.8% partial) in the P.E. lesson. The application, in an improved form, comprises the entire content of the curriculum of physical education in secondary school, transformed into 2080 questions with three answer variants, with 1500 processed images, that may be accessed with the teacher’s accord, on the student’s own phone. The assessment obtained by means of the application after the working session may provide the student with a mark for the information taught before, if he accesses topics from the previous lessons, or a mark for the current assessment in order to test the active and mindful participation in the lesson which is being taught. Conclusions. The study utilized multiple statistical tests to establish a relationship between platform access time and student performance. The results of the tests demonstrated that platform use time has a significant impact on student performance, with longer platform access time leading to higher marks. The study concluded that the proposed model is significant, as it identifies platform access time as a crucial factor in determining student performance. Moreover, the study found that even small increases in platform access time can lead to significant improvements in student performance, with an increase of one unit resulting in a 0.54% increase in marks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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23. 融合多模态自监督图学习的视频推荐模型.
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余文婷, 吴云, and 林建
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RANDOM noise theory , *LEARNING strategies , *NOISE , *CURRICULUM , *LEARNING - Abstract
Unsupervised commonsense question answering is a question answering model that uses the machine to automatically generate question-answering data. There are some problems in the question-answering data generated by current methods, such as noise data and random difficulty of questions. This paper proposed an unsupervised commonsense question-answering model based on curriculum learning. Firstly, it generated a question-answering dataset according to knowledge, then evaluated the diversity and fluency of the question answering dataset, and filtered the data by combining the two evaluation results to remove noise data. Finally, according to the course learning strategy, it used the similarity between the interference item and the correct answer as the difficulty evaluation standard to train the model according to the difficulty level. The accuracy of the test tasks is improved by 1.5%~3.5%, which proves that the model is effective in unsupervised commonsense question-answering tasks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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24. 基于课程学习的无监督常识问答模型.
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李伟, 黄贤英, and 冯雅茹
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RANDOM noise theory , *LEARNING strategies , *NOISE , *CURRICULUM , *LEARNING - Abstract
Unsupervised commonsense question answering is a question answering model that uses the machine to automatically generate question-answering data. There are some problems in the question-answering data generated by current methods, such as noise data and random difficulty of questions. This paper proposed an unsupervised commonsense question-answering model based on curriculum learning. Firstly, it generated a question-answering dataset according to knowledge, then evaluated the diversity and fluency of the question answering dataset, and filtered the data by combining the two evaluation results to remove noise data. Finally, according to the course learning strategy, it used the similarity between the interference item and the correct answer as the difficulty evaluation standard to train the model according to the difficulty level. The accuracy of the test tasks is improved by 1.5%~3.5%, which proves that the model is effective in unsupervised commonsense question-answering tasks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Information and communication technology coordinators: Their intended roles and architectures for learning.
- Author
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Woo, David James and Law, Nancy
- Subjects
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CONCEPTS , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *CONTENT analysis , *CORPORATE culture , *DECISION making , *CURRICULUM , *INFORMATION technology , *INTERVIEWING , *LEARNING , *RESEARCH methodology , *CASE studies , *RESPONSIBILITY , *SCHOOLS , *QUALITATIVE research , *DATA analysis , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *SOCIAL support , *TEACHING methods , *COLLEGE teacher attitudes , *DATA analysis software ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
This paper explores the roles of information and communication technology (ICT) coordinators, using architectures for learning as the theoretical framework to identify (a) the structures and mechanisms utilized to decide the role of a coordinator and (b) those organized for the coordinator to realize a role within a school context of ICT‐enabled, instructional reform. Data on ICT coordinator roles were collected from semi‐structured interviews with ICT coordinators and colleagues, and from school documents. The data were analysed and coded according to the elements of architectures for learning and shown to influence instructional reform. The paper presents four cases of ICT coordinators with roles intended to provide instructional support, technical support, both instructional and technical support, and neither instructional nor technical support. By comparing architectures for learning associated with different intended roles, we find that different conceptualizations of the ICT coordinator are connected to particular decision‐making mechanisms and organizational units found in a school. We also uncover differences in architectures for learning organized for ICT coordinators that are intended to provide instructional support compared with those intended to provide technical support. Using an architectures for learning framework in the design of an ICT coordinator role can be foundational to the successful participation of the role in the instructional reform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. THE IMPERATIVENESS OF CULTURE IN UPPER BASIC EDUCATION SOCIAL STUDIES CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT IN NIGERIAN SCHOOLS.
- Author
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Onyinye, Ohanyere Lilian and Ohanyere, Christopher C.
- Subjects
- *
X-rays , *BASIC education , *HUMANITIES education , *LEARNING , *CURRICULUM planning - Abstract
This paper sought to x-ray the role of culture in Upper Basic Education Social Studies curriculum development in Nigerian schools. The objectives of the research were; to explain the concepts of culture, Social Studies, Curriculum and Curriculum development; the objectives of Social Studies; the components of culture; cultural determinants of social studies curriculum content in Nigerian schools as well as to examine the factors influencing social studies curriculum development which include the learner, the teacher, the society (culture), philosophy of education and psychology of learning. However, the paper revealed that curriculum is the planned skills, attitudes, values and knowledge offered by the learner with an explicit goal of changing his behavior in order to become a functional and active member of the society. It also indicated that a well-coordinated and planned curriculum must be a true reflection of the society's culture where it is expected to function. The paper further revealed that the process of planning and developing a Social Studies curriculum is a strenuous journey for any society and requires a whole-system approach before it can be completed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
27. 'Noticing' in health professions education: Time to pay attention?
