43 results on '"Nielsen, Wendy"'
Search Results
2. Makerspaces: Building Confidence in STEM for Primary Preservice Teachers.
- Author
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Halliburton, Peta, Georgiou, Helen, and Nielsen, Wendy
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STUDENT teachers ,MAKERSPACES ,ASSESSMENT of education ,STEM education ,CONFIDENCE - Abstract
'Design and Technology' has been propelled into the spotlight with the popularity of the idea of 'STEM'. So much so that it is now common for primary schools to have 'STEM classrooms' or makerspaces. Whilst there has been an increasing exploration of the use of makerspaces, there has been limited research on the impacts, particularly with pre-service teachers (PST), who are known to lack confidence in STEM-related subjects. Therefore, in this research, we explore how different aspects of makerspaces may influence PST confidence. Participating PST worked in small groups in the Uni Makerspace to design a product as part of a formal university assessment in a primary education Science subject. The case study design includes four groups of PST and data from interviews, observations and artefacts. Results outline confidence development amongst PST with several key Makerspace influences identified, including the importance of learning to use sophisticated equipment and the key role played by the Makerspace facilitators. Implications for Makerspaces and STEM education are discussed, including the potential to leverage the 'novelty effect' of Makerspaces, and the need to offer extensive support, particularly in the early stages of engagement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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3. Romantic Medicine and the Gothic Imagination: Morbid Anatomies: by Laura R. Kremmel, Cardiff, U of Wales P, 2022, xi + 268 pp.
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Nielsen, Wendy C.
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ROMANTICISM ,ANATOMY ,NONFICTION - Published
- 2024
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4. Introduction to the Special Issue: Multimodal Meaning-Making in Science.
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Nielsen, Wendy and Yeo, Jennifer
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SCHOOL children ,LANGUAGE teachers ,SPEECH & gesture - Abstract
Understanding how learners make sense of representations, and how teachers orchestrate student work with representations, are shared purposes for each of the papers. In the early years, Arejung and colleagues compared teacher-introduced representations with student-generated drawings to interrogate how early years children interpret and incorporate the represented science content in their own drawings. This Special Issue of RISE is devoted to how theoretical perspectives in social semiotics help us understand science meaning-making when learners work with multiple representations. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
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5. Meaning Making with Multiple Representations: a Case Study of a Preservice Teacher Creating a Digital Explanation.
- Author
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Nielsen, Wendy, Turney, Annette, Georgiou, Helen, and Jones, Pauline
- Subjects
STUDENT teachers ,POLYSEMY ,SCIENCE education ,EXPLANATION ,VIRTUAL communities ,ELECTRONIC information resource searching ,DIGITAL images ,DIGITAL media - Abstract
The construction of dynamic multimedia products requires the selection and integration of a range of semiotic resources. As an assessment task for preservice teachers, this construction process is complex but has significant potential for learning. To investigate how weaving together multiple representations in such tasks enables learners to develop conceptual understanding, the paper presents an indicative case study of a 2nd-year preservice primary (K-6) teacher who created a digital explanation on the topic of 'transparency' for stage 3 children (ages 11–12). We focus on data gathered during the 3-h construction process including artefacts such as images, online searches, websites accessed and paper records used for planning; the digital explanation as product; audio and video capture of the construction process and pre- and post-construction interviews. Using multimodal analysis, we examine these data to understand how meanings are negotiated as the maker moves iteratively among multiple representations and through semiotic choices within these representations to explain the science concept. The analyses illustrate the complexity of the construction process while providing insight into the creator's decision-making and to her developing semiotic and conceptual understandings. These findings allow us to build on the concept of cumulative semiotic progression (Hoban & Nielsen, Research in Science Education, 35, 1101-1119, 2013) by explicating the role of iterative reasoning in the production of pedagogic multimedia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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6. Mentoring conversations in preservice teacher supervision: knowledge for mentoring in categories of participation.
- Author
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Nielsen, Wendy, Tindall-Ford, Sharon, and Sheridan, Lynn
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MENTORING ,PROFESSIONAL education ,TEACHER attitudes ,TEACHER supervisors ,SUPERVISION - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to elaborate the knowledge of the supervising teacher as enacted through mentor-mentee conversations that occur during practicum. An interpretivist framework using Clarke et al.'s (2014) Categories of Participation was used to consider how supervising teacher knowledge manifests in mentoring conversations with the preservice teacher. Case study methods captured conversations in situ when dyad pairs (n = 5) discussed a particular lesson developed and taught by the preservice teacher. The results illustrate three Categories of Participation as most frequent, providing insight into supervising teachers' knowledge base. An important finding from this study is the value of mentoring conversations for 'making visible' classroom teacher practices and knowledge to the preservice teacher during the practicum, which has implications for the professional development of supervising teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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7. Universities and teacher professional learning in the new policy context of teacher accreditation.
