40 results
Search Results
2. Co-development of client involvement in health and social care services: examining modes of interaction
- Author
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Kurki, Anna-Leena, Weiste, Elina, Toiviainen, Hanna, Käpykangas, Sari, and Ylisassi, Hilkka
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- 2024
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3. 活动理论视角下高校数字劳动教育的优化路径 研究.
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李振华, 李智军, and 廖 勇
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DIGITAL transformation ,HIGH technology industries personnel ,ECOLOGY education ,RESEARCH personnel ,EDUCATIONAL planning - Abstract
Copyright of Modern Educational Technology is the property of Editorial Board of Modern Educational Technology, Tsinghua University and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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4. Opening the black box of school-wide student wellbeing programmes: a critical narrative review informed by activity theory.
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Tan, Emmanuel, Frambach, Janneke, Driessen, Erik, and Cleland, Jennifer
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MEDICAL schools ,MEDICAL education ,DATA extraction ,ACTIVITY theory (Sociology) ,WELL-being - Abstract
Purpose: Medical schools have a duty of care to support student wellbeing but there is little guidance on how to translate this mandate into practice. Often schools focus on implementing and reporting individual-level interventions which typically only address one aspect of wellbeing. Conversely, less attention has been paid to holistic school-wide approaches towards student wellbeing that address multiple wellbeing dimensions. Thus, this review sought to improve our understanding of how support is mediated within such school-wide wellbeing programmes. Method: This critical narrative review was conducted in two stages. First, the authors searched several key databases for papers published up to 25th May 2021, using a systematic search strategy and TREND checklist to guide our data extraction process. We later expanded our search to include literature published from the original date to 20th May 2023. Second, the identified articles were critically analysed using activity theory as a theoretical lens to aid explanation. Results: We found school-wide wellbeing programmes emphasize social connectivity and building a sense of community. Tutors take a key role in the activity of supporting students' wellbeing. We mapped out the activity system components to describe the complexity of this tutor role. This analysis illustrated: tensions and contradictions in the system which may open up opportunities for change; the importance of context for influencing how system components interact; and that students' trust underpins the whole activity system. Conclusions: Our review shines a light into the black-box of holistic school-wide wellbeing programmes. We identified that tutors play a key role in wellbeing systems but confidentiality is a recurring tension which may jeopardise a wellbeing system. The time has come to investigate these systems in more detail, embracing and exploring the role of context at the same time as looking for common threads. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Machine learning and human learning: a socio-cultural and -material perspective on their relationship and the implications for researching working and learning
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Guile, David and Popov, Jelena
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- 2024
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6. Five methodological dilemmas when implementing an activity theory transformative intervention in higher education.
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Colasante, Meg
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HIGHER education , *WORK environment , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *DIGITAL technology , *METHODOLOGY - Abstract
Activity theory is a relatively young methodology for researching higher education teaching practices. Beyond systemic analyse of workplace activities and their development, activity theory used in its full interventionist capacity can foster practitioners' transformative agency to initiate practice change. Nevertheless, this is not an easy process. This paper shares activity theory research into the digital teaching activity of anatomy teachers within an Australian university. Using the lens of this project, the paper exposes several methodological dilemmas experienced by the researcher. Beyond the issue of the methodological level of activity theory used, these dilemmas relate to the authentic determination of both the unit of analysis and the object of the activity, the type of intervention (i.e. full Change Laboratory or modified), and the complexity in analysis using a concept-rich theory. Sharing these dilemmas invites further research to examine inherent contradictions in the human activity of conducting activity theory research focussed on university teaching. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. A shared lens around sensemaking in learning analytics: What activity theory, definition of a situation and affordances can offer.