- Author
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Clement, Tim, Bolton, Joanne, Griffiths, Leonie, Cracknell, Carolyn, and Molloy, Elizabeth
- Subjects
- *
SENSES , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *TEACHING methods , *MEDICAL personnel , *CURRICULUM , *MATHEMATICS , *STEREOTYPES , *LEARNING , *INTENTION , *SCIENCE , *MEDICAL education , *CONCEPTS - Abstract
Background: Health professions education teaches students to notice particular things, but has given little attention to teaching 'noticing' as a form of personal inquiry. The former is self‐evidently important, as it develops a way of seeing and behaving that is uniquely relevant to each health profession. Despite this emphasis, health professionals may fail to notice 'warning signs' in patients, be unaware of their own biases or develop unrecognised habits that have moved away from accepted standards. It has been suggested that such 'not noticing' is currently endemic. Approach: We situate our exploration of noticing in the mathematics and science education literature and John Mason's treatise on 'The discipline of noticing', differentiating between the observations that people make as they go about their lives ('ordinary' noticing), the specialised noticing that underpins professional expertise (Professional Noticing) and practices that can enhance the capacity to notice and to learn from experience (Intentional Noticing). We make the case for teaching health professions students about these conceptualisations of noticing, being able to notice with all our senses, and learning about the practices of Intentional Noticing in particular, which we suggest will have utility across health professional careers and personal lives. Implications: We acknowledge the difficulties in transferring heterogenous finding from one field to another but suggest that there are gains to be made in applying these noticing concepts to health professions education. We tentatively propose some strategies and activities for developing Professional Noticing and the practices of Intentional Noticing and link them to a new module that we are piloting with health professions students. As well as aiding health professionals sharpen their noticing abilities, reinvigorate their practice and interrogate assumptions that underpin health care, we suggest that ideas about 'noticing' may also help educators and researchers in the health professions reimagine their work. 'Not noticing' can have profound consequences for patients. In this paper, the authors explore how concepts of noticing that have been utilized in teacher education can be applied in health professions education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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28. Lesson learned from the pandemic for learning physics.
- Author
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Al‐Zohbi, Gaydaa, Pilotti, Maura A. E., Barghout, Kamal, Elmoussa, Omar, and Abdelsalam, Hanadi
- Subjects
- *
ONLINE education , *STATISTICS , *NATIONAL competency-based educational tests , *INFERENTIAL statistics , *PHYSICS , *PROBLEM solving , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *ONE-way analysis of variance , *CURRICULUM , *FISHER exact test , *LEARNING , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SEX distribution , *MATHEMATICS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DATA analysis , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *STUDENT attitudes , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Background: Valuable safeguards against fast‐spreading conjectures about learning in times of fear and uncertainty are evidence‐based approaches to the assessment of the impact of sudden and unforeseen disruptions on learning practices. The present research focused on physics learning in such times because conceptual and computational literacy in physics is critical to the development of a scientifically and technologically literate society. Objectives: The present research aimed (a) to offer an objective assessment of whether performance differences in a physics course of the general education curriculum existed between the face‐to‐face medium (familiar mode of instruction) and the online medium (unfamiliar mode of instruction) for both male and female students, and then (b) to develop a response to the evidence collected to ensure a quality education for all parties involved. The research intended to fill two critical gaps in the extant literature: mixed findings concerning students' performance in the face‐to‐face and online mediums as well as scarce coverage of specific domains of knowledge that are critical to STEM learners. Methods: Students' performance was examined as a function of the type of assessment (formative and summative), instructional mode (online and face‐to‐face), and gender. An understudied student population of STEM students of Middle Eastern descent without prior formal exposure to online instruction was targeted. Results and Conclusions: In both formative and summative assessments, male students performed better online than face‐to‐face, whereas the performance of female students was either higher online or equivalent between instructional mediums. The evidence collected suggested that consideration be given to remedies that foster academic success in the face‐to‐face instructional medium, particularly for male students. Takeaways: An evidence‐based approach to learning dismantled emotion‐driven expectations regarding the impact of the online medium on physics learning, and encouraged new perspectives about instruction. Lay Description: What is already known?: Ongoing debates on the impact of the pandemic on students' learning shape decisions regarding future reliance on the online medium for instruction. What this paper adds: The extant literature is mixed concerning performance in the face‐to‐face and online mediums, including particular domains of knowledge critical to STEM learning.This study focused on physics learning in an understudied population of STEM students who were unaccustomed to online instruction.Performance was higher online than face‐to‐face, but gender differences emerged. Implications for practice: Lessons learned focused on the flexibility of online learning and on the need to develop materials to enhance learning in males enrolled in face‐to‐face or hybrid/blended classes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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29. Development of a pediatric anesthesia fellowship curriculum in Australasia by the Society for Pediatric Anesthesia of New Zealand and Australia (SPANZA) education sub committee.