- Author
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Nielsen, Wendy, Lipscombe, Kylie, Tindall-Ford, Sharon, Duchesne, Sue, Weatherby-Fell, Noelene, and Sheridan, Lynn
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EDUCATIONAL accreditation ,COLLEGE teachers ,LEARNING ,PROFESSIONAL employees ,LEARNING communities ,CLASSROOMS - Abstract
All teachers in Australia must now achieve and maintain certification through mandatory accreditation processes that include specified professional learning hours. While key policies that outline teacher professional learning in Australia and New South Wales make no specific reference to a role for universities, this discussion paper proposes that the new teacher accreditation landscape provides opportunities for universities to work collaboratively with education systems to co-design and deliver contextually relevant teacher professional learning, support teachers-as-researchers and support schools to become learning communities. This collaboration would advance the policy agenda inherent in the accreditation processes by developing the intended culture of professional learning among teachers, education systems and universities that goes beyond mandated professional learning hours. We review the Australian policy context from a systems-thinking perspective and argue that university Schools and Faculties of Education (called SOE throughout this paper) work across multiple levels in education systems and are thus uniquely positioned to co-design and deliver relevant and contextually significant learning opportunities that foster teacher professional learning and school improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. Digital Explanation as Assessment in University Science.
- Author
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Nielsen, Wendy, Georgiou, Helen, Jones, Pauline, and Turney, Annette
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STUDENT attitudes ,DIGITAL communications ,COMPUTER literacy ,SCIENCE education ,EXPLANATION - Abstract
Assessments in tertiary science subjects typically assess content knowledge, and there is current need to both develop and assess different forms of knowledge and skills, such as communications and digital literacies. A digital explanation is a multimodal artefact created by students to explain science to a specified audience, which is an alternate form of assessment that has potential to develop and assess these other important forms of knowledge and skills. This research draws from perspectives in multimodality, educational semiotics and science education to gain a better understanding of digital explanation as a form of assessment in university science. Data sources include digital artefacts (n = 42), task descriptions and rubrics and pre-/post-interviews (n = 21) with students who created them as a task in a university science subject. Analysis involved identifying the range of media resources used across the data set, seeking patterns in how multiple resources were used and exploring students' perspectives on the task, including their design decisions. A more detailed look at artefacts from three different science learning contexts illustrates that students base their design decisions on the content knowledge being represented, their technical capabilities to generate them and how to engage the audience. Students enjoy this form of assessment and feel that the tasks allowed them to demonstrate different sorts of capabilities than are normally assessed in their subjects. Recommendations for instructors provide guidance for considering this sort of task in tertiary science contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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9. Multimodal science teaching and learning.
- Author
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Yeo, Jennifer and Nielsen, Wendy
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LEARNING ,TEACHING - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which the editor discusses articles in the issue on topics including science education; science learning; and school-based teaching.
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- 2020
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10. Working with multiple representations: preservice teachers' decision-making to produce a digital explanation.
- Author
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Nielsen, Wendy, Turney, Annette, Georgiou, Helen, and Jones, Pauline
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EDUCATION of science teachers ,DECISION making ,SOCIAL semiotics ,DIGITAL media ,STUDENT engagement - Abstract
A "digital explanation" is a science learning task where learners explain science content to non-expert others, in this case, the learners are primary preservice teachers [PST] in a science methods class. In the task, PST are assigned a prompt based on science content from the New South Wales K-6 syllabus and generate or source multiple representations to design and produce this stand-alone digital artefact. In this study, PST were interviewed about their decision making in producing the digital explanation, which offers insight into the design process and what makes for a successful product. Data include the digital explanations, interviews with nine PST, marking rubrics and rationale statements generated as part of the task. Thematic coding shows PST make design decisions for four principal reasons: content, engagement, clarity and unconscious selection. Decisions around content and engagement prevail and their decisions reveal keys to success in creating a digital explanation. We also note a tension between emphasis on engagement over content, which may reflect that the intended audience is young children and PST have a strong desire to gain and keep children's interest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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11. Assessing multimodal literacies in science: semiotic and practical insights from pre-service teacher education.