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Poquet, Oleksandra
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LENSES , *SOCIAL perception , *INDIVIDUAL differences , *LEARNING , *DEFINITIONS , *RESEARCH personnel , *RIDESHARING - Abstract
The paper argues that learning analytics as a research field can benefit from a theory‐informed shared language to describe sensemaking of learning and teaching data. To make the case for such shared language, first, I critically review prominent sensemaking theories to then demonstrate how studies in learning analytics do not use coherent descriptions of sensemaking, eclectically combining the paradigms that have underlying differences. I then propose a conceptualization of sensemaking that overcomes the differences between these theories and explains how the concepts of activity system, the definition of the situation and affordances can be used to capture individual differences in sensemaking. The paper concludes with a preliminary framework and examples demonstrating its utility in raising new theoretical questions, informing design principles and providing shared language for researchers in learning analytics.Practitioner notesWhat is already known about this topicSensemaking happens when individuals try to explain unknown situations.Learning analytics uses sensemaking as a lens to understand dashboard use.Systematic analysis of sensemaking is essential for learning analytics.What this paper addsThe paper notes that noticing and perceiving are commonly examined in learning analytics on dashboard use.The paper suggests a revision of fundamental assumptions in sensemaking.A paper proposes a toy model of sensemaking that includes operationalization of the definition of the situation, activity where sensemaking happens and processes of noticing and perceiving affordances.Implications for practice and/or policyLearning analytics must examine sensemaking of data about teaching and learning in a systematic manner.Internal perceptions of the social environment and activity that are informed by the data need to be considered in evaluating dashboard use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Sociocultural dynamics of learners' emotions in a Chinese English-medium instruction context.
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Sun, Youzhi
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PHILOSOPHY of education ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,FOREIGN language education ,LANGUAGE policy ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors - Abstract
Drawing on Activity Theory, this study is an attempt to explore and explicate learners' emotions in a Chinese English-medium instruction (EMI) context. This paper detailed two cases of university learners to address two issues: how the relationship between EMI learners and their perceived sociocultural contexts shapes their foreign language enjoyment and anxiety and how the factors affecting the two emotions can be explained from an Activity Theory (AT) perspective. Qualitative content analysis was performed on data collected from in-depth, face-to-face interviews and journals. The findings illustrated that a diversity of sociocultural factors, ranging from the object of learning to the rules of learning, could influence learners' emotions. Contradictions between these factors also influenced EMI learners' two emotions. This study could inform educational language policy and the development of EMI curricula and pedagogy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. 智慧养老数据资源治理体系研究:基于活动理论视角.
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左美云, 段睿睿, and 林 琳
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The market size of smart senior care industry continues to expand then generates a series of valuable data resource. However, the degree of smart senior care data resource sharing in the country is low and not systematic, showing the outstanding problem of non-integration non-unification and non-uniform, which makes it difficult to give full play to the value of data resource, hinders the cooperation and efficiency improvement of various service subjects, and affects the satisfaction of the elderly. Therefore, it is urgent to establish and improve the governance systems of the smart senior care data resource sort out and analyze various service subjects and data involved in smart senior care. design reasonable governance structure, establish effective cooperation modes and governance mechanisms. to help all smart senior care service subjects better share data and achieve more value creation through data integration and business collaboration. Scholars have studied the framework and mechanisms of data resource governance in some fields, but there is still a lack of research on the data resource governance system in the field of smart senior care. especially how various elements collaborate in the governance framework and how to carry out scenario-oriented governance activities. In this paper, the framework of smart senior care data resource governance system is proposed based on the activity theory. And the six elements of governance subject, object. community rules, tools and division of labor are analyzed in detail. In the process of analysis. it is proposed to sort out and analyze the data resource owned by virous smart senior care service subjects based on the scene, and to build a data resource classification system including three levels of "metadata-master data-reference data". It is also concluded that the governance modes of the community will go through the development stage from the distributed mode to the centralized. to the distributed-centralized. finally to the network mode, from no-center to single-center to polycenter. At different stages. governance mechanisms such as supervision mechanism registration mechanism consultation mechanism. rights and responsibility mechanism incentive mechanism and regulatory mechanism can be built. Finally, based on the rehabilitation scenario. an activity flow chart of data resource governance from pre-rehabilitation to rehabilitation and then to after rehabilitation is constructed to guide the actual governance activities. This paper contributes to the existing literature in two aspects: first the introduction of activity theory framework can help comprehensively understand the key issues in smart senior care data resource governance. That is why to govern, who participates in governance, what need to govern and how to govern. At the same time, it corresponds to the various elements included in the activity, and carries out the collaborative analysis among the various elements. Second, different from the existing conceptual framework which emphasizes the macro-control role, this paper focuses on practice of smart senior care data governance. Starting from the current situation, this paper summarizes the governance modes and mechanisms at different stages that can be promoted and developed. and combs data resource by scene dimension and defines the division of governance. Above two contributions can enrich the smart senior care data governance theory and then explore the application field of data governance theory. The research in this paper can reveal the internal logic of smart senior care data resource governance system, help promote data sharing activities in different cooperation situations, and establish effective governance modes and mechanisms, achieve more data resource value creation, promote high-quality development of senior care services. and ultimately improve the satisfaction and happiness of the seniors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Sociocultural influence on engineering students' collaborative design project: an Activity Theory perspective.