- Author
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Kaur, Balvindar and Taylor, Elsa Medland
- Subjects
- *
PEDIATRIC anesthesia , *CURRICULUM , *CHILD care , *MEDICAL education - Abstract
There has been a recognized need to develop a curriculum for pediatric anesthesia training in Australia and New Zealand. The drivers are safe care for children, clear standards of care for children within and outside of quaternary centres, and clarity of the expertise and skill of the practitioner. Entrustable professional activities (EPAs) made up of multiple competencies and sub‐competencies are useful for the description and assessment of contemporary medical education. We have developed an EPA‐based curriculum that is not prescriptive in the number or range of EPAs that should be completed. Individuals can shape their learning and training to the EPAs that will support their ability to provide high‐quality safe care in the wide variety of institutions that they may be employed in after their pediatric fellowship. Institutions can use the curriculum to describe the skill set required for their institution and location. This paper will explain the process behind the development of the Society for Pediatric Anesthesia in New Zealand and Australia (SPANZA) guidelines of a curriculum for pediatric anesthesia fellowship based on EPAs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. 'It's for others to judge': what influences students' construction of the ideal student?
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Chiu, Yuan-Li Tiffany, Wong, Billy, and Charalambous, Magda
- Subjects
- *
COLLEGE students , *LEARNING , *TEACHING , *CURRICULUM , *TEENAGERS , *YOUNG adults , *HIGHER education - Abstract
Recognising the changing landscape and financial costs, changes in the higher education sector continue to challenge the purpose and operations of universities, notably the shift towards student consumerism. Given this, what it means to be a student in contemporary higher education can evolve and would arguably have implications about the expectations of university students and staff for learning and teaching practice. To promote greater transparency of expectations, this paper develops the concept of the ideal student further with closer look into the spheres of influence that shape university students' construction of the ideal student. We draw on 23 focus groups with 105 university students to explore the key factors that contribute to how the ideal student is developed and recognised. Our findings indicate that students' construction of the ideal student is closely shaped by and rooted in their prior educational experiences, interaction with their peers and the curriculum, and perceptions of lecturers, institution and employer expectations. All these influences lead to a fluid and complex negotiation process as students navigate the meanings of being a university student. We conclude with practical implications for learning, teaching and curriculum development in higher education. The paper therefore provides a platform for key stakeholders to discuss different influencing factors as we support student transition and progression and manage their expectations of higher education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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31. Knowledge About Family and School Contribution in Academic Achievement: The Context of Schooling and Social Representations in India.
- Author
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Sinha, Chetan
- Subjects
- *
COLLECTIVE representation , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SCHOOL failure , *SOCIAL context , *FAMILY roles , *SWARM intelligence - Abstract
The present paper critically examined the available research on role of family and school contribution in academic achievement and explored their social representations. People adaptation with the prevalent notions and thinking beyond the boundary of common sense is required to explain multidimensional picture of any attribute. Previous research applied social representation theory to understand educability, intelligence, academic achievement and failure, and teachership. This article showed a polysemic understanding of family and school contribution where roles and identity matters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Simple Metacognitive Prompts for Enhancing Student Learning: An Interdisciplinary Study.
- Author
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Domokos, Sophia and Huey, Melissa
- Subjects
- *
INTERDISCIPLINARY education , *COLLEGE students , *CURRICULUM , *STUDENTS , *LEARNING - Abstract
Short metacognitive prompts—like "minute papers"—are simple enough to be widely adopted by instructors. But do they work? We investigate how they affect college students' performance in quantitative (Physics) and qualitative (Psychology) courses, comparing classes which received metacognitive prompts to those that did not. We find significant improvement in performance in Psychology and borderline significant improvement in Physics. While the interventions did not raise students' confidence, interviews with students revealed that the prompts helped them process course material and study for exams. This is one of few studies to directly compare the effectiveness of metacognitive prompts across disciplines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Return to Learn ECHO: Telementoring for School Personnel to Help Children Return to School and Learning After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury.