- Author
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Jones, Pauline, Turney, Annette, Georgiou, Helen, and Nielsen, Wendy
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STUDENT teachers ,SCIENCE teachers ,SCIENCE education ,SEMIOTICIANS ,TEACHING - Abstract
This paper arises from research undertaken by educational semioticians and science educators investigating the use of student generated digital artefacts as assessment tasks in pre-service science teacher education. Part of a broader shift toward student-generated media in tertiary science, the use of such tasks is driven by the need to deepen pre-service primary teachers' understandings of content and to foster enthusiasm for teaching science. However, the tasks are challenging as students must demonstrate both content and meta-semiotic knowledge in these brief digital standalone presentations. In the paper, we draw on artefacts, interviews and assessment practices to demonstrate these challenges. We identify what have emerged as key semiotic understandings necessary to complete a successful response to the task, arguing that these include multimodal understandings as well as knowledge of disciplinary specific representational practices. We describe an intervention informed by functional social semiotics and scaffolded literacy approaches with key features including use of an exemplar text for deconstruction and an explicit instructional sequence with a tailored assessment rubric. The paper reports both theoretical and practical insights and seeks to contribute to emerging analytical frameworks as well as multimodal literacy assessment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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12. Developing and Maintaining an RDN‐Led Bedside Feeding Tube Placement Program.
- Author
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Brown, Britta D., Hoffman, Stacey R., Johnson, Sarah J., Nielsen, Wendy R., and Greenwaldt, Heidi J.
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- 2019
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13. Joining the research conversation: threshold concepts embedded in the literature review.
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Chatterjee-Padmanabhan, Meeta, Nielsen, Wendy, and Sanders, Sarah
- Abstract
Doctoral education scholars associate doctoral learning with certain threshold concepts, many of which are embedded in the literature review. In considering this, we draw from a literary metaphor of 'joining the conversation' and report on a doctoral writing programme that blended elements of workshops, 'shut-up-and-write' sessions and thesis writing circles in the Faculty of Social Sciences at an Australian university. Findings illustrate conceptual thresholds engendered in the literature review. Study participants reported growing awareness of: the need for a critical voice; the difference between descriptive and critical writing; and, different ways to conduct and structure the literature review. Further, these are capacities and skills that develop iteratively over the candidature. To join the research conversation, gaining an understanding of these aspects of the conceptual threshold is important and, as indicated here, writing programmes that explicitly support this learning are vital to the process of scholarly development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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14. Preparing to cross the research proposal threshold: A case study of two international doctoral students.
- Author
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Chatterjee-Padmanabhan, Meeta and Nielsen, Wendy
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DOCTORAL students ,FOREIGN students ,ACADEMIC dissertations ,DOCTORAL committees ,DOCTORAL degree ,COLLEGE students ,HIGHER education - Abstract
This paper presents a study of two international doctoral students’ perspectives on preparing to formally present the thesis proposal, which we conceptualise as a threshold in the PhD journey. They participated in a thesis writing group (TWG) that aimed to support international doctoral students to develop aspects of their scholarship in the early stages of their candidature. The case students reported feeling ‘stuck’ before joining the TWG run by the authors. After the writing group experience, they reported that they had gained confidence and developed the skills and knowledge required to prepare for their proposal presentation. Their perspectives were gathered through semi-structured interviews that were analysed using the conceptual framework of threshold concepts for doctoral learning. This small-scale study suggests that the collegial support provided by a TWG can be a powerful pedagogy enabling doctoral scholars to confidently negotiate crossing the thesis proposal threshold. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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15. Introduction to This Special Issue: Tribute to the Memory of the Late Professor Peter Fensham.
- Author
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Nichols, Kim and Nielsen, Wendy
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MEMORY ,GRADUATE education - Abstract
As the current Editors-in-Chief of RISE, we raised the idea for a special issue to the ASERA Board and, with their unanimous support, joined forces with the current President of ASERA, Dr Rebecca Cooper, Emeritus Professors Richard Gunstone and Leonie Rennie to co-edit this special issue as a collective gesture of remembering. In this special issue of I Research in Science Education i (RISE), we depart from our research focus on empirical work in science education to honour and celebrate the life, work and profound influence of our colleague and friend Emeritus Professor Peter Fensham AM on the field of science education. This is followed by a discussion from Cristina Guarella, Jan van Driel and Caroline Cohrssen of Peter's influence that helped foster and shape early childhood science education research. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
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16. Australia’s supervising teachers: motivators and challenges to inform professional learning.
- Author
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Nielsen, Wendy, Mena, Juanjo, Clarke, Anthony, O'Shea, Sarah, Hoban, Garry, and Collins, John
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COOPERATING teachers ,EDUCATION ,PROFESSIONAL learning communities ,PROFESSIONAL standards ,STUDENT teachers - Abstract
This paper offers an overview of what motivates and challenges Australian supervising teachers to work with preservice teachers in their classrooms. In the contemporary Australian context of new National Professional Standards for Teachers, a new national curriculum and new standards for Initial Teacher Education programs, what motivates and challenges supervising teachers becomes a focus for professional learning through analysis presented in this paper. Data are reported from a national data set that includes 314 responding supervising teachers who took theMentoring Perspectives Inventoryfrom 2012–2014. The MPI data are aggregated in this paper to suggest that the wider system of teacher education could benefit from attention at various levels of interest to develop the underlying knowledge base of supervising teachers and our understanding of how they are challenged and motivated in their work with preservice teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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17. Blended Media: Student-Generated Mash-ups to Promote Engagement with Science Content.