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De Costa, Peter I., Lee, Jongbong, and Li, Wendy
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ENGINEERING students ,SOCIOCULTURAL theory ,SCHOLARLY communication ,REPORT writing ,CLASSROOM activities ,TEACHERS' assistants - Abstract
In keeping with discipline-specific genre expectations for writing in scientific and technological fields, students enrolled in English writing classes for future engineers are often required to produce collaborative reports on team projects. For freshman engineering students, such collaborative report writing, which constitutes a cornerstone in their academic literacy, is an entirely new genre. Drawing on Engeström's (Engeström, Yrjö. 1987. Learning by expanding: An activity theoretical approach to developmental research. Orienta-Konsultit Oy) activity system and Storch's (Storch, Neomy. 2002. Patterns of interaction in ESL pair work. Language and Learning 52(1). 119–158) interaction model, this paper explores two engineering freshmen's experiences of working collaboratively in separate groups in the same writing class. Our focal students were both native-English-speaking women at a U.S. midwestern university. Over the course of one semester, they provided their class notes and project report drafts, and they and the course teaching assistant participated in interviews. Our findings demonstrate that while both students had similar levels of commitment to the collaborative project, their writing experiences differed depending on their respective group members and their own attitudes and experiences. Our case study has implications for engineering freshman writing education as we illustrate how the ESP class we examined can help students prepare for academic and professional communication. We also discuss ways to help apprentice future engineers overcome discipline-specific communication difficulties as they enter a new discourse community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Relocating assessment in pre-service teacher education: an emerging model from activity theory lens.
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Güngör, Mustafa Akın and Güngör, Müzeyyen Nazlı
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EDUCATION of student teachers , *EDUCATIONAL evaluation , *ENGLISH language , *PRACTICUMS , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes - Abstract
This empirical study aims to understand the assessment pedagogies used to support pre-service teachers' assessment development in the post-pandemic. The study involved sixty 4th year English language pre-service teachers, and data were collected from interviews, practicum observation notes, field visit notes, and reflection papers. The study aimed to identify research-based pedagogical constructs that effectively contributed to pre-service teachers' learning and practice of assessment in the practicum. Using an activity theory lens, the study developed a model that could be used in pre-service teacher assessment education across different contexts. The paper concludes by suggesting research and practice-oriented implementations for pre-service teacher education based on the identified pedagogical constructs. Also, it has important implications for developing effective assessment education for pre-service teachers, which can contribute to better student learning outcomes in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Innovation and Entrepreneurship in Transition to Sustainability Trajectories: An Activity-Based Conceptual Analytic Framework.
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Adamides, Emmanuel D.
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As the road to environmental and social sustainability is tied to large-scale systemic transitions, inevitably, sustainable innovation and entrepreneurship should be considered in their context. In this paper, we investigate how entrepreneurial opportunities develop in trajectories of sectoral transitions to sustainability. We adopt a social practice perspective and, based on insights from sectoral systems of innovation, socio-technical systems and activity theory, we develop an activity-based template/framework to represent sectors and their inherent dynamics in a structured and holistic way. The framework allows for the identification of entrepreneurial opportunities in the contradictions that emerge during transitions in the activities of sectors due to internally developed inconsistencies and/or external interventions. Hence, plausible narratives of the anticipated business futures can be constructed. It also surfaces the role of learning and knowledge creation, i.e., innovation, in resolving contradictions, thus creating value and stirring transitions in the direction of sustainability. The case study of the transition of the automobility sector to sustainability is used to test the framework proposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. `It's not just linguistically, there's much more going on’: The experiences and practices of bilingual paediatric speech and language therapists in the UK.