- Author
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McAvoy, Karen, Halstead, Mark, Radecki, Linda, Shah, Amy, Emanuel, Anjie, Domain, Stephanie, Daugherty, Jill, and Waltzman, Dana
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION of psychologists , *TEACHER education , *PILOT projects , *HEALTH policy , *AFFINITY groups , *HIGH schools , *STATISTICS , *NONPARAMETRIC statistics , *PROFESSIONS , *SOCIAL support , *MIDDLE schools , *FOCUS groups , *SCHOOL health services , *RESEARCH methodology , *RE-entry students , *COMMUNITY health services , *UNLICENSED medical personnel , *SATISFACTION , *CURRICULUM , *LEARNING , *HUMAN services programs , *SELF-efficacy , *HEALTH care teams , *COMMUNICATION , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *RESEARCH funding , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *BRAIN injuries , *SCHOOL administration , *ELEMENTARY schools , *DATA analysis software , *DATA analysis , *TELEMEDICINE , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Return to learn (RTL) after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) presents unique challenges for school professionals. A multidisciplinary team approach is necessary yet training school professionals is logistically difficult. This paper describes an innovative pilot RTL program and its evaluation. METHODS: Utilizing the telehealth/telementoring program Project ECHO® (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes), this study utilized a multidisciplinary team of subject matter experts to deliver five 1‐hour sessions across 5 cohorts of school‐based professionals (total of 133 participants). The evaluation used a mixed‐methods approach of post‐session and post‐program participant surveys and post‐program participant focus groups. RESULTS: Participants who completed a post‐program survey reported statistically significant improvements in essential aspects of RTL knowledge and self‐efficacy. This included improvements in how to manage a student with an mTBI (44.8% to 86.9%), benefits of early return to school for students following mTBI (31.8% to 86.9%), and the importance of written RTL policies/procedures (55.1% to 97.1%). CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that RTL training via a telementoring approach may be a positive and effective way to train school‐based professionals and improve knowledge and self‐efficacy, especially when attending face‐to‐face trainings are difficult. This model has the potential to produce programmatic and systematic improvements for RTL education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Student-led sustainability transformations: employing realist evaluation to open the black box of learning in a Challenge Lab curriculum.
- Author
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Holmén, Johan, Adawi, Tom, and Holmberg, John
- Subjects
- *
SUSTAINABILITY , *LEARNING , *SOCIAL context , *THEATER students , *CURRICULUM , *SOCIAL accounting - Abstract
Purpose: While sustainability-oriented education is increasingly placing importance on engaging students in inter- and transdisciplinary learning processes with societal actors and authentic challenges in the centre, little research attends to how and what students learn in such educational initiatives. This paper aims to address this by opening the "black box" of learning in a Challenge Lab curriculum with transformational sustainability ambitions. Design/methodology/approach: Realist evaluation was used as an analytical frame that takes social context into account to unpack learning mechanisms and associated learning outcomes. A socio-cultural perspective on learning was adopted, and ethnographic methods, including interviews and observations, were used. Findings: Three context-mechanism-outcome (CMO) configurations were identified, capturing what students placed value and emphasis on when developing capabilities for leading sustainability transformations: engaging with complex "in-between" sustainability challenges in society with stakeholders across sectors and perspectives; navigating purposeful and transformative change via backcasting; and "whole-person" learning from the inside-out as an identity-shaping process, guided by personal values. Practical implications: The findings of this paper can inform the design, development, evaluation and comparison of similar educational initiatives across institutions, while leaving room for contextual negotiation and adjustment. Originality/value: This paper delineates and discusses important learning mechanisms and outcomes when students act as co-creators of knowledge in a sustainability-oriented educational initiative, working with authentic challenges together with societal actors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. FE White Paper - ideas into action.
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATIONAL leadership , *CURRICULUM , *COVID-19 pandemic , *LEARNING , *EDUCATION - Abstract
The article looks at "FE White Paper 2021: Ideas into Action" which contains the insights, expertise and experiences of a range of practitioners from leadership teams through to curriculum specialists and policy experts. It mentions employer-college relationship, which sits at the heart of the FE White Paper, needs to be viewed as a two-way street in which colleges. It also mentions COVID-19 pandemic has led to a transformation in the way that learning is delivered across the country.
- Published
- 2021
36. Crossing curricular boundaries for powerful knowledge.
- Author
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Niemelä, Mikko A.
- Subjects
- *
THEORY of knowledge , *CURRICULUM , *CURRICULUM planning , *TEACHING , *LEARNING - Abstract
This paper makes a theoretical contribution to the discussion of powerful knowledge in education. The major claim is that curriculum integration can structure knowledge for a coherent curriculum and thus, support the idea of powerful knowledge. The mainstream understanding of curriculum integration promotes it as a pedagogical arrangement and views school subjects as being guilty of fragmenting students' experience. Leaning on empirical evidence, this paper argues that the question of integration cannot be left to teachers and students alone; rather, it is crucial to design a coherent written curriculum that supports the teaching‐studying‐learning process with an appropriately differentiated and integrated structure for school subjects. Alternatives for subject design and knowledge‐based curriculum integration with the potential for developing powerful knowledge are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Exploring pupils' and physical education teachers' views on the contribution of physical education to Health and Wellbeing in the affective domain.
- Author
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Teraoka, Eishin and Kirk, David
- Subjects
- *
PHYSICAL education , *MENTAL health , *WELL-being , *TEACHING , *LEARNING , *YOUTH , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
Physical education is expected to play a significant role in developing pupils' health. This is the case in Scotland, where physical education is located in a prioritised cross-curricular area of Health and Wellbeing (HWB). However, there is a lack of evidence on the extent to which physical education contributes to pupils' HWB under the new curriculum. Given that there is a growing interest in exploring how teachers enact pedagogies as a response to mental health issues, this study seeks to examine the practices of teachers who identify as being committed to pedagogies of affect within a sample of Scottish secondary schools. The purpose of this study was to report how pupils and teachers talk about the contribution of physical education to pupils' HWB, with a particular focus on the affective domain. The study on which this paper is based used qualitative methods within a grounded theory approach. Six physical education teachers who were from four different secondary schools participated in semi-structured interviews. Pupils were selected by the teachers and participated in focus group interviews. We outlined two main themes: (1) teachers' and pupils' practices in building confidence in pupils, which was exclusive to the female pupils and teachers; (2) teachers' concerns with building relationships with pupils. A notable finding was that teachers who had an explicit and direct intention for affective learning among their pupils sought to build a trusting relationship with pupils as a basic concern to implement teaching for affective learning, rather than the need for an emphasis on lesson contents and specific teaching approaches. This study could be a valuable resource for teacher professional learning as the findings referred to teachers' regular practices and their knowledge of the curriculum, especially for those who recognise a need to enact pedagogies of affect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. EDUCAÇÃO SEXUAL EM TEMPOS PANDÊMICOS: analisando narrativas docentes e experiências curriculares na docência em Ciências e Biologia.