- Author
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Hoban, Garry, Nielsen, Wendy, and Hyland, Christopher
- Published
- 2016
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18. Designing a digital teaching resource to explain phases of the moon: A case study of preservice elementary teachers making a slowmation.
- Author
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Nielsen, Wendy and Hoban, Garry
- Subjects
LUNAR phases ,ELEMENTARY school teachers ,ELEMENTARY school teaching ,TEACHING aids ,EDUCATIONAL technology research ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This research studied a group of three preservice elementary teachers creating a narrated stop-motion animation (Slowmation) from start to finish in 3 hours to explain the challenging concept of 'phases of the moon' to elementary school children. The research questions investigated the preservice teachers' learning before and after the construction as well as how the preservice teachers designed the slowmation as a teaching resource. Data collection involved individual interviews immediately before and after the construction in conjunction with analysis of video and audio data collected during the construction process. Before the animation construction, the participants had little understanding of the causes of moon phases and one held an alternative conception. After creating the slowmation all three preservice teachers demonstrated more 'elements' of the concept and appeared to resolve an alternative conception. There are two findings from this research: (i) creating a slowmation enabled the preservice teachers to develop more elements to contribute to their understanding of moon phases; (ii) the design of the slowmation was based on breaking the concept into a sequence of sub-concepts that were represented digitally. Designing a digital teaching resource such as a slowmation to explain a concept involves preservice teachers breaking a concept down into coherent parts or 'chunks' and representing the concept in multiple ways. This can be done within a science method class and is also a good way for the them to negotiate meanings about a difficult concept. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Res Sci Teach 52: 1207-1233, 2015. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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19. Science Teachers' Response to the Digital Education Revolution.
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Nielsen, Wendy, Miller, K., and Hoban, Garry
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SCIENCE teachers ,COMPUTERS in education ,LAPTOP computers ,EDUCATIONAL change ,CLASSROOM management - Abstract
We report a case study of two highly qualified science teachers as they implemented laptop computers in their Years 9 and 10 science classes at the beginning of the 'Digital Education Revolution,' Australia's national one-to-one laptop program initiated in 2009. When a large-scale investment is made in a significant educational change, it is important to consider teachers perspectives and responses to such change and we draw from sociocultural perspectives for our analysis. Through interviews and classroom observations, our interpretive analysis identified four key tensions and contradictions. These include the following: (1) barriers to innovative science teaching; (2) maintaining classroom and school connectivity; (3) teacher versus student expectations; and (4) changes to classroom management. Analysis leads to implications for the future of this and similar programs. The study shows that while these two teachers were committed to developing and delivering technology-rich science lessons, there were many factors that challenge how the implementation progressed. The findings from this study have implications for the continued engagement of teachers in this and other jurisdictions considering the introduction of one-to-one laptop programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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20. Physics Students' Social Media Learning Behaviours and Connectedness.
- Author
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Moll, Rachel F., Nielsen, Wendy, and Linder, Cedric
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- 2015
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21. Systematic review of health branding: growth of a promising practice.
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Evans, W, Blitstein, Jonathan, Vallone, Donna, Post, Samantha, and Nielsen, Wendy
- Abstract
Brands are marketing tools that create mental representations in the minds of consumers about products, services, and organizations. Brands create schema that help consumers decide whether to initiate or continue use of a product or service. Health branding determines behavioral choice by building consumer relationships and identification with health behaviors and their benefits. Health branding can be measured by the associations individuals form with health behaviors. In 2008, Evans and colleagues systematically reviewed the literature on health brands, reported on branded health messages and campaigns worldwide, and examined specific branding strategies in multiple subject areas. This paper extends that review. We replicated the comprehensive online literature search strategy from 2008. We screened a total of 311 articles and included 130 for full-text review. This included both articles from the 2008 review and new articles. After excluding those new articles that did not meet full-text inclusion criteria, we reviewed 69 in total. Of these, 32 were new articles since the 2008 review. Branded health campaigns cover most major domains of public health and appear worldwide. Since 2008, we observed improvement in evaluation, application of theory, and description of campaign strategies in published work. We recommend enhanced education of public health practitioners and researchers on the use and evaluation of branding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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22. Developing a Model for a Self-Study Professional Learning Community.