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Gréaux, Mélanie, Gibson, Jenny L., and Katsos, Napoleon
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Background Aims Methods Results Conclusion & Implications WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS What is already known on the subject What this paper adds to existing knowledge What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work? Despite the high prevalence of bilingualism in the United Kingdom, few speech and language therapists (SLTs) are bilingual themselves. Most SLT research on bilingualism has generated knowledge to inform service delivery for bilingual clients, but few studies have investigated how being a bilingual SLT influences one's professional experiences and practices. Better understanding the unique positionality of bilingual SLTs can yield critical insights to meaningfully address issues of diversity, inclusion and equity in the profession.To investigate the experiences and practices of bilingual paediatric SLTs in the United Kingdom through the lens of Cultural‐Historical Activity Theory‐International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (CHAT‐ICF), a new theoretical framework developed to conceptualise the activities of professionals working in the field of disability.In this qualitative study, 19 bilingual paediatric SLTs practising in the United Kingdom were interviewed individually. Participants were recruited through a snowball sampling strategy, and semi‐structured interviews conducted online. The data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis and following a hybrid inductive‐deductive approach to map the results onto the CHAT‐ICF framework.Six overarching components of the CHAT‐ICF framework hosted the 12 sub‐themes identified to capture the experiences and practices of bilingual SLTs: (1)
Subject (intersectionality); (2)Tools (language skills, education, clinical resources); (3)Rules (systemic barriers, sense of responsibility); (4)Community (sense of inclusion); (5)Division of labour (parents, colleagues); and (6)Practice (empathy with children, holistic mindset, flexible approaches). The use of the CHAT‐ICF theoretical lens revealed two fundamental structural phenomena: (1) the distribution of sub‐themes across many components of CHAT‐ICF demonstrated that being a bilingual SLT is a multifactorial experience; and (2) the chain reactions between sub‐themes illustrated the dynamic nature of bilingual SLTs’ experiences which can be harnessed to challenge marginalisation and promote equity in the profession.This is the first qualitative study to date to provide in‐depth insights into the experiences and practices of bilingual SLTs in the United Kingdom. These insights can be mobilised to inform the meaningful inclusion of bilingual SLTs in workforce planning efforts and service development. Recommendations include using intersectional lenses, providing cultural and anti‐racism awareness training to SLTs, developing more diverse clinical resources and flexible approaches for bilingual families, valuing bilingualism in recruitment processes and increasing accountability at the leadership level. Research giving voice to bilingual SLTs, and other underrepresented demographics in the SLT workforce, can catalyse action to promote a more diverse and inclusive profession in line with the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists' strategic vision 2022–2027. Most research on bilingualism in speech and language therapy is focused on issues related to service provision and delivery for bilingual clients with little consideration for bilingual speech and language therapists’ (SLTs) unique positionality. A few survey studies have shown that bilingual SLTs report significantly higher competency and greater confidence when working with clients who speak multiple languages, but there are significant gaps in understanding how bilingualism impacts other aspects of their professional experiences. This is the first study to provide in‐depth insights into the experiences and practices of bilingual SLTs in the United Kingdom. We show that being bilingual profoundly impacts many aspects of their professional experiences, including their clinical identity, skillset, sense of inclusion in the workplace, work relationships and clinical approaches. Bilingual SLTs expressed developing trust relationships with bilingual families and adopting flexible approaches to account for their clients’ environmental factors, all of which can contribute to more equitable SLT services. This study also makes a novel contribution by proposing and using the Cultural‐Historical Activity Theory‐International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (CHAT‐ICF) framework to conceptualise and investigate SLTs’ experiences and practices. This study provides evidence‐based recommendations to inform progress towards the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists' strategic vision 2022–2027 and the diversification of the profession. Actions to support bilingual SLTs and diversify the profession include shifting a rigid mindset of linguistic and cultural `competence’ to self‐growth and awareness, developing more diverse clinical resources and flexible approaches for bilingual families, valuing bilingualism in SLT recruitment processes and career progression and increasing accountability and leadership around issues of diversity in the workplace. The novel CHAT‐ICF framework has the potential to be used to support therapists’ reflexivity in their practice or structure audits of rehabilitation services. Intersectionality theories and transformative processes can catalyse positive change in clinical services and research around bilingualism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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14. Ethical artificial intelligence for teaching-learning in higher education
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Airaj, Mohammed
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- 2024
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15. Twenty-five years of change laboratories in schools: a critical and formative review.