- Author
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Gonçalves, Erica and Cerqueira do Nascimento Borba, Rodrigo
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC school teachers , *SCIENCE teachers , *BIOLOGY teachers , *SEX education , *LEARNING - Abstract
The paper discusses aboutteaching experiences and practices aimed at sex education produced by science and biology teachers in public schools in Minas Gerais during the pandemic period. The qualitative research had its empirical produced from interviews with teachers aiming to challenge and to variegate curricular prescriptions contained in official documents and legislation. It is debated that curricular impositions restricted teaching autonomy and raised challenges to the approach to the theme. The conservative scenario that puts pressure on teaching and generates constraints to pedagogical work on the human body, health, genders and/or sexualities that escapes a biomedical, hygienist and behaviorist bias is discussed. Furthermore, the opportunities created with information and communication technologies collided with the digital exclusion and socio-economic vulnerability of students. It is concluded that despite the teachers resisting and insisting on the construction of didactic strategies aimed at promoting sex education, structural and conjunctural obstacles were obstacles to plural and inclusive teaching and learning processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. An international study on the implementation of programmatic assessment: Understanding challenges and exploring solutions.
- Author
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Torre, Dario, Schuwirth, Lambert, Van der Vleuten, Cees, and Heeneman, Sylvia
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL support , *PROFESSIONS , *LEADERSHIP , *COLLEGE teachers , *MEDICAL personnel , *INTERVIEWING , *CURRICULUM , *EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements , *HUMAN services programs , *LEARNING , *DECISION making , *THEMATIC analysis , *OCCUPATIONAL adaptation , *MEDICAL education , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Programmatic assessment is an approach to assessment aimed at optimizing the learning and decision function of assessment. It involves a set of key principles and ground rules that are important for its design and implementation. However, despite its intuitive appeal, its implementation remains a challenge. The purpose of this paper is to gain a better understanding of the factors that affect the implementation process of programmatic assessment and how specific implementation challenges are managed across different programs. An explanatory multiple case (collective) approach was used for this study. We identified 6 medical programs that had implemented programmatic assessment with variation regarding health profession disciplines, level of education and geographic location. We conducted interviews with a key faculty member from each of the programs and analyzed the data using inductive thematic analysis. We identified two major factors in managing the challenges and complexity of the implementation process: knowledge brokers and a strategic opportunistic approach. Knowledge brokers were the people who drove and designed the implementation process acting by translating evidence into practice allowing for real-time management of the complex processes of implementation. These knowledge brokers used a 'strategic opportunistic' or agile approach to recognize new opportunities, secure leadership support, adapt to the context and take advantage of the unexpected. Engaging in an overall curriculum reform process was a critical factor for a successful implementation of programmatic assessment. The study contributes to the understanding of the intricacies of implementation processes of programmatic assessment across different institutions. Managing opportunities, adaptive planning, awareness of context, were all critical aspects of thinking strategically and opportunistically in the implementation of programmatic assessment. Future research is needed to provide a more in-depth understanding of values and beliefs that underpin the assessment culture of an organization, and how such values may affect implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Developing an Anti-Racist Foundations Course in MCH for MPH Students.
- Author
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Marshall, Cassondra, Bakal, Michael, Deardorff, Julianna, Pies, Cheri, and Lu, Michael C.
- Subjects
- *
CONFIDENCE , *PROFESSIONAL employee training , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *HEALTH occupations students , *CURRICULUM , *PUBLIC health , *SOCIAL justice , *PROBLEM-based learning , *INSTITUTIONAL racism , *LEARNING , *EXPERIENCE , *MASTERS programs (Higher education) , *CHILD health services , *STUDENTS , *HEALTH equity , *MEDICAL education , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Introduction: Over the past decade, foundational courses in MCH have been revised and revamped to integrate the life course perspective and social determinants of health in ways that bring these essential issues to the core of the learning experience. Yet the racial reckoning of 2020 and the racially disparate health impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic underscore that a deeper, more focused approach to anti-racist pedagogy is now imperative for MCH educators and others responsible for developing the MCH workforce. Methods: In this paper, we discuss our experience of building a 'community of practice' of anti-racist MCH trainees through our course, 'Foundations of Maternal and Child Health Policy, Practice, and Science.' Results: We identify four principles which guided our course: (1) building on students' experience, knowledge, identities and social justice commitments; (2) creating a common purpose and shared vocabulary related to racism; (3) organizing classroom activities to reflect real-world problems and professional practices related to addressing structural racism as a root cause of health inequities; and (4) building students' skills and confidence to recognize and address structural racism as MCH professionals. Discussion: We hope that this description of our principles, along with examples of how they were put into practice, will be useful to MCH educators who seek to build anti-racist frameworks to guide MCH workforce development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. An inclusive multifaceted approach for the development of electronic work-integrated learning (eWIL) curriculum.