- Author
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Hoban, Garry, McLean, Peter, Nielsen, Wendy, Berry, Amanda, Brown, Christine, Brown, Gordon, Butterfield, Barbara, Forrester, Tricia, Kervin, Lisa, Mantei, Jessica, Trezise, Jillian, Rossetto, Celeste, and Verenikina, Irina
- Published
- 2012
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23. Cooperating Teacher Participation in Teacher Education: A Review of the Literature.
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Clarke, Anthony, Triggs, Valerie, and Nielsen, Wendy
- Subjects
TEACHERS ,EDUCATION ,CAREER development ,PSYCHOLOGICAL typologies ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
Student teachers consider cooperating teachers to be one of the most important contributors to their teacher preparation program. Therefore, the ways in which cooperating teachers participate in teacher education are significant. This review seeks to move conceptions of that participation beyond commonly held beliefs to empirically supported claims. The analysis draws on Brodie, Cowling, and Nissen’s notion of categories of participation to generate 11 different ways that cooperating teachers participate in teacher education: as Providers of Feedback, Gatekeepers of the Profession, Modelers of Practice, Supporters of Reflection, Gleaners of Knowledge, Purveyors of Context, Conveners of Relation, Agents of Socialization, Advocates of the Practical, Abiders of Change, and Teachers of Children. When set against Gaventa’s typology of participation, the resultant grid highlights the importance of negotiated or invited spaces for cooperating teacher participation and provides a new way of thinking about, planning professional development for, and working with cooperating teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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24. Students' Conceptions of the Nature of Science: Perspectives from Canadian and Korean Middle School Students.
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Park, Hyeran, Nielsen, Wendy, and Woodruff, Earl
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SCIENTIFIC literacy ,COMPREHENSION testing ,PHILOSOPHY of science ,MIXED methods research ,TEENAGERS ,MIDDLE school education - Abstract
This study examined and compared students' understanding of nature of science (NOS) with 521 Grade 8 Canadian and Korean students using a mixed methods approach. The concepts of NOS were measured using a survey that had both quantitative and qualitative elements. Descriptive statistics and one-way multivariate analysis of variances examined the quantitative data while a conceptually clustered matrix classified the open-ended responses. The country effect could explain 3-12 % of the variances of subjectivity, empirical testability and diverse methods, but it was not significant for the concepts of tentativeness and socio-cultural embeddedness of science. The open-ended responses showed that students believed scientific theories change due to errors or discoveries. Students regarded empirical evidence as undeniable and objective although they acknowledged experiments depend on theories or scientists' knowledge. The open responses revealed that national situations and curriculum content affected their views. For our future democratic citizens to gain scientific literacy, science curricula should include currently acknowledged NOS concepts and should be situated within societal and cultural perspectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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25. Learning Wisdom Through Collectivity: The Women Writing Women Collective.
- Author
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Armstrong, Luanne, Bickel, Barbara, Fels, Lynn, Gerhard, Gillian, Hoy, Alyson, Jordan, Nané, Nielsen, Wendy, Smith, Annie, Stubbs, Jeannie, and Triggs, Valerie
- Published
- 2014
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26. Learning Science through Creating a ‘Slowmation’: A case study of preservice primary teachers.
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Hoban, Garry and Nielsen, Wendy
- Subjects
SCIENCE education ,TEACHING methods ,MOTION picture animation education ,STUDENT teachers ,SCIENCE teachers ,TEACHING aids - Abstract
Many preservice primary teachers have inadequate science knowledge, which often limits their confidence in implementing the subject. This paper proposes a new way for preservice teachers to learn science by designing and making a narrated stop-motion animation as an instructional resource to explain a science concept. In this paper, a simplified way for preservice teachers to design and make an animation called ‘slowmation’ (abbreviated from ‘slow animation’) is exemplified. A case study of three preservice primary teachers creating one from start to finish over 2 h was conducted to address the following research question: How do the preservice primary teachers create a slowmation and how does this process influence their science learning? The method of inquiry used a case study design involving pre- and post-individual interviews in conjunction with a discourse analysis of video and audio data recorded as they created a slowmation. The data illustrate how the preservice teachers’ science learning was related to their prior knowledge and how they iteratively revisited the content through the construction of five representations as acumulative semiotic progression: (i) research notes; (ii) storyboard; (iii) models; (iv) digital photographs; culminating in (v) the narrated animation. This progression enabled the preservice teachers to revisit the content in each representation and make decisions about which modes to use and promoted social interaction. Creating a slowmation facilitated the preservice teachers’ learning about the life cycle of a ladybird beetle and revised their alternative conceptions. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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27. Using 'Slowmation' to Enable Preservice Primary Teachers to Create Multimodal Representations of Science Concepts.
