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2. Annual Proceedings of Selected Research and Development Papers Presented Online and On-Site during the Annual Convention of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (44th, Chicago, Illinois, 2021). Volume 1
- Author
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Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT), Simonson, Michael, and Seepersaud, Deborah
- Abstract
For the forty-fourth time, the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT) is sponsoring the publication of these Proceedings. Papers published in this volume were presented online and onsite during the annual AECT Convention. Volume 1 contains papers dealing primarily with research and development topics. Papers dealing with the practice of instructional technology including instruction and training issues are contained in Volume 2. [For volume 2, see ED617429.]
- Published
- 2021
3. Annual Proceedings of Selected Research and Development Papers Presented at the Annual Convention of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (40th, Jacksonville, Florida, 2017). Volume 1
- Author
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Association for Educational Communications and Technology, Simonson, Michael, and Seepersaud, Deborah
- Abstract
For the fortieth time, the Research and Theory Division of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT) is sponsoring the publication of these Proceedings. Papers published in this volume were presented at the annual AECT Convention in Jacksonville, Florida. The Proceedings of AECT's Convention are published in two volumes. Volume 1 contains 19 papers dealing primarily with research and development topics. Fourteen papers dealing with the practice of instructional technology including instruction and training issues are contained in Volume 2. Volume 1 contains the following 19 papers: (1) Gamification for Change: A New Approach to Investigate Students' Attitudes toward Educational Gamification in Online Learning Environments (Sumayah Abu-Dawood); (2) Facilitating Higher Levels of Thinking and Deeper Cognitive Processing of Course Text Using Reciprocal Teaching Strategies in Asynchronous Discussion Forums (Jenifer R. Marquis and Ginger S. Watson); (3) Online Learning Design and Implementation Models: A Model Validation Study Using Expert Instructional Designers (Ann Armstrong and Albert Gale); (4) Tracking the Design and Development of a Six Module miniMOOC for Quality Graduate Supervision (Hawazen Alharbi and Michele Jacobsen); (5) Diversity Training in Organization Settings: Effective and Ethical Approaches for Change Leaders (Ashley McArthur and Nancy B. Hastings); (6) Hey, Want to Play? "Kahooting" to Win the Learning Game (Papia Bawa); (7) An Examination of Prior Knowledge and Cueing Effects in an Animation (Ismahan Arslan-Ari); (8) Teacher Perceptions of the Adaptation of the New Computer Science (CS) Curriculum: An Evaluation of CS Curriculum Implementation (Suhkyung Shin, Jongpil Cheon, and Sungwon Shin); (9) Multimedia Video Resolution, Camera Angle, and the Impact on Instructor Credibility and Immediacy (Miguel Ramlatchan and Ginger S. Watson); (10) The Effects of Visible-Annotation Tool on the Learning Process and Learning Outcome in CSCL (Yoonhee Shin, Jaewon Jung, and Dongsik Kim); (11) Pre-Service ICT Teachers' Recommendations for School Internet Safety (Sanser Bulu, Melike Kavuk-Kalender, and Hafize Keser); (12) Turkish Schools' Readiness for Preventing Cyberbullying (Melike Kavuk-Kalender, Hafize Keser, and Sanser Bulu); (13) Examining Technology Integration Decision-Making Processes and Identifying Professional Development Needs of International Teachers (Medha Dalal, Leanna Archambault, and Catharyn Shelton); (14) Integrating Learning Analytics into Workforce Education to Develop Self-Assessment Competency (Lin Zhong); (15) Ensuring Academic Integrity in Online Courses: A Case Analysis in Three Testing Environments (Berhane Teclehaimanot, Sue Ann Hochberg, Diana Franz, Mingli Xiao, and Jiyu You); (16) Changing Student Performance and Perceptions through Productive Failure: Active Learning for Applied Chemistry in Pharmaceutics (Dan Cernusca and Sanku Mallik); (17) The Construction of Sentiment Lexicon in Educational Field Based on Word2vec (Xiang Feng and Longhui Qiu); (18) Blended Instruction by Using Simulation Method Teaching to Enhance Digital Literacy for Student Teachers in Thailand (Sumalee Chuachai); and (19) Social Network Use Preferences of Pre-Service ICT Teachers (Omer Faruk Islim and Nese Sevim Cirak). (Individual papers contain references.) [For Volume 2, see ED580817.]
- Published
- 2017
4. Lessons Learned about Designing Innovation. Conference Paper
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National Center on Scaling Up Effective Schools (NCSU) and Mihalik, Michael
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For the past two and one-half years I have been a practitioner participant in the National Center on Scaling Up Effective School's (NCSU's) work with Fort Worth Independent School District. I have a unique vantage point, being one of the few members remaining who has been involved since the very beginning. In addition, my work with NCSU has straddled two campuses and two positions (teacher/administrator), which has afforded me several different lenses on the work of this project. My experience with this innovation design has led to three observations in the areas of (1) constraints, (2) leverage, and (3) processes. While these themes do not fit neatly under a single umbrella, they authentically reflect the variety of challenges and successes I have experienced. Firstly, I suggest that constraints are equally as important as thinking outside the box when the innovation design process is being undertaken by practitioners. Secondly, I think the most successful elements of innovation arise from areas of leverage within the system. We simply cannot add more stress to the system, without providing immediate relief somewhere else. Third, building a process for implementation and change is possibly more important than the actual change that will be implemented. This parallels the idea that we must build the capacity of teachers to design and lead before we expect them to be able to do so. [This paper was developed with assistance from Education Development Center, Inc.]
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- 2015
5. Re-Heated Meals: Revisiting the Teaching, Learning and Assessment of Practical Cookery in Schools. Conference Paper
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Cambridge Assessment (United Kingdom), Elliott, Gill, and Ireland, Jo
- Abstract
The place of practical cookery within school subjects in England has, in recent years, been debated as part of concerns about the nation's health and obesity. Cookery has been a school subject for over a century, but has only ever held a minority place in the curriculum. In 2017 we surveyed teachers of practical cookery in schools, in a repeat of a survey first carried out in 2007. We asked them about the ingredients used and the skills taught in practical cookery lessons at school and also about the issues they faced delivering practical cookery teaching and assessment through the school food curriculum. We have found that the nature of the products being taught in schools has changed, with less emphasis on sugary baked items than previously, which is consistent with the development of healthy eating initiatives and awareness. However, many of the issues surrounding the teaching of cookery skills in schools identified in 2007, such as insufficient equipment, lesson time and parental support, remain unchanged. In this paper we will present the results of our study in full and discuss the implications of this research and the role of practical cookery teaching and assessment in schools in the future.
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- 2019
6. Annual Proceedings of Selected Research and Development Papers Presented at the Annual Convention of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology - Volume 1 and Selected Papers on the Practice of Educational Communications and Technology - Volume 2 (34th, Jacksonville, Florida, 2011)
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Association for Educational Communications and Technology and Simonson, Michael
- Abstract
For the thirty-fourth year, the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT) is sponsoring the publication of these Proceedings. Papers published in this volume were presented at the annual AECT Convention in Jacksonville, FL. A limited quantity of these Proceedings were printed and sold in both hardcopy and electronic versions. The Proceedings of AECT's Convention are published in two volumes. Volume #1 contains papers dealing primarily with research and development topics. Papers dealing with the practice of instructional technology including instruction and training issues are contained in Volume #2. This year, both volumes are included in one document. (Individual papers contain references, tables, and figures.) [For Volumes 1 and 2 of the 2010 proceedings, see ED514646 and ED514647.]