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Hopwood, Nick
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ACTION research , *EDUCATION research , *CRITICAL thinking , *TEACHER collaboration , *JUSTICE - Abstract
Transformation, learning and research come together in educational action research. Change Laboratories (CLs) are a distinctive approach to action research grounded in Cultural-Historical Activity Theory (CHAT). CLs seek to go beyond technical change, oriented instead to systemic and ideologically driven transformation. However, there have been few reviews of CL research, none focused on education. This paper reports a review of 55 studies using CLs or sibling approaches involving schools. It finds that CLs have been applied to diverse problems including pedagogical practice development, initial teacher education and collaboration across school boundaries. Wider issues of equity, inclusion and justice are present but not ubiquitous in this work. Theoretical references focus on expansive learning, activity systems and double stimulation, with growing use of wider concepts from within and beyond CHAT, including Southern and Indigenous epistemologies. Critical reflection of these findings informs seven fronts for future development in CLs to strengthen their contribution to educational action research: participation, beyond-technical change, enduring change, epistemic justice, addressing grand challenges, resistance, and reporting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Exploring the Workplace Culture of an Eastern Ontario University's Writing Center: A Quasi-Ethnographic Study.
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El-Astal, Mohammed
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CORPORATE culture ,WRITING centers ,EVIDENCE gaps ,SOCIAL constructionism ,ETHNOLOGY research ,FRIENDSHIP ,PATIENCE - Abstract
Purpose: The tutors or consultants working in university writing centers help students with their general assignments and academic writing. Very little attention has been paid to ethnographic-based research in this domain. This quasi-ethnographic paper aimed to fill this research gap by exploring: (a) the culture within which the writing consultants working for the writing services of an Eastern Ontario university provided their services to students, and (b) the discourse produced within that culture. Method: An ethnographic research design was adopted for this study. The sample comprised a diverse group of 11 consultants (four females and seven males). The data were collected through participant observations and semi-structured interviews. Findings: Employing social constructionism, activity, and social theory of genre, this research found that (a) collaboration, commitment, friendship, respect, and patience characterized the culture within which the writing consultants working for the university examined provided their services to students, and (b) academic and non-academic discourses were produced within that culture. Implications: The study is expected to benefit those who teach academic writing as it (a) illustrates the knowledge, ideas, customs, patterns of behavior, and beliefs that distinguish the group examined, and (b) identifies the nature of the discourse produced by that group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Conceptualising learning from resilient performance: A scoping literature review.
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Degerman, Helene and Wallo, Andreas
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ENGINEERING , *PROFESSIONS , *ORGANIZATIONAL learning , *LEARNING , *INDUSTRIAL safety - Abstract
Resilient performance is a crucial characteristic of complex socio-technical systems, enabling them to sustain essential functionality during changing or stressful conditions. Resilience Engineering (RE), a sub-field of safety research, focuses on this perspective of resilience. RE emphasises its "cornerstone model", presenting the RE system goals of "anticipating, monitoring, responding and learning". The cornerstone of learning remains fragmented and undertheorized in the existing literature. This paper aims to enrich RE research and its practical implications by developing a nuanced and comprehensive understanding of the role of learning from resilient performance. To achieve this aim, a scoping literature review was conducted to assess how learning is conceptualised in the RE literature and the theoretical foundations on which previous work rest. The main findings show that RE researchers view learning as the process of understanding the system, sharing knowledge, and re-designing system properties. The application of established learning theories is limited. This paper contributes to research by proposing an organisational process for the RE cornerstone of learning, paving the way for deeper discussions in future studies about learning from resilient performance within complex socio-technical systems. • Organisational learning is a core requirement for the safety and optimal functionality of complex socio-technical systems. • Conceptualizations of organisational learning from resilient performance are under-developed. • The literature review shows that learning from resilient performance is fragmented and undertheorized. • The research lays groundwork for future discussions on learning from resilient performance • A refined organisational process for learning within RE, grounded in established learning theory, is proposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Co-Creation of Learning Technologies in School–University–Industry Partnerships: An Activity System Perspective.