- Author
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Hoban, Garry and Nielsen, Wendy
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STUDENT teachers ,TEACHING methods ,SCIENCE education (Primary) ,EDUCATIONAL technology ,ANIMATION (Cinematography) - Abstract
Research has identified the value of students constructing their own representations of science concepts using modes such as writing, diagrams, 2-D and 3-D models, images or speech to communicate meaning. 'Slowmation' (abbreviated from 'Slow Animation') is a simplified way for students, such as preservice teachers, to make a narrated animation using a combination of modes. In this study, 13 preservice primary teachers learned how to create a slowmation during a two-hour class in a science methods course and then created one about an allocated science topic as an assignment. The research question that guided this study was, 'What are the preservice teachers' perceptions of making a slowmation and how was the science concept represented in the animation?' Data included pre and post individual interviews, concept maps constructed during the interviews and the animations as artifacts. Three case studies provide a window into the perceptions of preservice teachers making a slowmation and show how they represented their concept. Slowmation is a new form of student-generated representation which enables them to use their own technology to construct a narrated animation as a multimodal representation to explain a science concept. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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28. Preparing Action Competent Environmental Educators: How Hard Could It Be?
- Author
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Nielsen, Wendy, Andersen, Peter, Hurley, Amy, Sabljak, Vanessa, Petereit, Amy-Lee, Hoskin, Vanessa, and Hoban, Garry
- Subjects
TEACHER education ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ENVIRONMENTAL education ,CRITICAL thinking ,EDUCATORS ,STUDENTS - Abstract
This article describes an interpretive study that evaluated a new subject in teacher education called ‘Education for Sustainable Development’. The study evaluated the subject for its ability to prepare pre-service teachers for their roles as environmental educators. We used perspectives in place-based pedagogy and critical thinking to underpin the subject design and our analysis. Data sources include instructor journals, planning documents, interviews with students and student thinking books. Interpretive analysis of the data corpus was a collaborative process that involved both subject instructors and students who took the subject. Themes that emerged from the research were centred around: (1) how the students built connections between primary school education and environmental education; (2) how students developed action competence through the activities in the subject; (3) how students were challenged to think differently about themselves as educators; and, (4) how the subject design presented its own challenges for both instructors and students. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
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29. The Mentoring Profile Inventory: an online professional development resource for cooperating teachers.
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Clarke, Anthony, Collins, John, Triggs, Valerie, Nielsen, Wendy, Augustine, Ann, Coulter, Dianne, Cunningham, Joni, Grigoriadis, Tina, Hardman, Stephanie, Hunter, Lee, Kinegal, Jane, Li, Bianca, Mah, Jeff, Mastin, Karen, Partridge, David, Pawer, Leonard, Rasoda, Sandy, Salbuvik, Kathleen, Ward, Mitch, and White, Janet
- Subjects
TEACHERS ,MENTORING ,STUDENTS ,COUNSELING ,MENTORS - Abstract
We report on the origins, development and refinement of an online inventory to help cooperating teachers focus on selected dimensions of their practice. The Mentoring Profile Inventory (MPI) helps quantify important features of both the motivating and challenging aspects of mentoring student teachers and provides results to respondents in a graphic, easy-to-understand and immediate feedback report (14 sub-scales and 3 summary charts). Psychometric properties of the MPI are shown to be robust. Results can be used individually or collectively to facilitate cooperating teacher professional development by providing the opportunity for dialog around a set of common issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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30. Slowmation: Preservice elementary teachers representing science knowledge through creating multimodal digital animations.
- Author
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Hoban, Garry, Loughran, John, and Nielsen, Wendy
- Subjects
SEMIOTICS ,ANIMATION (Cinematography) ,SCIENCE teachers ,CINEMATOGRAPHY ,DIGITAL media - Abstract
Research has identified the value of learners using technology to construct their own representations of science concepts. In this study, we investigate how learners, such as preservice elementary teachers, design and make a narrated animation to represent their science knowledge. The type of animation exemplified is called a 'Slowmation' (abbreviated from 'Slow Animation'), which is a simplified way for preservice teachers to make an animation that integrates features from claymation, object animation, and digital storytelling. Drawing on semiotic theory, a case study of three preservice elementary teachers, who were audio and video recorded as they created a slowmation, illustrates how the construction process enabled them to engage with a science concept in multiple ways. Findings suggest that when preservice teachers create a slowmation, they design and make a sequence of five representations, each being a semiotic system with particular affordances that link as a semiotic progression: (i) research notes; (ii) storyboard; (iii) models; and (iv) digital photographs, which culminate in (v) a narrated animation. In this study, the authors present their theoretical framework, explain how the preservice teachers created a slowmation using a sequence of representations to show their science knowledge and discuss the implications of these findings for learners in universities and schools. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Res Sci Teach 48: 985-1009, 2011 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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31. Perceptual Influence of Ugandan Biology Students’ Understanding of HIV/AIDS.