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- 2011
7. Exploring Program Delivery in the Further Education and Training Phase of South African Secondary Schools amidst the COVID-19 Pandemic: Challenges, Mitigation Strategies and Transformative Approaches
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Louise Fullard, Charl Wolhuter, Aaron Nhlapo, and Hennie Steyn
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This paper investigates the challenges, mitigation strategies and transformative approaches in educational programme delivery in South African education amidst the adverse influence of the pandemic in schools' Further Education and Training phase with a focus on the integration of technology-enhanced effective teaching and learning; using data obtained from interviews of a data-rich sample of the school management team and teachers of five schools. The noteworthy contribution of this paper to knowledge in the context of Comparative and International Education pertains to transformative strategies for technology-enhanced programme delivery in education. This paper's final objective is to link the explored findings of challenges, trends and innovations in the South African education system to the theme of this book focusing on the different worlds common education challenges. Furthermore, the findings emphasised the need for innovation and transformation toward a technology-enhanced education environment, especially in the Fifth Industrial Revolution milieu. In addition, this paper presented noteworthy recommendations for educational stakeholders and future research. [For the complete Volume 22 proceedings, see ED656158.]
- Published
- 2024
8. Learn Languages, Explore Cultures, Transform Lives. Selected Papers from the 2015 Central States Conference on the Teaching of Foreign Languages
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Central States Conference on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (CSCTFL) and Moeller, Aleidine J.
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The 2015 Central States Conference on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (CSCTFL) was held in Minneapolis, Minnesota together with the Minnesota Council on the Teaching of Languages and Cultures, who served as local host. This year's theme underscores the transformative nature of learning a foreign language. As language teachers we have a great responsibility to provide our students with opportunities to learn and explore languages and cultures in ways that foster intercultural communicative competence. The 2015 conference highlighted strategies, practices, and approaches that world language educators can use to help students develop the attitudes, skills, and knowledge necessary to interact with others in our global community. The CSCTFL 2015 conference featured 35 workshops and more than 200 sessions. Nine of the 16 Central States were represented by "Best of" sessions. 21 sessions from the 2014 conference were presented again at the 2015 conference as "All-Stars." The session and workshop topics represented at the 2015 conference included technology in the classroom, intercultural competence, assessment, advocacy, best practices, and the use of literature, art, and music in language classes. The authors whose articles are included in the 2015 CSCTFL "Report" addressed the 2015 conference theme, "Learn Languages Explore Cultures Transform Lives" by focusing on those elements that transform foreign language teaching and learning. The articles provide the reader with innovative ideas and approaches for world language instruction that will assist teachers in transforming their classrooms to meet the needs of the 21st century learners.
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- 2015
9. Proceedings of International Conference on Research in Education and Science (Antalya, Turkey, April 1-4, 2021). Volume 1
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International Society for Technology, Education and Science (ISTES) Organization, Shelley, Mack, Chiang, I-Tsun, and Ozturk, O. Tayfur
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"Proceedings of International Conference on Research in Education and Science" includes full papers presented at the International Conference on Research in Education and Science (ICRES) which took place on April 1-4, 2021 in Antalya, Turkey. The aim of the conference is to offer opportunities to share ideas, to discuss theoretical and practical issues and to connect with the leaders in the fields of education and science. The conference is organized annually by the International Society for Technology, Education, and Science (ISTES). The ICRES invites submissions which address the theory, research or applications in all disciplines of education and science. The ICRES is organized for: faculty members in all disciplines of education and science, graduate students, K-12 administrators, teachers, principals and all interested in education and science. After peer-reviewing process, all full papers are published in the Conference Proceedings. [Individual papers are indexed in ERIC.]
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- 2021
10. Proceedings of International Conference on Research in Education and Science (Antalya, Turkey, April 1-4, 2021). Volume 1
- Author
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International Society for Technology, Education and Science (ISTES) Organization, Shelley, Mack, Chiang, I-Tsun, and Ozturk, O. Tayfur
- Abstract
"Proceedings of International Conference on Research in Education and Science" includes full papers presented at the International Conference on Research in Education and Science (ICRES) which took place on April 1-4, 2021 in Antalya, Turkey. The aim of the conference is to offer opportunities to share ideas, to discuss theoretical and practical issues and to connect with the leaders in the fields of education and science. The conference is organized annually by the International Society for Technology, Education, and Science (ISTES). The ICRES invites submissions which address the theory, research or applications in all disciplines of education and science. The ICRES is organized for: faculty members in all disciplines of education and science, graduate students, K-12 administrators, teachers, principals and all interested in education and science. After peer-reviewing process, all full papers are published in the Conference Proceedings.
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- 2021
11. Annual Proceedings of Selected Research and Development Papers Presented at the Annual Convention of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (36th, Anaheim, California, 2013). Volume 2
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Association for Educational Communications and Technology and Simonson, Michael
- Abstract
For the thirty-sixth year, the Research and Theory Division of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT) is sponsoring the publication of these Proceedings. Papers published in this volume were presented at the annual AECT Convention in Anaheim, California. The Proceedings of AECT's Convention are published in two volumes. Volume 1 contains papers dealing primarily with research and development topics. Papers dealing with the practice of instructional technology including instruction and training issues are contained in Volume 2. (Individual papers contain references.) [For Volume 1, see ED546877.]
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- 2013
12. Annual Proceedings of Selected Research and Development Papers Presented at the Annual Convention of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (36th, Anaheim, California, 2013). Volume 1
- Author
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Association for Educational Communications and Technology and Simonson, Michael
- Abstract
For the thirty-sixth year, the Research and Theory Division of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT) is sponsoring the publication of these Proceedings. Papers published in this volume were presented at the annual AECT Convention in Anaheim, California. The Proceedings of AECT's Convention are published in two volumes. Volume 1 contains papers dealing primarily with research and development topics. Papers dealing with the practice of instructional technology including instruction and training issues are contained in Volume 2. (Individual papers contain references.) [For Volume 2, see ED546878.]
- Published
- 2013
13. Proceedings of International Conference on Social and Education Sciences (Chicago, Illinois, October 15-18, 2020)
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International Society for Technology, Education and Science (ISTES) Organization, Akerson, Valari, and Sahin, Ismail
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"International Conference on Social and Education Sciences" includes full papers presented at the International Conference on Social and Education Sciences (IConSES) which took place on October 15-18, 2020 in Chicago, IL, USA. The aim of the conference is to offer opportunities to share your ideas, to discuss theoretical and practical issues and to connect with the leaders in the fields of education and social sciences. The conference is organized annually by the International Society for Technology, Education, and Science (ISTES). The IConSES invites submissions which address the theory, research or applications in all disciplines of education and social sciences. The IConSES is organized for: faculty members in all disciplines of education and social sciences, graduate students, K-12 administrators, teachers, principals and all interested in education and social sciences. After peer-reviewing process, all full papers are published in the Conference Proceedings. [For the 2019 proceedings, see ED602587.]
- Published
- 2020
14. Dealing with a Nightmare Situation -- Teachers in English Schools and Trans/Gender Distressed/Gender Dysphoria Students
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Gillian L. S. Hilton
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This paper discusses the responses of schools and teachers in England and some other developed countries to Trans children, that is, those who feel that their assigned sex at birth was not correct. These children may be defined as Trans, that is wanting to change their assigned sex, or in other ways, such as having gender distress or dysphoria, or not being cisnormative which is, accepting one's sex assigned at birth. Recent years have seen a steady increase in the numbers of school children concerned about their birth assigned sex, presenting numerous problems. These include areas such as toilet facilities, changing rooms, sports studied, clothing, names and the use of pronouns and how to allot sleeping accommodation on a school journey. Parents in many cases are very concerned over schools' reactions, which have included schools agreeing to allow social transitioning without informing parents, ignoring the safeguarding instructions to schools, that parents must be informed of physical or mental health issues a child discloses. In addition, parents and schools can be at odds, with how schools should respond. In England, teachers have been waiting for guidance from the DfE on this matter since 2018, but this was not produced for schools until the end of 2023 for consultation, leaving schools to make individual decisions on actions. Comparisons are made with how schools in other developed countries have responded to this challenge and a small group of teachers in England, were asked to express their personal views on this subject and how it had affected their role in school. [For the complete Volume 22 proceedings, see ED656158.]