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Sillaots, Pirgit, Tammets, Kairit, Väljataga, Terje, and Sillaots, Martin
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EDUCATIONAL technology ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,COLLABORATIVE learning ,RESEARCH personnel ,TECHNOLOGY education - Abstract
EdTech companies can develop tools and services for educational institutions. The EdTech sector needs teachers as end-users to create services and tools that serve the users' real needs. Co-creation in the EdTech sector is essential for bridging the gap between developers' and educators' needs. By collaboratively designing learning technologies, we can ensure that tools address end-user requirements. In the EdTech industry, teachers and researchers need to work together to assess the effect of practice and services on learning and teaching and co-create solutions with a more evidence-based approach. This study emphasizes co-creation as a research setting to extract design principles and comprehend stakeholder dynamics within multi-participant systems. Implementing Activity Theory, we aim to analyze stakeholder roles and their intersections. The essence of co-creation lies in collaborative meaning-making, shared ownership, and sustainable development with scalability potential. Our co-creation program targeted the collaborative design of education technologies, engaging teachers, the EdTech sector, researchers, and policymakers. We seek to understand the core dynamics of such partnerships and how interdisciplinary co-creation elevates stakeholders' professional experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Learners' motivation caught between the interplay of policy and practice: a case study of an EMI medical program in China.
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Cai, Heng, Yang, Miao, and Wen, Danping
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INCENTIVE (Psychology) ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,ACADEMIC motivation ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,MEDICAL schools ,CONTENT analysis - Abstract
The past few decades have seen a boom in English-medium instruction (EMI) in Chinese universities. Despite growing research interest in EMI policy and practices in China, little is known about how students' motivation to study in the EMI programs is influenced by EMI policy and its implementation at the meso and micro levels. This study addresses this gap by examining an EMI program at a Chinese medical college. Through a survey of 118 students and interviews with 10 students and 6 teachers, we investigated students' EMI learning motivation, how and why it changed over time, and different stakeholders' perceptions of the EMI implementation. The questionnaire and interview data were triangulated with textual analysis results of institutional EMI policy documents. It was found that students' motivation generally declined over the course of EMI study and was often influenced by implementation factors such as pedagogical practices, assessment-related policies, and incentive strategies. Interactions and contradictions between the EMI policy goals, EMI implementation at different levels and students' motivation change were also analyzed through the Activity Theory lens to shed light on how higher education institutions could better sustain students' EMI motivation and enhance the quality of EMI programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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20. Be(com)ing an Educational Researcher in the Global South (and Beyond): A Focus on the Research-Practice Relationship.
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Sato, Masatoshi and Cárcamo, Benjamín
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LANGUAGE teachers ,TEACHER researchers ,EDUCATION of language teachers ,RESEARCH personnel ,LANGUAGE research ,SECOND language acquisition - Abstract
Educational researchers are increasingly expected to focus on their research productivity as per their professional performance. Such a trend may have influenced their professional identities and activities, especially in the Global South, where researchers have not been immersed in the new research culture and where their assumed primary role may be to increase teaching efficacy instead. The pervasive focus on research productivity is detrimental to the equitable research-practice relationship whereby two groups of professionals—practitioners and researchers—collaboratively work to achieve the common goal of student learning. This teacher-researcher epistemological clash may exist within individual researchers when they have abundant teaching experience prior to becoming educational researchers. Through the lens of activity theory, we report on a case study of educational researchers' lived experiences and struggles of navigating teacher-researcher identities in Chile, entailing their boundary-crossing of teacher-researcher identities, internal and external identity conflicts, and beliefs and actions related to the ideal research-practice relationship. In conclusion, we call for changes at the institutional level to promote an equitable and manageable research-practice relationship as well as at the individual level to reflect the ultimate purpose of educational research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Understanding Children’s Learning of Part–Whole Relations Using Fingu
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Kortenkamp, Ulrich, Ladel, Silke, and Larkin, Kevin
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- 2024
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22. Unlocking Teacher Agency for Professional Learning Through Connection-Building: Evidence from a Professional Development Program on China’s Standards of English Language Ability
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Zhang, Jie and Peng, Yue
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- 2024
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23. The role of project-based learning with activity theory in teaching effectiveness: Evidence from the internet of things course
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Dai, Zhicheng, Yang, Yue, Chen, Zengzhao, Wang, Ling, Zhao, Liang, Zhu, Xiaoliang, and Xiong, Junxia
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- 2024
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24. Young children's at-home digital experiences and interactions: an ethnographic study.