- Author
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Gamage, Ancy
- Subjects
- *
INCLUSIVE education , *CURRICULUM planning , *ONLINE education , *DISTANCE education , *CURRICULUM , *LEARNING , *HIGHER education , *EDUCATIONAL technology - Abstract
The need for inclusive and equitable teaching and learning approaches is widely accepted in higher education literature. Surprisingly, the notion of inclusion appears to be neglected within the context of eWIL. This paper uses insights from multi-disciplinary theories to propose a framework for the development of an eWIL framework. Its key features include an inclusive, intentional approach that integrates content (the 'what') and process (the 'how') aspects of delivery using technology. The primary considerations of the framework are anticipating and responding to the diverse backgrounds, abilities, aspirations, and needs of students, and primary partners (academics and employers). The desired outcomes of the curriculum include 'hard' outcomes (like student employability) and 'soft' outcomes (like involvement and inclusion). The framework highlights particular student-related obstacles for electronically mediated experiences and learning, and issues with employers are also likely as they evolve new ways to work in a digitalized environment. Anticipating some tensions in translating the intended eWIL curriculum into practice, a 'transition prism' is suggested. Overall, the eWIL framework offers a multifaceted approach for active discussion, implementation and evaluation of eWIL programs. This is a timely consideration given dramatic shifts to remote work and online instruction observed during COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. رود نوكم عامتسلاا ثدحتلاو يف ةيمنت ةيافكلا ةيلصاوتلا دنع ملعتم ةسردملا ةيئادتبلاا ةيبرغملا - ىوتسملا سماخلا اجذومن -
- Author
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ةيمس يحننف
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNICATIVE competence , *CURRICULUM evaluation , *VERBAL ability , *CURRICULUM planning , *LISTENING , *LEARNING - Abstract
The child learns his language in his early years in an undivided whole, through listening and daily use of it in real communicative situations. The thing that made the Moroccan school assign the component of listening and speaking an important temporal space from the time of teaching and learning, as it allocated organizational and didactic measures that distinguish it from the rest of the components of the curriculum as It is an essential part of language learning, and as an end in itself. Accordingly, this research paper came to find out the most important developments of the Moroccan curriculum at the primary stage with regard to the listening and speaking component and the latter's ability to master the verbal act of this group of learners, defining the methodological framework adopted in teaching this component and the stages of conducting its lessons and activities. This research will also present an artificial evaluation situation that aims to improve the oral communicative competence of the fifth-level learners, as they are the category that accompanied the curriculum updating project, whose work was launched in 2017, and which was one of the most important workshops of the Ministry's adoption of an early education approach to reading. Staff of the deductive approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
43. Networked learning to educate future energy transition professionals: results from a case study.
- Author
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Huijben, Josephina C. C. M., Van den Beemt, Antoine, Wieczorek, Anna J., and Van Marion, Mieke H.
- Subjects
- *
LEARNING , *INTERDISCIPLINARY education , *CURRICULUM , *RENEWABLE energy transition (Government policy) , *SUSTAINABILITY , *ENGINEERING students , *HIGHER education - Abstract
Society is in strong need to change the way in which energy is produced and consumed. To cope with this complex challenge, integration of knowledge from different disciplines is needed. This paper shows how an interdisciplinary educational approach called networked learning combined with sustainability transition theories can help groups of engineering students to address pressing societal challenges such as the energy transition. A series of 8 workshops was held with an interdisciplinary engineering student team of a University of Technology. Networked learning within the student team showed an ad-hoc character, mainly caused by shifting student constellations during workshops. Workshops focusing on short-term goals resulted in more concrete output. The team showed a high level of equality amongst members and actively reflected on organisational aspects of their learning process. Sustainability transitions concepts and theories that integrate multiple disciplinary perspectives further supported the learning process and helped to guide strategic decision making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Theological-relational pedagogy: Winnicott, Rahner, and the development of a theological perspective on relational pedagogy.
- Author
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Nuttall, Joce and Gerard McEvoy, James
- Subjects
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TEACHING , *DIALECTICAL theology , *LEARNING , *CHILD psychotherapy , *CHURCH schools , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
This paper attempts to move beyond a critique of historically dominant ways of thinking about teaching and learning relationships to offer a conceptualization of relational pedagogy from a theological perspective. It offers commentary on the potential of relational pedagogy for Christian faith-based schools informed by the scholarship of German theologian Karl Rahner and the dialectical child psychotherapy of D. W. (Donald) Winnicott. An argument for a theological-relational pedagogy is outlined, followed by discussion of three features linking Rahner, Winnicott, and relational pedagogy: realizing our human-ness through relationships with others; the role of a dialectical unity between self and other; and the mystery of human subjectivity. The paper concludes by signalling some of the implications for faith-based curriculum and pedagogy arising from our argument, centred on the emergence of a new theology of childhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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45. Development and implementation of an online platform for curriculum mapping in medical education.