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- 2024
15. Secondary Teachers' Education Programs to Promote a Positive Learning Climate through the Cases of France, Greece, and England: The Planning of a Research
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Aikaterini Sklavenitou
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This paper presents an ongoing comparative study of secondary teachers' education programs in France, Greece, and England, with a primary focus on strategies aimed at cultivating a positive learning environment in schools. Recent studies have underlined the significance of teachers' pedagogical competence formation as a determinant element which will form their future in the teaching profession. Globalization and technological development being major characteristics of our century have had an undeniable impact on educational thought and practice which imposes the need to acquire new types of knowledge and skills to ensure teachers' capacity to deal with the needs of the new generation. Secondary teachers must implement targeted handlings towards a special age group--adolescence--in combination with the principles of the curriculum. Through interviews and focus groups with secondary teachers of various specialization and teaching experience the aim is to understand their needs and level of preparation for the purpose of entering the classroom equipped to conduct their demanding role and to explore the ways the undergraduate studies of secondary teachers can be enriched both theoretically--and especially--at a practical level. [For the complete Volume 22 proceedings, see ED656158.]
- Published
- 2024
16. Examine the Notion That AI Has Come to Replace Education Jobs in Classroom Teaching and Learning Done by Human Beings
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Elizabeth Achinewhu-Nworgu
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There is a growing concern that AI is likely to replace the work done face to face in the classroom by teachers. The concerns also extend to the students use of AI to complete assignments which could impact on their grades either positive or negative and in some cases, when a student work is detected with high AI the work could be classified as plagiarism if AI usage is not declared. On another note, there are increasing debates about the use of AI as a valid tool to support work completed by human beings. Whatever maybe the growing concerns, many researchers have argued that AI is not likely to replace education jobs such as teaching and learning done by teachers and education administrators. The purpose of this paper is to explore debates around the use of AI in education, mostly in teaching and learning and assessment of students university misconduct policy. Teachers work and the link to the opinions on integrating AI in the classroom are illuminated by empirical evidence gathered via interviews. A lot of educators respond to AI in different ways. Some of the debates falls around AI as God of the admin work and assessment of students s sent tools that can help reduce some work such as helping with multiple choice questions, on the other hand, some students have been penalised and in some cases failed their work due to use of AI in completing their assignments without acknowledging the use. In addition, others have argued that AI has come to replace the work done by teachers and are anxious about AI in education jobs done by teachers, hence would not bear the idea for classroom teaching and learning. [For the complete Volume 22 proceedings, see ED656158.]
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- 2024
17. Annual Proceedings of Selected Research and Development Papers Presented at the National Convention of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (28th, Orlando, Florida, 2005). Volume 2
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Association for Educational Communications and Technology, Washington, DC., Simonson, Michael, and Crawford, Margaret
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For the twenty-eighth year, the Research and Theory Division of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT) is sponsoring the publication of these Proceedings. Papers published in this volume were presented at the National AECT Convention in Orlando, Florida. The Proceedings of AECT's Convention are published in two volumes. Volume 2 contains over 100 papers dealing with instruction and training issues. (Individual papers contain references, figures, and tables.) [For Volume 1, see ED499958.]
- Published
- 2005
18. Annual Proceedings of Selected Research and Development Papers Presented at the National Convention of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (27th, Chicago, Illinois, 2004). Volume 1
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Association for Educational Communications and Technology, Washington, DC., Simonson, Michael, and Crawford, Margaret
- Abstract
For the twenty-seventh year, the Research and Theory Division of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT) is sponsoring the publication of these Proceedings. Papers published in this volume were presented at the National AECT Convention in Chicago, Illinois. The Proceedings of AECT's Convention are published in two volumes. Volume 1 contains papers dealing primarily with research and development topics. (Individual papers contain references, figures, and tables.) [For Volume 2, see ED499962.]
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- 2004
19. Annual Proceedings of Selected Research and Development Papers Presented at the National Convention of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (26th, Anaheim, California, 2003). Volume 1
- Author
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Association for Educational Communications and Technology, Washington, DC., Simonson, Michael, and Crawford, Margaret
- Abstract
For the twenty-sixth year, the Research and Theory Division of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT) is sponsoring the publication of these Proceedings. Papers published in this volume were presented at the National AECT Convention in Anaheim, CA. The Proceedings of AECT's Convention are published in two volumes. Volume 1 contains papers dealing primarily with research and development topics. Papers dealing with instruction and training issues are contained in volume 2 which also contains over 60 papers. The papers contained in this document represent some of the most current thinking in educational communications and technology. (Individual papers contain references, figures, and tables.) [For Volume 2, see ED496303. For Volume 1 of the 2002 proceedings, see ED496300. For Volume 2 of the 2002 proceedings, see ED496301.]
- Published
- 2003
20. Texas Papers in Foreign Language Education, Fall 2002.
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Texas Univ., Austin. Foreign Language Education Program.
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Articles are divided into two sections. Section 1, "Research and Theory, includes: "The Influence of Pronunciation Instruction on the Pronunciation of English Word-Final Consonants by Brazilian Learners" (Roseanne Silveira); "Perceptions, Interactions and Immersion: A Cross-Comparative Case Study of African-American Students' Experiences in a French Immersion Class and a Regular French Class" (Michelle Haj-Broussard); "Teachers Studying Abroad: An Analysis of Changes in Linguistic and Cultural Knowledge and Attitudes toward Spanish Culture and the Effects of Ethnographic Interviews" (Greg Thompson); "Motivation in Foreign/Second Language Learning: Some Problems and Implications" and "Learning to Teach Spanish" (Gloria Velez-Rendon). Section 2, "Teaching Tips," includes: "Dialogic Construction and Reflective Practice: A Teacher Educator's Action Research Study of Teacher as Learner" (Marjorie Haley and Sabrina Wesley-Nero); "Creating an Innovative English as a Second Language in the Workplace Program" (David Schwarzer, Clarena Loretta, and Vyacheslav Zub); "Heretical Method for Teaching Foreign Languages" (Zev Bar-Lev); and "Professional Organizations: A Comprehensive Resource List" (Felicia Rader). (Papers contain references.) (SM)
- Published
- 2002
21. Annual Proceedings of Selected Research and Development Papers Presented at the National Convention of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (25th, Dallas, Texas, 2002). Volume 1
- Author
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Association for Educational Communications and Technology, Washington, DC., Simonson, Michael, and Crawford, Margaret
- Abstract
For the twenty-fifth year, the Research and Theory Division of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT) is sponsoring the publication of these Proceedings. Papers published in this volume were presented at the National AECT Convention in Dallas, TX. The Proceedings of AECT's Convention are published in two volumes. Volume 1 contains papers dealing primarily with research and development topics. Papers dealing with instruction and training issues are contained in Volume 2. Volume 2 contains over 60 papers. (Individual papers contain references and tables.) [For Volumes 1 and 2 of the 2001 proceedings, see ED470066.]