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Lewis, K. L., Kervin, L. K., Verenikina, I., and Howard, S. J.
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ETHNOLOGY ,WEARABLE video devices ,FAMILIES ,DIGITAL technology ,SOCIAL context ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors - Abstract
Introduction: Young children are increasingly provided with opportunities to interact with digital technologies in their homes. Despite an accumulating body of research on children's digital interactions, little is known about how these are situated within the social and cultural context in which they take place. In this exploratory study, we aim to extend existing knowledge by offering a contextualised understanding of children's digital experiences. To do this, we draw on Activity Theory as a conceptual framework to explore how various social and cultural factors influence and interact to shape children's opportunities and interactions with digital technologies. Method: This study draws upon ethnographic and 'day in the life' methodologies to gain rich insight into children's situated digital experiences. Along with other traditional ethnographic methodologies, children aged between 3 and 6 years from 5 families were provided with wearable chest-mounted video cameras to capture their usual daily play activities at home - which included, but was not limited to, digital activities. Results: Data on digital interactions is presented for the five participating families, and through the presentation of two purposively selected in-depth illustrative examples, we demonstrate how children's digital interactions are part of a larger activity system situated within the social and cultural contexts of their homes. We also elaborate on children's natural inclination to interact playfully with digital technologies. Discussion: This study extends on current knowledges about the contextual influences of children's digital experiences and has important implications for parents and families trying to navigate the complexities of their children's digital lives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. Effects of Robot-Assisted Language Learning on English-as-a-Foreign-Language Skill Development.
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Wu, Xueqing and Li, Rui
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EDUCATIONAL attainment ,LANGUAGE & languages - Abstract
While numerous studies of robot-assisted language learning (RALL) for English-as-a-foreign-language (EFL) learners' language skill development have been done, a comprehensive and theoretically-driven meta-analysis on its effects is still in paucity. To fill the gap, drawing on Activity Theory (AT), this study reported a meta-analysis from 47 independent studies out of 29 literature samples involving 1791 EFL learners on RALL for language skill development published during 2004–2023. The results indicated that the overall effect size was g =.69, 95% CI [.49,.90], suggesting that RALL outperforms non-RALL conditions. In addition, educational levels and intervention durations were found to be significant moderators. Based on the results, implications for practice were discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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26. 地方政府建構 教師持續專業發展 支持系統的個案分享.
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陳順利
- Abstract
Copyright of School Administrators is the property of School Administration Research Association, R.O.C. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
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27. Exploring Iranian EAP teachers' well-being: an activity theory perspective.
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Nazari, Mostafa and Karimpour, Sedigheh
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of teachers ,TEACHER influence ,TEACHER educators ,SEMI-structured interviews - Abstract
Despite the growth of research on EAP teachers in the past decade, little research has focused on their emotions and much less on their well-being. In response to this gap of knowledge, the present study draws on the theoretical framework of activity theory and explores the well-being of 13 Iranian EAP teachers. We collected data from a questionnaire, narrative frames, and semi-structured interviews. Data analyses revealed three themes in relation to the teachers' well-being: (1) content as a site of experiencing positive and negative emotions, (2) content and institutional contextualities as determinants of seeking purpose in EAP instruction, and (3) sociocultural parameters as shaping meaning in EAP instruction. We found that EAP teacher well-being functions as a layered construct that is influenced by various personal, institutional, and sociocultural dynamics, and substantially influences teachers' professional practices, identities, and emotions. Across these processes, content operates as the antecedent or consequence of the influence in EAP instruction. Based on the findings, we provide implications for teachers and teacher educators in how to employ professional alternatives that could effectively contribute to EAP teachers' well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Bridging Motivation and AI in Education: An Activity Theory Perspective.