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Majerník, Jaroslav, Kacmarikova, Andrea, Komenda, Martin, Kononowicz, Andrzej A., Kocurek, Anna, Stalmach-Przygoda, Agata, Balcerzak, Łukasz, Hege, Inga, and Ciureanu, Adrian
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ONLINE education , *MEDICAL education , *NATURAL language processing , *MEDICAL informatics , *CURRICULUM planning , *VIRTUAL communities , *EDUCATIONAL quality , *PROBLEM-based learning - Abstract
Nowadays universities face ever-increasing demands on quality of education, which is crucial from perspective of future graduates. In face of the need of constant quality improvements of medical curricula, it is important to seek strategies for their efficient management. The general trend is to develop electronic support tools to streamline the curricular design, analysis and harmonization. Based on the requirements we have identified by the needs analysis among curriculum designers, teachers and managers at five universities involved in the Building Curriculum Infrastructure in Medical Education (BCIME) project, and evidence published in literature on curriculum development, we have developed methodological guidelines on curriculum innovations and a software-based tools that help manage, map and analyse curricula in the medical and healthcare study fields. In this paper, we share our experiences with building and implementation of EDUportfolio, an online platform developed within our consortium and intended to facilitate harmonisation and optimisation of medical outcome-based curricula. Its functionalities and outputs were verified by pilot mapping of Anatomy curricula as taught at partner universities in five European countries. The visualisation and the analysis of described curriculum data using natural language processing techniques revealed both the hidden relations between curriculum building blocks and a set of overlaps and gaps in curricula. In addition, we demonstrate both the usability of the platform in the context of the involved academic environments and the capability to map and compare curricula across different institutions and different countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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46. Making:Archives – a case study of creative collaboration.
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Jane, Sarah C. and Maughan, Hannah
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NATIONAL archives , *TEXTILES education , *HIGHER education , *CURRICULUM , *ARCHIVES - Abstract
This paper reports on an undergraduate project, Making:Archives — Narrative Artefact, as an exemplar of collaborative good practice, expanding on its case study in the National Archives and History UK's Guide to Collaboration for Archive and Higher Education. The paper examines the expected and unexpected impacts of the Making:Archives collaborative project for the stakeholders involved: the Institution, the Archive Service, its depositors, and in particular the students. Students have both struggled and excelled in the project, with the most engaged developing a range of creative and transferrable skills that have been repurposed in the creation of work beyond Making:Archives. The paper also reflects on the challenges faced, and numerous opportunities presented, during the co-creation, delivery and evaluation of the project, drawing extensive data gathered from student participants. The project is presented in the context of relevant literature from both the textile education, industry, and archive sectors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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47. Models of teaching and learning identified in Whole Class Ensemble Tuition.
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Fautley, Martin, Kinsella, Victoria, and Whittaker, Adam
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TEACHING models , *LEARNING , *MUSIC education , *SCHOOLS - Abstract
The Whole Class Ensemble Tuition (WCET) is a model of teaching and learning music which takes place in many English primary schools. It is a relative newcomer to music pedagogy in the primary school. In the groundbreaking study reported in this paper, two new models of teaching and learning music are proposed. These are (a) Music education starts with the instrument and (b) Music education takes place via the instrument. Conceptualised descriptions of classroom music pedagogies are not commonplace, and so this paper makes a significant contribution to the music education research literature by delineating, describing and labelling two of these with reference to the WCET programme. These distinctions are of international significance and are useful to describe differences between programmes, which constitutes a major contribution to music curricula discussions. The paper concludes that clarity on the purposes of teaching and learning is fundamental to effective musical pedagogy and that this is a matter that education systems worldwide should be considering. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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48. Understanding when students are active‐in‐thinking through modeling‐in‐context.