- Published
- 2002
22. Learning Languages in a Digital World. Selected Papers from the 2007 Central States Conference
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Central States Conference on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (CSCTFL), Moeller, Aleidine J., and Theiler, Janine
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The title of this volume, "Learning Languages in the Digital Age," focuses on the integration of technology to promote authentic and interactive communication within and outside the walls of the language classroom. Major innovations have shifted Internet use from a consumer to a participatory model; that is, previously, Internet users were placed in the role of consumers who had access to materials and information (this phase of Internet integration is commonly referred to as Web 1.0). Now Internet users can become producers of resources themselves (Web 2.0 is a term used to describe this shift in Internet use from a consumer model to a participatory model). While traditional consumer and communication applications continue, widespread participation as producers of resources has jumped dramatically. Blogging, podcasting, Wikis, and other forms of democratized media are all examples of applications that promise to challenge traditional systems and roles and to enhance the nature of language teaching and learning. This shift from consumer to producer allows language learners to take a more active role in the learning process, participate in authentic communication and create products that can serve as authentic assessment of language production. This volume provides the theoretical foundation for effective language teaching and learning while providing practical applications for the language classroom. Each of the three sections represents an important aspect of language education designed to promote best practices and to increase student achievement: (1) Embracing Technology: Tools Teachers Can Use to Improve Language Learning; (2) Teacher Education and Professional Development: Agents of Change; and (3) Teaching Culture through Divergent Paths.
- Published
- 2007
23. Responding to a New Vision for Teacher Development. Selected Papers from the 2006 Central States Conference
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Central States Conference on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (CSCTFL), McAlpine, Dave, and Dhonau, Stephanie
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The 2006 Central States Conference on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (CSC), a joint conference with the Illinois Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages, celebrated languages of the world in the classroom and in the community. This volume of the CSC "Report" is the companion volume for the 2005 CSC "Report," "The Year of Languages: Its Challenges, Changes, Choices, and Celebrations" (see ED598294). This 2006 volume focuses on pre-service teacher preparation and its connected issues, and in-service teacher development and its related topics. Integrating the perspectives of language and communities for both present and future teachers is evident in the conference program and in the articles selected for this volume. The articles integrate the perspectives of a new vision for teacher development whether it is meeting the needs of a changing population, developing mentoring programs, studying abroad, or preparing for new requirements. The participants of the conference integrated the perspectives of language and communities. Both the CSC "Report" and conference integrated perspectives of foreign language education fundamental to meeting the future needs of students and teachers.
- Published
- 2006
24. Academic Women: Different Ways of Knowing. ASHE Annual Meeting Paper.
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Amey, Marilyn J.
- Abstract
This paper examines the degree to which women faculty and administrators are able to engage in connected knowing and interdependent definitions of self and reality within an institutional environment that values and rewards individualism, separateness, competition, and objectivity. The paper notes that connected knowing is essentially the process of working within groups, investing in empowering others, and focusing on the process rather than the outcomes. Separate knowing, conversely, involves greater isolation of the individual from the group in order to maintain objectivity and the interpreting of relationships hierarchically. Results are presented from interviews with 17 women faculty members and administrators at one state university designed to determine the struggles of these women to remain connected knowers in an environment that most felt supported and rewarded separate knowing. The interviews reveal that, while administrative women seemed more successful at integrating their independence and connected ways of knowing, most women faculty speak of their concern and frustration with this conflict. It is suggested that such conflicts should be considered as important retention and vitality problems for both women and men in collegiate systems. Contains 15 references. (GLR)
- Published
- 1992
25. Understanding Institutional Image. AIR 1992 Annual Forum Paper.
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Terkla, Dawn Geronimo and Pagano, Marian F.
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This paper discusses the use of a semantic differential research tool to investigate the image of Tufts University in Massachusetts. Specifically explored are the following questions: (1) What are the differences between the institution's desired image and current image? (2) Do various constituencies view the institution differently, and if so, how do alumni perceptions differ from those of current students? and (3) Does the institution's internal image differ from its external image? The paper describes the various surveys used to collect study data, including obtaining opinions from alumni, faculty and administration, college seniors, college applicants, and the current student population. Study results include the following items: elements of the desired image tended toward the extremes; perceptions differed among the various constituencies although the image held by alumni and currently enrolled students was quite similar; and most of the differences that did exist, existed between the incoming freshmen (rosier image and more positive view) and one or more of the other groups surveyed. It is noted that because incoming freshmen hold a rather different image of the school than the other groups, student retention problems may develop as these students matriculate and discover that the university is not what they expected. (GLR)
- Published
- 1992
26. New Pathways to a Degree: An Assessment of the Use of Instructional Technologies at Seven Institutions. AIR 1994 Annual Forum Paper.
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Zuniga, Robin Etter and Johnstone, Sally M.
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This paper examines the design and findings of a survey of 31 faculty and 550 students participating in 7 Annenberg/CPE New Pathways to a Degree electronic learning projects. Each project was selected because it proposed innovative ways to use technology to create new educational opportunities for "new majority learners" (students unable to attend college in conventional ways). All New Pathways courses used technologies in combinations, and communication between students and instructors and among students was supported via several technologies. Survey results indicated that off-campus students found delivery of lectures via video technology (two-way video, one-way video with two-way audio, broadcast video, and videotape) to be acceptable. Students felt that the quality of their mediated interaction with their instructor was as good as or better than experiences in face-to-face classes, and half the students felt that the frequency of their interactions were the same or more frequent. To promote interaction between faculty and students or among students, technologies such as audio-conferencing, electronic mail, or voice mail were more effective than video technologies. Faculty felt that the technologies that let them act the same way they do in face-to-face classes provided the best tools for interaction. The technologies are pushing changes in the relationship among course content, mentor, and student. (Contains 18 references.) (JDD)
- Published
- 1994
27. Towards Effectiveness: Campus Climate at the University of Cyprus. AIR 1996 Annual Forum Paper.
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Pashiardis, Petros
- Abstract
This study examined organizational climate at the University of Cyprus 4 years after its establishment in order to obtain the perceptions of employees and promote more open and constructive communication among faculty, clerical and professional staff, and the university leadership. The Personal Assessment of the University Climate Survey was administered and completed by 150 college employees, 131 full-time faculty and 72 administrators. The method of "gap analysis" was used to find the areas with most need for improvement. The study found that the greatest needs were: (1) wider dissemination of information across the institution; (2) more effective interaction of the leadership with faculty and administrative personnel; (3) more use of group problem solving methods and techniques across and within departments and administrative services; and (4) more need for feedback on their work from both faculty and administrative staff. Evidence that organizational climate exerts a significant effect on organizational performance suggests urgency in addressing these areas of need. (Contains 47 references.) (DB)
- Published
- 1996
28. Evolution of a 5-Year Action Research Project: Results and Implications for Empowering School Improvement. Short Paper.
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Romance, Nancy and Vitale, Michael R.
- Abstract
This paper presents an overview of the findings and implications of an ongoing 5-year collaborative action research project conducted by university faculty and classroom teachers in a large urban school district in the southeastern United States. Based on the premise that participation in research empowers teachers to take action to improve schools, the project both supports and encourages the involvement of practicing classroom teachers in research projects. The document provides a framework for examining: (1) the development of a teacher-mentor model that offers a foundation for school improvement by enhancing teachers' research interests; and (2) the capability of teachers to conduct and do research (an analysis of requirements). A prototype model for developing the capability of teachers to do research is described. The model advocates some form of apprenticeship and focuses on the means through which a collegial relationship (teacher-researcher) can evolve into a type of apprenticeship relationship (apprentice-mentor) through which teachers can pursue the substantive knowledge and research tools they need to become colleagues as practicing researchers in the field of science education. (LL)
- Published
- 1993
29. Satisfied Faculty and Involved Chairpersons: Keys to Faculty Retention. ASHE Annual Meeting Paper.
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Nienhuis, Robert W.