- Author
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Artemova, Inna
- Subjects
CRITICAL discourse analysis ,INTRINSIC motivation ,LITERATURE reviews ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,EDUCATION theory - Abstract
Copyright of Digital Education Review is the property of University of Barcelona, Virtual Teaching & Learning Research Group and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Exploring the impact of automated written corrective feedback on the academic writing skills of EFL learners: An activity theory perspective
- Author
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Rahimi, Masoud, Fathi, Jalil, and Zou, Di
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Social media as a mechanism of dissemination and knowledge translation among health professions educators: a scoping review
- Author
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Giroux, Catherine M., Kim, Sungha, Sikora, Lindsey, Bussières, André, and Thomas, Aliki
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Examination of systemic factors that impact instructional designers’ practices in higher education
- Author
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Stefaniak, Jill E.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Student motivation and engagement in maker activities under the lens of the Activity Theory: a case study in a primary school
- Author
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Nikou, Stavros A.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Waste Work in the Global South: Exploring Activity Theory as a Framework for Understanding Distributed Roles of Intermediaries in Cape Town’s Urban Waste Economy
- Author
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Goeiman, Johnathan and Rink, Bradley
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Exploring Self-Regulated Writing Strategies of Business-Major Students with Activity Theory
- Author
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Ha, Le Thanh, Hoa, Le Huong, Nhung, Le Thi Thuy, Chowdhury, Raqib, editor, and Tuan, Huynh Anh, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A Conceptual Model of a Multi-agent System to Simulate Collective Behaviors in Renewable Energy Communities
- Author
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Allani, Raihana, Leclercq, Pierre, Goos, Gerhard, Series Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, and Luo, Yuhua, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. 以教師實踐社群實作 單元教學研究發展 學校本位課程的想像: 活動理論的分析.
- Author
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陳順利 and 施琇瑩
- Abstract
Copyright of School Administrators is the property of School Administration Research Association, R.O.C. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Ethnic Minority Students' English Learning Agency: An Activity Theory Perspective.
- Author
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Zhu, Xiaohui and Duan, Yangyang
- Subjects
MINORITY students ,ENGLISH language education ,ACTIVITY theory (Sociology) ,LANGUAGE ability - Abstract
Recent years have witnessed a growing body of research on the English learning of ethnic minority students in China, yet little is known as to how these students enact their agency to address the challenges they encounter in learning English. Through the lens of activity theory, this qualitative case study explored the manifestations and influencing factors of English learning agency of four first-year Uyghur university students. Data were collected through the students' journals, interviews, and documents, supplemented by the interview data from their teachers. The findings revealed that Uyghur students' English learning agency was manifested by reflecting on the gap btween themselves and their Han classmates and adjusting their English learning methods; adapting to the mode of all-English teaching and the rule of English presentation; using tools such as the Mandarin Chinese, English learning apps and the Internet; and seeking help from teachers, peers and other community members. The study also found that Uyghur students' agency was influenced by factors such as language proficiency, motivation, and personal learning experiences. Additionally, preferential policies of the state and the school, help from teachers and peers, and emotional support from family members also had an impact on their English learning agency. This study provides implications for the English teaching of ethnic minority students at universities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Examining the Construction of "Teaching Assessment Literacy": A Case Study of Teacher Conceptual Development in Collaborative Research Practice.
- Author
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Yang, Luxin and Zhang, Ning
- Subjects
ENGLISH as a foreign language ,TEACHER development ,ACTIVITY theory (Sociology) ,ENGLISH teachers - Abstract
This study explored the trajectory of teacher concept development during collaborative research practice promoted by a university-school partnership teacher development program. Drawing on Vygotsky's and Engeström's notion of concept formation, it examined how a secondary EFL teaching-research officer (TRO) negotiated between scientific and everyday concepts as she co-constructed the research theme "teaching assessment literacy" with mentors and fellow teachers mediated by the program. Multiple sources of data were collected over a span of two years, including six rounds of oral defense and research reporting activities, classroom observations, interviews, journals, and research reports. The analysis showed that the TRO experienced a gradually integrated and transformed path of concept development, and also initiated an expansive learning opportunity for her research participants, triggering collective concept development. While the program played a significant role in providing multi-module facilitating activities, academic-practice joint mentoring and collective scaffolding, more subtle guidance is suggested for the tension-laden process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. DHM-driven quantitative assessment model of activity posture in space-restricted accommodation cabin
- Author
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Xiao, Jianghao, Yu, Suihuai, Chen, Dengkai, Yu, Mingjiu, Xie, Ning, Wang, Hanyu, and Sun, Yiwei
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Understanding EFL students’ chatbot-assisted argumentative writing: An activity theory perspective
- Author
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Guo, Kai, Li, Yuanke, Li, Yongyan, and Chu, Samuel Kai Wah
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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