- Author
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Mutonyi, Harriet, Nashon, Samson, and Nielsen, Wendy S.
- Subjects
HIV ,AIDS ,HEALTH education ,BIOLOGY education ,SCIENCE education - Abstract
In Uganda, curbing the spread of HIV/AIDS has largely depended on public and private media messages about the disease. Media campaigns based on Uganda’s cultural norms of communication are metaphorical, analogical and simile-like. The topic of HIV/AIDS has been introduced into the Senior Three (Grade 11) biology curriculum in Uganda. To what extent do students’ pre-conceptions of the disease, based on these media messages influence students’ development of conceptual understanding of the disease, its transmission and prevention? Of significant importance is the impact the conceptions students have developed from the indirect media messages on classroom instruction on HIV/AIDS. The study is based in a theoretical framework of conceptual change in science learning. An interpretive case study to determine the impact of Ugandan students’ conceptions or perceptions on classroom instruction about HIV/AIDS, involving 160 students aged 15–17, was conducted in four different Ugandan high schools: girls boarding, boys boarding, mixed boarding, and mixed day. Using questionnaires, focus group discussions, recorded biology lessons and informal interviews, students’ preconceptions of HIV/AIDS and how these impact lessons on HIV/AIDS were discerned. These preconceptions fall into four main categories: religious, political, conspiracy and traditional African worldviews. Results of data analysis suggest that students’ prior knowledge is persistent even after biology instructions. This has implications for current teaching approaches, which are mostly teacher-centred in Ugandan schools. A rethinking of the curriculum with the intent of offering science education programs that promote understanding of the science of HIV/AIDS as opposed to what is happening now—insensitivity to misconceptions about the disease—is needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Boadicea Onstage before 1800, a Theatrical and Colonial History.
- Author
-
NIELSEN, WENDY C.
- Subjects
ESSAYS ,ENGLISH drama -- History & criticism ,LITERARY characters ,FEMININITY ,MOTHERS in literature ,WARRIORS - Abstract
An essay is presented which explores British theatrical representations of the first century British warrior queen Boadicea from 1600 to 1800. Plays including "The Tragedie of Bonduca," by John Fletcher, "Boadicea, Queen of Britain," by Charles Hopkins, and "A History of Britain," by John Milton are examined and particular focus is given to Boadicea's femininity. The cost of war, Boadicea's role as mother, and her characterization as a warrior are also discussed.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Metacognitive Engagement During Field-Trip Experiences: A Case Study of Students in an Amusement Park Physics Program.
- Author
-
Nielsen, Wendy S., Nashon, Samson, and Anderson, David
- Subjects
ASSESSMENT of education ,SCHOOL field trips ,FIELDWORK (Educational method) ,METACOGNITION ,SELF-monitoring (Psychology) ,EDUCATION research - Abstract
The article discusses metacognitive engagement during school filed trips. The authors detail a study that examined metacognitive engagement as students participated in an amusement park physics program. They found that students engaged in three different types of metacognitive engagement during group learning tasks, including collaborative and consensus-seeking engagement, highly argumentative engagement, and eclectic engagement in situations that had high levels of dissonance. Behavior during the exercises is analyzed.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Whatever happened to STS? Pre-service physics teachers and the history of quantum mechanics.
- Author
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Nashon, Samson, Nielsen, Wendy, and Petrina, Stephen
- Subjects
PHYSICS teachers ,VOCATIONAL guidance for teachers ,QUANTUM theory ,HISTORY of science ,SCIENTIFIC knowledge ,HISTORY of physics ,TEACHER training ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,SCIENCE & society ,EDUCATION - Abstract
If issues in the history and philosophy of science and those related to science, technology and society are generally accepted in policy, how ought these be handled in practice? Mandate in policy does not guarantee implementation in practice. Indeed, HPS and STS have for decades been marginalized in the curriculum. Subject areas designated to teach components of HPS and STS, such as design and technology, social studies and science, seem preoccupied with other aspects of the curriculum and rarely get around to HPS and STS. This study aimed at eliciting pre-service physics teachers’ perspectives on using HPS to address quantum mechanics and scientific literacy. Through questionnaires, observation of and participation in a physics methods class, 16 pre-service teachers were asked to identify topics they considered problematic to teach or learn. They were challenged to identify those topics that could effectively be taught or learned from HPS. The pre-service teachers agreed that HPS and STS were more appealing for teaching some topics, such as quantum mechanics, which is the focus of this article. This intervention in physics teacher education demonstrates the importance of using specific methods in physics instruction to demonstrate the value of HPS in scientific literacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Building Scientific Literacy in HIV/AIDS Education: A case study of Uganda.