- Abstract
This study sought to identify those factors which increase a faculty member's satisfaction with, and desire to remain at, his or her institution of higher education when presented with a competing job offer. Tenured, tenure-stream, and specialist faculty (N=2,051) at a research university were surveyed. Participants were asked to rate: (1) their degree of satisfaction with each of 31 aspects of the job and (2) the importance of each of 44 factors in deciding to leave the university. In addition, 25 faculty who had received recent external job offers were interviewed regarding their decision making process as were nine department chairpersons who had discussed such external job offers with a faculty member. Six issues were identified as being factors in job satisfaction of which the most important in a decision to remain or leave were those having to do with colleagues and recognition. Two areas of involvement by the department chairperson were identified as being of critical importance for faculty retention. First, the creation of a positive climate in the department and, second, the response of the chairperson to a faculty member's announcement of a job offer (faculty members wish to be told they are valued and that every effort will be made to retain them). An appendix charts the factor loadings for both job satisfaction and reasons for leaving the university. Contains 26 references. (DB)
- Published
- 1994
30. Academic Health Center Faculty at Work. AIR 1991 Annual Forum Paper.
- Author
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Freeman, Irving
- Abstract
This paper extends part of a study conducted by the National Center for Research to Improve Postsecondary Teaching and Learning on perceptions of college faculty members regarding their work. This study extends the analysis to include the attitudes of faculty at an academic health center (the University of Mississippi Medical Center). The study used a modified version of the "Faculty at Work" instrument containing questions in the areas of: (1) attributes of valued faculty members; (2) faculty influence on matters important to their work; and (3) perceptions of the campus environment. Responses by 250 faculty members (a 50% response) were compared to those in the original study. The study found no relationship between the rankings of academic health center faculty and liberal arts faculty; no relationship in the rankings of the values and attitudes characteristic of valued faculty members; far more emphasis given to publishing as important for the liberal arts faculty; similarity in valued personality characteristics; significant differences between the two groups on items involving the campus environment; and significant differences between groups in the perception of degree of faculty influence over various outcomes. Results suggest the existence of a separate culture of academic health center faculty. Includes 10 references. (DB)
- Published
- 1991
31. What Are the Prerequisites for Today's T&I Students? A Research Paper.
- Author
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Rogers, George E.
- Abstract
A study identified what competencies secondary trade and industrial (T&I) instructors from Central Pennsylvania believed technology education should provide. A total of 33 instructors of 49 surveyed responded to a questionnaire developed from Pucel's (1992) categories of technology education and work attitudes as identified by Gregson (1991). An analysis of variance treatment indicated 27 competency comparisons significant at the p=.05 level. The results of the data analysis showed that the competencies T&I instructors would like technology education graduates to possess were not current high-tech issues. Rather, they identified these competencies: good work ethic, the ability to measure, and the ability to identify and use hand tools and equipment. Recommendations for technology education included emphasis on these affective domain attributes: following directions, pride in work, being dependable and punctual, exhibiting awareness of safety, and being conscientious. These cognitive and psychomotor competencies were recommended as core content of any technology education curriculum: measurement, identification and use of common hand tools and equipment, and knowledge of technical terminology. The following: competencies were not considered a major part of the technology education curricular content: economic factors, invention process, high-tech applications, and desktop publishing. (Contains 13 references.) (YLB)
- Published
- 1993
32. Academic Tasks as the Representation of Content in Postsecondary Teaching. ASHE Annual Meeting Paper.
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Blake, Veronica M. and Dinham, Sarah M.
- Abstract
This study examined W. Doyle's notion of academic task as content representation in the college setting, examining the products students were asked to produce, the operations they were required to use in order to produce those products, the cognitive operations required and resources available, and the accountability system involved. Interviews were conducted with seven undergraduate-to-doctoral level teachers who were teaching a particular course for the first time. Detailed findings are presented from one case as an example of the teacher's view of the purpose of the course, the design of student tasks, and the thinking that accompanied the process. Across the seven participants, three themes emerged: (1) task systems were designed to engage students with course content in a thoughtful way throughout the semester and to allow them to synthesize that course content at the end of the semester; (2) learning through doing emerged as an implied instructional theory; and (3) task design served as a mirror of the way students are expected to think in the discipline. These three themes yielded two major conclusions: (1) academic tasks provide the vehicle for knowledge transformation, so that the course content can be comprehensible to students, and (2) through academic tasks students perform the activities necessary for assimilating and comprehending course material. (17 references) (JDD)
- Published
- 1990
33. A Comparison of Teaching Goals, Assumptions, and Practices of Faculty in Eight Liberal Arts Disciplines. ASHE Annual Meeting Paper.
- Author
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Lawrence, Janet H.
- Abstract
This study attempted to: (1) identify differences, among full-time academic faculty in eight disciplines and five major institutional types, regarding their goals for classroom instruction, their assumptions about undergraduate students and the conditions under which students learn best, and their teaching practices; and (2) determine which of the two organizational dimensions, institutional type or academic discipline, is the stronger predictor of faculty members' goals, assumptions, and practices. A survey of 8,130 faculty members teaching in 5 major institutional categories was conducted between November 1987, and January 1988; of this total 3,972 replied, for a response rate of 48.9 percent. Analysis of results indicated that the transmission of facts, principles, and theories were the major instructional goals. Slightly less important was the demonstration of intellectual, artistic, or scientific process. The faculty also agreed that they alone should determine course content and pace. The assumptions about undergraduate students were positive: the students were seen as being able to think on their own, hardworking, and well-motivated. Differences of opinion usually split across institutional lines, with faculty at research and doctoral institutions less interested than faculty in comprehensive and community colleges in emphasizing non-intellectual instructional goals such as developing or improving the students' social and economic conditions, or engaging in formal modes of individualized instruction. Tables are included. Contains 26 references. (GLR)
- Published
- 1990
34. Using a Triple Number Line to Represent Multiple Constructs of Fractions: A Task Design Process and Product
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Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia (MERGA), Lovemore, Tarryn, Robertson, Sally-Ann, and Graven, Mellony
- Abstract
This paper reports on a key representation, a triple number line, designed as part of the first author's doctoral study. The study sought ways to represent multiple constructs of fractions in the context of merging music and mathematics to support learners' understanding of fractions. A problem scenario was designed guided by Realistic Mathematics Education principles. Findings shared in this paper are based on the process of designing and implementing the tasks around the triple number line. Data for this qualitative, participatory dual-design experiment in task design were collected via formal and informal interviews in two micro-Communities of Practice. We conclude that the key representation of the triple number line can be a powerful tool for supporting learners in their fraction understanding.
- Published
- 2023
35. High-Stakes Examination Tasks as Impetus for Primary Mathematics Teachers' Reform in Their Instructional Practice
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Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia (MERGA) and Kaur, Berinderjeet
- Abstract
The study reported in this paper is on the professional development (PD) of primary school mathematics teachers. Teachers from two primary schools participated in the PD for two years. High-stakes mathematics examination tasks were used to kick start awareness and thinking about teaching for big ideas. Teachers did the tasks and discussed their solutions focusing on how their instruction could facilitate the acquisition of mathematical ideas as a body of connected knowledge. Data presented in this paper show that the tasks teachers worked with at the start of the PD did impact their understanding and instructional practice specific to big ideas in mathematics. Some challenges the teachers faced during the PD are also noted.
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- 2023
36. Exploring the Impact on Practice of Secondary Teachers' Beliefs and Attitudes towards 21st Century Skills and Mathematical Proficiency
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Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia (MERGA), Whitney-Smith, Rachael, and Day, Lorraine
- Abstract
In this paper we report on an aspect of the findings of a larger three-phase study exploring the factors that influence teachers implementing pedagogies that cultivate students' STEM capabilities and 21st century skills. Data were collected through an online questionnaire, semi-structured interviews, focus groups and case studies. This paper will focus on the findings from the first phase of this study and initial analysis of focus groups and semi-structured interviews data. Preliminary findings show that participants hold mixed beliefs concerning student proficiency in mathematics and there are common factors that influence decisions concerning the use of pedagogical practices that support students' mathematical proficiency and the development of students' 21st century skills. These factors include teachers' personal beliefs and attitudes, perceived time and curriculum constraints, student behaviour and students' academic ability.