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Swiecki, Zachari, Ruis, Andrew R., Gautam, Dipesh, Rus, Vasile, and Williamson Shaffer, David
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CRITICAL thinking , *LEARNING , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *CURRICULUM , *EDUCATION policy , *TEACHER development - Abstract
Learning‐in‐action depends on interactions with learning content, peers and real world problems. However, effective learning‐in‐action also depends on the extent to which students are active‐in‐thinking, making meaning of their learning experience. A critical component of any technology to support active thinking is the ability to ascertain whether (or to what extent) students have succeeded in internalizing the disciplinary strategies, norms of thinking, discourse practices and habits of mind that characterize deep understanding in a domain. This presents what we call a dilemma of modeling‐in‐context: teachers routinely analyze this kind of thinking for small numbers of students in activities they create or customize for the needs of their students; however, doing so at scale and in real‐time requires some automated processes for modeling student work. Current techniques for developing models that reflect specific pedagogical activities and learning objectives that a teacher might create require either more expertise or more time than teachers have. In this paper, we examine a theoretical approach to addressing the problem of modeling active thinking in its pedagogical context that uses teacher‐created rubrics to generate models of student work. The results of this examination show how appropriately constructed learning technologies can enable teachers to develop custom automated rubrics for modeling active thinking and meaning‐making from the records of students' dialogic work. Practitioner NotesWhat is already known about this topic Many immersive educational technologies, such as digital games and simulations, enable students to take consequential action in a realistic context and to interact with peers, mentors and pedagogical agents. Such technologies help students to be active‐in‐thinking: engaging deeply with, reflecting on and otherwise making meaning of their learning experience.There are now many immersive educational technologies with integrated authoring tools that enable teachers to customize the learning experience with relative ease, reducing barriers to adoption and improving student learning.Educational technologies that support learning‐in‐action typically contain student models that operate in real‐time to control the behavior of pedagogical agents, deliver just‐in‐time interventions, select an appropriate content or otherwise measure and promote active thinking, but these student models may not work appropriately if teachers customize the learning experience.Much as there are authoring tools that allow teachers to customize the curriculum of a given learning technology, there is a need for authoring tools that allow teachers to customize the associated student models as well.What this paper adds This paper presents a novel, rubric‐based approach to develop automated student models for new activities that teachers develop in digital learning environments that promote active thinking.Our approach combines machine learning techniques with teacher expertise, allowing teachers to participate in the design of automated student models of active thinking that with further development could be scaled by leveraging their skills in rubric development.Our results show that a rubric‐based approach can outperform a machine learning approach in this context. More importantly, in some cases, the rubric‐based approach can produce reliable automated models based on the information that a teacher can easily provide.Implications for practice and/or policy If integrated into authoring tools, the rubric‐based approach could allow teachers to participate in the design of automated models for educational technologies customized to their instructional needs.Through this design process, teachers could develop a better understanding of how the automated modeling system works, which in turn could increase the adoption of educational technologies that promote active thinking.Because the rubric‐based approach enables teachers to identify key connections among concepts relevant to the pedagogical context, rather than general concepts or linguistic features, it is more likely to facilitate targeted feedback to help promote the development of active thinking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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49. Scaffolding ecosystems science practice by blending immersive environments and computational modeling.
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Dickes, Amanda C., Kamarainen, Amy, Metcalf, Shari J., Gün‐Yildiz, Semiha, Brennan, Karen, Grotzer, Tina, and Dede, Chris
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SCIENCE education , *COMPUTER simulation , *TECHNOLOGY research , *LEARNING , *CLASSROOM activities , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
Research in the field of technology‐enhanced learning has argued for a broader scope of technology‐supported learning environments to include the design of activity systems which position students as active thinkers by reorganizing learning with technology around the practices of scholarly communities. In the context of elementary ecosystems science, this entails structuring classroom activity around the construction and evaluation of epistemic artifacts, such as scientific models and representations, that profitably direct learners' conceptual efforts toward productive forms of inquiry and the construction of new scientific knowledge. In this demonstration‐of‐concept paper, we present EcoMOD, an elementary ecosystems science curriculum that blends an immersive virtual environment with an agent‐based computational modeling tool to support growth in ecological knowledge and scientific practice in learners aged 8 to 11 years old. Specifically, we explore how the design of the EcoMOD activity system supported students' active thinking in scientific inquiry through transformative modeling practices. Analysis of student activity and discourse indicates that engagement in transformative activities supported students in developing more nuanced causal explanations of the ecosystem by the end of the curriculum. Practitioner NotesWhat is already known about this topic Authentic virtual simulations can transform classroom learning experiences, particularly when organized around the production of epistemic artifacts.Computational modeling and programming tools are successful in supporting ecosystems knowledge construction and complex causal reasoning in learners.Engagement in transformative modeling practices are integral to the construction of new scientific knowledge.What this paper adds Suggests a design framework for meaningfully blending immersive virtual environments with computational modeling and programming tools to support active thinking in scientific inquiry.Demonstrates multi‐modal techniques for formative and summative assessment.Indicates that children in this age range are able, with appropriate support, to acquire knowledge and skills well above what is described in curriculum standards.Implications for practice and/or policy Offers practitioners an effective approach for productively integrating computational modeling, science content and inquiry‐based practices within elementary science instruction.Demonstrates to policymakers the practicality, affordability and value of immersive learning technologies and agent‐based modeling in classroom settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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50. Conciencia histórica e interés en la historia de los estudiantes colombianos y españoles de educación secundaria.
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Ibagón Martín, Nilson Javier and Miralles Martínez, Pedro
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HISTORY education , *SECONDARY school students , *SPANISH-speaking students , *COMPULSORY education , *SECONDARY school curriculum , *EFFECTIVE teaching - Abstract
This paper presents the results of a comparative study that seeks to identify conceptions of the importance of four types of formal content in history teaching (periods of history, cross-cutting themes in history, history of places, and national historical processes) among a group of Colombian (M = 764) and Spanish (N = 648) students in the last year of compulsory education in the cities of Bogotá and Murcia, respectively. A descriptive approach was followed based on a closed-ended questionnaire relating to historical consciousness, with item responses measured on a Likert scale. The results support the idea that the interest shown by students in the formal content proposed is an indicator that calls for a critical review of the structure and organization of history curricula in the two contexts studied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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