- Author
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Mutonyi, Harriet, Nielsen, Wendy, and Nashon, Samson
- Subjects
HIV ,AIDS education ,CASE method (Teaching) ,LITERACY ,STUDENTS ,THEORY of knowledge ,SENSORY perception ,DISCUSSION ,OBSERVATION (Educational method) - Abstract
The term scientific literacy is defined differently in different contexts. The term literacy simply refers to the ability for one to read and write, but recent studies in language literacy have extended this definition. New literacy research seeks a redefinition in terms of how skills are used rather than how they are learned. Contemporary perspectives on literacy as a transfer of learned skills into daily life practises capture the understanding of what it means to be scientifically literate. Scientific literacy requires students to be able to use their scientific knowledge independently in the everyday world. Some models for teaching towards scientific literacy have been suggested including inquiry-based learning embedded in constructivist epistemologies. The inquiry-based model is posited to be effective at bringing about in-depth understanding of scientific concepts through engaging students' preconceptions. In order to establish whether directly engaging students' preconceptions can lead to in-depth understanding of the science of HIV/AIDS, a case study was designed to elucidate students' prior knowledge. From questionnaires and classroom observations, Ugandan Grade 11 students' persistent preconceptions were explored in follow-up focus group discussions. The inquiry process was used to engage students with their own perceptions of HIV/AIDS during the focus group discussions. Findings suggest that students need to dialogue with each other as they reflect on their beliefs about HIV/AIDS. Dialogue enabled students to challenge their beliefs while making connections between 'school' and 'home' knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Participation Rates in Physics 12 in BC: Science Teachers' and Students' Views.
- Author
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Nashon, Samson Madera and Nielsen, Wendy S.
- Subjects
PHYSICS ,EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements ,CHEMISTRY ,BIOLOGY ,SCIENCE teachers ,SCIENCE students - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Science, Mathematics & Technology Education is the property of Springer Nature 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
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Participation Rates in Physics 12 in BC: Science Teachers’ and Students’ Views.
- Author
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Nashon, Samson Madera and Nielsen, Wendy S.
- Abstract
In recent years, participation rates in the British Columbia (BC) provincial physics exams have been low, compared with chemistry and biology. A qualitative study employing questionnaire and interview methods sought the views of teachers and students of senior science courses on why this is the case. Data analysis revealed that students’ decisions about Physics 12 were influenced by their perceptions of the mathematical content of physics, the physics teachers’ personalities and teaching styles, the perceived difficulty of physics, and prior experience of physics. We conclude that enhancing student interest in taking physics at advanced high school levels may necessitate a wider, more articulated exposure to topics in physics, together with more careful attention to mathematical background and skills. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Staging Rousseau's Republic: French Revolutionary Festivals and Olympe de Gouges.
- Author
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Nielsen, Wendy C.
- Subjects
THEATER ,DRAMA ,DRAMA festivals ,FESTIVALS - Abstract
Comments on the issues related to the theatricality and performance in the plays written by Olympe De Gouges and "Letter to M. d'Alembert on Theatre" written by Jean-Jacques Rousseau in France. Contribution of the play to the institution of Revolutionary festivals; Influence of Rousseau on the models of performance and gender in the late eighteenth century; Assistance extended by De Gouges to the organization and staging of the Festival of the Law; Significance on the theories of Rousseau on theater, theatricality, performance, and civic identity.
- Published
- 2002
39. Querying Komparatistik: Recent Books by Corbineau-Hoffmann, Konstantinovic, and O'Sullivan.
- Author
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Nielsen, Wendy C.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Wollstonecraft’s Ghost: The Fate of the Female Philosopher in the Romantic Period / The Joseph Johnson Letterbook.
- Author
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Nielsen, Wendy C.
- Subjects
NONFICTION - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Renaissance Fun: The Machines behind the Scenes.
- Author
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Nielsen, Wendy C.
- Subjects
RENAISSANCE drama ,STAGE machinery ,NONFICTION - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Tragedy Walks the Streets: The French Revolution in the Making of Modern Drama.
- Author
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Nielsen, Wendy C.
- Subjects
FRENCH poetry ,NONFICTION ,REVOLUTIONARY poetry - Abstract
The article reviews the book "Tragedy Walks the Streets: The French Revolution in the Making of Modern Drama," by Matthew S. Buckley.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Geschlechterdifferenz in der Literaturrezeption um 1800? Zu zeitgenössischen Goethe-Lektüren (Book).
- Author
-
Nielsen, Wendy C.
- Subjects
GERMAN literature ,NONFICTION - Abstract
Reviews the book "Geschlechterdifferenz in der Literaturrezeption um 1800? Zu zeitgenössischen Goethe-Lektüren," by Silke Schlichtmann.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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