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- 2023
37. GES App -- Supporting Global Employability Skills from the Perspectives of Students, Staff and Employers
- Author
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Sobah Abbas Petersen, Maria Iqbal, Alan Williams, and Gavin Baxter
- Abstract
Global Employability Skills are skills that students acquire during their study period, that are in addition to their academic knowledge and skills, and that would help in their careers. As students continue their university journeys, they often overlook or underestimate the importance of developing Global Employability Skills that employers may consider important for their jobs. In this paper, we present a mobile application, the GES App, designed to help students recognize, document, and articulate their skills to their prospective employees. The GES App is designed to stimulate university students to reflect upon their experiences and assess the skills they may develop outside of their formal university studies. This paper presents how such an app could support students plan their careers and develop their Global Employability Skills that would make them more attractive to their future employers. A use case scenario is described to illustrate the role the GES App could play, from the perspectives of students, staff, and employers. [For the full proceedings, see ED639391.]
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- 2023
38. Proceedings of the International Association for Development of the Information Society (IADIS) International Conference on Cognition and Exploratory Learning in Digital Age (14th, Vilamoura, Algarve, Portugal, October 18-20, 2017)
- Author
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International Association for Development of the Information Society (IADIS), Sampson, Demetrios G., Spector, J. Michael, Ifenthaler, Dirk, and Isaías, Pedro
- Abstract
These proceedings contain the papers of the 14th International Conference on Cognition and Exploratory Learning in the Digital Age (CELDA 2017), 18-20 October 2017, which has been organized by the International Association for Development of the Information Society (IADIS) and endorsed by the Japanese Society for Information and Systems in Education (JSISE). The CELDA 2017 Conference received 72 submissions from more than 25 countries. Out of the papers submitted, 27 were accepted as full papers for an acceptance rate of 38%; 23 were accepted as short papers and 2 were accepted as reflection papers. In addition to the presentation of full, short and reflection papers, the conference also includes one keynote presentation from an internationally distinguished researcher, "Classroom Orchestration: From Practical Tips to Formal Models" (Pierre Dillenbourg). Full papers include: (1) Are Learning Logs Related to Procrastination? From the Viewpoint of Self-Regulated Learning (Masanori Yamada, Misato Oi and Shin'ichi Konomi); (2) Asymmetry in the Perception of Friendship in Student Groups (Luigi Lancieri); (3) Exploring Teacher Use of an Online Forum to Develop Game-Based Learning Literacy (Amanda Barany, Mamta Shah and Aroutis Foster); (4) Educational Assessment of Students in Primary School in Tunisia (Wiem Ben Khalifa, Dalila Souilem and Mahmoud Neji); (5) Impact of Early Numeracy Training on Kindergartners from Middle-Income Families (Carla Meloni, Rachele Fanari, Andrea Bertucci and Sara Berretti); (6) 360 Degree Videos within a Climbing MOOC (Michael Gänsluckner, Martin Ebner and Isidor Kamrat); (7) Cultivating Students' Reading Literacy Using Digital Textile-Based Reading in a Chinese Primary School (Patricia Norte, Joao Negreiros and Ana Correia); (8) How to Flip a Classroom and Improve Student Learning and Engagement: The Case of PSYC1030 (Pedro Isaias, Blake McKimmie, Aneesha Bakharia, John Zornig and Anna Morris); (9) Early Numerical Competence and Number Line Task Performance in Kindergartners (Rachele Fanari, Carla Meloni and Davide Massidda); (10) Exploring the Impact of the Informational Value of Feedback Choices on Performance Outcomes in an Online Assessment Game (Maria Cutumisu); (11) Refining Presentation Documents with Presentation Schema (Yuki Obara and Akihiro Kashihara); (12) The Knowledge Development Model: Responding to the Changing Landscape of Learning in Virtual Environments (Nan B. Adams); (13) Mobile Learning Analytics in Higher Education: Usability Testing and Evaluation of an APP Prototype (Matthias Kuhnel, Luisa Seiler, Andrea Honal and Dirk Ifenthaler); (14) Digital Competence Model of Distance Learning Students (Ketia Kellen A. da Silva and Patricia A. Behar); (15) How Dispositional Learning Analytics Helps Understanding the Worked-Example Principle (Dirk Tempelaar); (16) Pushing Buttons: A Sociomaterial Exploration of the Distributed Lecture (Anna MacLeod, Paula Cameron, Olga Kits and Cathy Fournier); (17) Multimodal Teaching and Learning with the Use of Technology: Meanings, Practices and Discourses (Vasiliki Papageorgiou and Petros Lameras); (18) Contrasts in Openness toward Mobile Learning in the Classroom: A Study of Elementary, Middle and High School Teachers (Rhonda Christensen and Gerald Knezek); (19) Classification of Learning Styles in Virtual Learning Environment Using J48 Decision Tree (Renato R. Maaliw, III and Melvin A. Ballera); (20) Using Short Videos as Testing Elements in Skill Matching--Test Design in the SMART Project (Marc Beutner and Frederike Anna Rüscher); (21) I Might Not Be as Tech as You Think: Collegiate Print versus Digital Preferences (Joan Ann Swanson, Susan L. Renes and Anthony T. Strange); (22) A Visualization System for Predicting Learning Activities Using State Transition Graphs (Fumiya Okubo, Atsushi Shimada, Yuta Taniguchi and Shin'ichi Konomi); (23) OCRA, A Mobile Learning Prototype for Understanding Chemistry Concepts (Tenku Putri Norishah Tenku Shariman and Othman Talib); (24) Teaching Strategies and Methods in Modern Environments for Learning of Programming (Slobodanka Djenic and Jelena Mitic); (25) A Lecture Supporting System Based on Real-Time Learning Analytics (Atsushi Shimada and Shin'ichi Konomi); (26) Characteristics of Effective Pedagogical Strategies for Self-Regulated Learning in Technology-Enhanced Environments: Towards Improving Learning Outcome (Ian S. McGowan); and (27) Pseudo-Haptic Feedback for Promoting Narrative Comprehension (Kazuaki Umetsu and Akihiro Kashihara). Short papers include: (1) Development of a Support Application and a Textbook for Practicing Facial Expression Detection for Students with Visual Impairment (Hirotaka Saito, Akinobu Ando, Shota Itagaki, Taku Kawada, Darold Davis and Nobuyuki Nagai); (2) Teaching Media Design by Using Scrum. A Qualitative Study within a Media Informatics Elective Course (Ines Herrmann, Sander Münster, Vincent Tietz and Rainer Uhlemann); (3) An Architecture to Support Wearables in Education and Wellbeing (Fernando Luis-Ferreira, Andreia Artifice, Gary McManus and João Sarraipa); (4) Differentiated Learning Environment--A Classroom for Quadratic Equation, Function, and Graphs (Emre Dinç); (5) Leveraging the Affordances of Mobile Learning for Vocabulary Gains (Michael Bowles); (6) Towards a Framework of Using Knowledge Tools for Teaching by Solving Problems in Technology-Enhanced Learning Environment (Sergei Kostousov and Dmitry Kudryavtsev); (7) Exploring Students' Learning Journals with Web-Based Interactive Report Tool (Yuta Taniguchi, Fumiya Okubo, Atsushi Shimada and Shin'ichi Konomi); (8) The Framework of Intervention Engine Based on Learning Analytics (Muhittin Sahin and Halil Yurdugül); (9) On the Use of E-TPCK for Situated Teacher Professional Development (Maria Mama Timotheou, Andri Christodoulou and Charoula Angeli); (10) Narb-Based Analysis of Tweets Related to United Airlines Controversy: Learning Beyond the Media (Ananda Mitra); (11) Learners' and Teachers' Perceptions of Learning Analytics (LA): A Case Study of South Hampton Solent University (SSU) (Osama Khan); (12) Issues of IT-Professionals Training in Traditional Educational Process (Farid Eminov and Irina Golitsyna); (13) The Isolation Emotion: An Emotional Point of View on Teaming and Group Tools in E-Learning Environments (Tarek Boutefara and Latifa Mahdaoui); (14) Development of Critical Thinking with Metacognitive Regulation and Toulmin Model (Yasushi Gotoh); (15) A Preliminary Investigation into Parents' Concerns about Programming Education in Japanese Primary Schools (Yukiko Maruyama, Hiroko Kanoh and Kinya Adachi); (16) Designing Philadelphia Land Science as a Game to Promote Identity Exploration (Amanda Barany, Mamta Shah, Jessica Cellitti, Migela Duka, Zachari Swiecki, Amanda Evenstone, Hannah Kinley, Peter Quigley, David Williamson Shaffer and Aroutis Foster); (17) Juxtapose: An Exploration of Mobile Augmented Reality Collaborations and Professional Practices in a Creative Learning Environment (Darren Menorath and Laurent Antonczak); (18) Gender, Games and Space (Suzanne de Castell, Hector Larios and Jennifer Jenson); (19) The Contribution of Collective Intelligence for the Analysis of the Phenomenon of Students Overcrowding (Dikagma Bassagou and Luigi Lancieri); (20) Integrated Collaborative E-Learning for the Global Management Education in the 21st Century (Barbara W. K. Son); (21) Relations between Cognitive Resources and Two Types of Germane Load for Learning (Kazuhisa Miwa, Hitoshi Terai and Yosuke Mizuno); (22) A Framework for People Re-Identification in Multi-Camera Surveillance Systems (Sirine Ammar, Nizar Zaghden and Mahmoud Neji); and (23) Connecting the Dots: Linking Creativity, Synthesis Skills, and the Students' Anxiety about the Future (Ioan Susnea, Emilia Pecheanu, Luminita Dumitriu and Adina Cocu). The two reflection papers are: (1) Localising Content for an XMOOC in the UAE (Jenny Eppard and Preeya Reddy); and (2) Academic Reading on a Collaborative, Online Platform (Jenny Eppard and Preeya Reddy). An author index is included. Individual papers contain references.
- Published
- 2017
39. Student Effort and Progress Learning Analytics Data Inform Teachers' SEL Discussions in Math Class
- Author
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Natalie Brezack, Wynnie Chan, and Mingyu Feng
- Abstract
This paper explores how learning analytics data provided by a math problem-solving educational technology platform informed 5th and 6th grade teachers' instructional decisions around socioemotional learning (SEL). MathSpring is an educational technology tool that provides teachers with data on students' effort, progress, and emotions while students are solving math problems. This paper presents findings from qualitative analyses of 11 classroom observations, 10 observation follow-up chats, and 35 teacher interviews that were collected as part of a randomized control trial conducted in the northeastern United States. The analyses include teachers who used the program with their students (treatment group) and teachers who implemented math instruction as usual (control group). Teachers in the treatment group viewed analytic data on students' effort and progress, which informed the discussions they had with their students around SEL topics including setting goals, the importance of effort, and using productive problem-solving strategies. Findings from these analyses suggest that analytic data on effort and progress can inform teachers' discussions of math-related SEL concepts with their students. [This paper was published in: "The 14th Learning Analytics and Knowledge Conference (LAK '24), March 18-22, 2024, Kyoto, Japan," ACM, 2024.]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. A Qualitative Comparison of Mathematics Teachers' and Students' Experiences in a Virtual Reality Algebra Application
- Author
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Julianna Washington, Taylor Darwin, Theodora Beauchamp, and Candace Walkington
- Abstract
Prisms VR, a secondary math learning application, allows for users to see, manipulate, and engage with mathematical concepts in an embodied way in Virtual Reality (VR) environment. We examine cases in which mathematics teachers and middle school students worked through Prisms and reflected upon their experiences. Findings indicate that VR environments can help teachers find alternative ways of presenting algebraic concepts in a hands-on, interactive, and embodied manner; and these findings were confirmed based on the student experience. VR allows teachers to make connections through scaffolding and personalized experiences, while also aiding students in the exploration and meaning-making. [This paper was published in: "Proceedings of the 18th International Conference of the Learning Sciences - ICLS 2024," edited by R. Lindgren et al., International Society of the Learning Sciences, 2024, pp. 1610-13.]
- Published
- 2024
41. Exploring and Comparing Teacher Twitter Use in Three Countries: Purposes, Benefits, Challenges, and Changes
- Author
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Jeffrey P. Carpenter, Hege Emma Rimmereide, and Keith Turvey
- Abstract
Social media platforms play important roles in many educators' lives. In particular, teacher professional activities on Twitter have received attention from scholars. However, research has not typically explored Twitter use with attention to the diverse national contexts in which teachers work. To address this literature gap, the present qualitative study collected interview data from teachers (N=29) in England, Norway, and the United States of America. Inductive data analysis yielded findings related to teacher purposes for, changes in, and benefits and challenges of Twitter use. Both similarities and differences in Twitter use were noted across participants from the three national settings. We discuss these findings in relation to literature, theory, and practice around teacher professional learning in a digital era.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Pre-Service Teacher Education and the Integration of Mediation, Technology, and Plurilingualism
- Author
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Ciaramita, Giulia
- Abstract
Although some research has been conducted on the importance of mediation in language learning and teaching (Dendrinos, 2006; González-Davies, 2020; Piccardo, 2012, 2020; Scarino, 2016), there is still scarce research on the integration of plurilingualism, mediation, and technology. Through qualitative and quantitative methodology, this paper investigates teachers' abilities in Italy and Spain to integrate plurilingualism, mediation, and technology. A survey has been distributed in order to explore teachers' attitudes towards the use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) and their awareness of the definition and importance of mediation. Furthermore, some mediation tasks performed by teachers in which they had to integrate mediation, plurilingualism, and technology were analysed. [For the complete volume, "Intelligent CALL, Granular Systems and Learner Data: Short Papers from EUROCALL 2022 (30th, Reykjavik, Iceland, August 17-19, 2022)," see ED624779.]
- Published
- 2022
43. Teacher Attitudes toward Online Assessment in Challenging Times
- Author
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Vurdien, Ruby and Puranen, Pasi
- Abstract
This paper explores and reports on teacher attitudes toward online assessment in foreign language teaching and learning in Spain and Finland. During the pandemic, teachers have had to face serious challenges, such as the method to be adopted, task design or handling student feedback, in order to ensure effective student assessment. They have had to find completely new ways to assess their students. A qualitative approach was adopted and data were gathered from a questionnaire shared on Google form, which was completed by 23 teachers from Spain and 11 from Finland. The aim was to examine: (1) the advantages and disadvantages of using online assessment tools to measure students' progress; and (2) the participants' perceptions of their experience of assessing their students online. The findings show that while online assessment tools, especially quiz apps, provide instant feedback and correction for students and teachers, it is difficult to control what tools students might be using to support their learning and/or assessment assignments. [For the complete volume, "Intelligent CALL, Granular Systems and Learner Data: Short Papers from EUROCALL 2022 (30th, Reykjavik, Iceland, August 17-19, 2022)," see ED624779.]
- Published
- 2022
44. L2 Chinese Language Teachers' Cross-Cultural Adaptation in Teaching Online Courses Using Videoconferencing Tools in a Foreign Country during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Case Study
- Author
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Fan, Yue, Cheng, Li, and Zhu, Zhu
- Abstract
This case study is based on teachers' personal observation of students of Oberlin College, Ohio, US, and students' feedback, and addresses cross-cultural communication of Chinese as a foreign (L2) language teacher, who is also the first author of this article. The study was conducted during the global pandemic; L2 language teaching methods in Oberlin College had to be shifted from face-to-face lectures to online teaching using videoconferencing tools, particularly Zoom. It was used not only as the online class platform, but also an additional live communication tool in other activities. The case study presented in this article was conducted mainly through observations in daily classes before and after the pandemic. The results suggest that reserved personality and inadequate cultural contact are factors of accultured difficulties for L2 Chinese language teachers when working in the US. This paper proposes solutions for preparations for a cross-cultural adaptability for Chinese language teachers teaching L2 Chinese abroad, especially in conditions like using videoconferencing tools in online teaching classes. [For the complete volume, "Intelligent CALL, Granular Systems and Learner Data: Short Papers from EUROCALL 2022 (30th, Reykjavik, Iceland, August 17-19, 2022)," see ED624779.]
- Published
- 2022
45. Writing Our Way: Giving Voice to Adult Learning. Adult Higher Education Alliance Annual Conference Proceedings (41st, Orlando, Florida, March 9-10, 2017)
- Author
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Adult Higher Education Alliance (AHEA), Elufiede, Kemi, Flynn, Bonnie, and Olson, Joann S.
- Abstract
The 41st annual conference of the Adult and Higher Education Alliance (AHEA) was held at the University of Central Florida in March 2017 and explored the theme, "Writing Our Way: Giving Voice to Adult Learning." Papers in these proceedings include: (1) Transformative Learning Following Job Loss-A Dissertation Renewal (Robert Benway); (2) Preserving the Voices of Adult Educators (Len A. Bogner and Brett King); (3) Teaching Learning Concepts to Graduate Students through Writing (Patricia G. Coberly-Holt and S. Taylor Walton); (4) Writing between the Lines (Jennifer K. Holtz, Amy L. Sedivy-Benton, and Carrie J. Boden-McGill); (5) Promoting Engagement and Community in Online Courses: It's all about the Writing (Jeremy Schwehm, Jennifer Saxton, and Annette Stuckey); (6) Exploratory Study of Perceived Barriers to Learning in an Urban Educational Opportunity Center (Jung Min Lee); (7) Writing: Collaborating for Increasing Success (Marilyn S. Lockhart); and (8) Writing a Dissertation: Tools for Success (Anne E. Montgomery). (Individual papers contain references.)
- Published
- 2017
46. Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education (16th, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, November 5-8, 1994). Volume 2: Research Papers, Oral Reports, and Posters (Continued).
- Author
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International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education. North American Chapter. and Kirshner, David
- Abstract
This PME-NA proceedings volume contains the full text of 41 research papers. In addition, brief usually one-page reports, are provided for 11 oral presentations and 13 poster sessions. The full research reports are as follows: "Cognitive Analysis of Chinese Students' Mathematical Problem Solving" (J. Cai and E. A. Silver); (2) "Mathematical and Verbal Abilities in Mathematical Problem Solving by Talented Students" (S. D. Moore); (3) "One Student's Effort in Resolving His Self-Generated Measurement Problem: 'See If It Would Work With a Triangle.'" (A. Reynolds and G. H. Wheatley); (4) "Problem Solving Using Arithmetic and Algebraic Thinking" (A. R. Teppo and W. W. Esty); (5) "The Development of Children's Concept of Unit--Grades 4-8" (S. J. Lamon); (6) "Interaction and Fraction Knowledge: Children's Construction of the Iterative Partitioning Scheme" (R. Tzur); (7) "Using Case Studies to Promote Instructional Change" (B. Armstrong, And Others); (8) "The Validity of Concept Maps as a Research Tool in Remedial College Mathematics" (J. Laturno); (9) "Collaborative Action Research in Mathematics Education" (A. M. Raymond); (10) "Middle School Students' Perceptions of Their Everyday Mathematics Usage" (J. O. Masingila); (11) "A Basis for Equity in Mathematics Education: An Experiment In Cultural Course Development" (N. C. Presmeg); (12) "A Case of Equity Reform In Mathematics" (B. F. Risacher); (13) "The Negotiation of Social Norms in a Mathematics Class" (S. D. Trowell and G. H. Wheatley); (14) "Exploring the Social in Social Construction" (S. R. Williams and K. M. C. Ivey); (15) "Empowering Students to Talk About Mathematics In a Seventh-Grade Classroom" (V. M. Adams); (16) "Confidence in Answer Keys Among College Calculus Students" (H. T. Barton); (17) "Enhancing Student Interest in Mathematics Using Integrative Curricula" (M. Mitchell); (18) "The Effects of Psychosocial Variables on Middle School Student Problem-Solving Achievement in Mathematics" (J. L. Nath, And Others); (19) "Justifying the Reasonableness of Answers: Processes of Middle School Mathematics Students" (S. E. Williams and J. V. Copley); (20) "A Teacher's Perception of Time in a Mathematics Classroom" (K. M. C. Ivey); (21) "Preservice Secondary Teachers' Beliefs About Mathematics and Their Expectations About Student Performance on Open-Ended Assessment Tasks" (B. W. Grover and P. A. Kenney); (22) "Changing the Mathematics Learning Environment in Relation to Beliefs, Knowledge, and Practices" (P. A. Jaberg and C. A. Lubinski); (23) "Connecting Orientation Towards Authority to First-Year Teachers' Thinking About Teaching" (B. E. Shealy); (24) "Transforming Mathematics Teaching in Grades K-8: The Role of Material Resources in Supporting Teacher Change" (L. R. Davenport); (25) "Affective Issues in Developing Mathematics Teaching Practice" (L. T. Goldsmith and L. R. Davenport); (26) "Case Studies on Empowering Secondary Mathematics Teachers in Computer-Intensive Environments" (M. K. Heid, And Others); (27) "Perceived Deficits in Middle Grades Mathematics Teaching" (M. K. Heid, and S. J. Feeley); (28) "How Middle School Teachers Adjust to Change: Classroom Testing Of Materials From An Innovative Curriculum Project" (D. V. Lambdin and R. V. Preston); (29) "The Needs of Second Career, Secondary Mathematics Teachers: How Well Are They Met by Academic Programs and Inductive Processes?" (S. A. Maxwell); (30) "Development of Classroom Social Norms and Mathematical Practices with Preservice Teachers" (B. McNeal and M. A. Simon); (31) "Teaching in an Era of Reform: Mathematics in Elementary Classrooms" (P. Sztajn and F. K. Lester, Jr.); (32) "Changing Practice: Describing Mathematics Teachers' Development Through A Modification of Perry's Scheme" (M. R. Wilson and M. P. Goldenberg); (33) "Teacher's Graphical Representations of Rate of Change" (S. B. Berenson and G. S. Carter); (34) "Distributive Flaws: Latent Conceptual Gaps in Preservice Teachers' Understanding of the Property Relating Multiplication to Addition" (S. Campbell and R. Zazkis); (35) "Elementary Teachers' Understanding and Implementation of Unitizing Operations" (T. L. Golding and M. J. Behr); (36) "Elementary School Teachers' Perceptions of Algebra: The Role of Modelling and Technology" (B. J. Pence); (37) "Learning Mathematics While Teaching" (S. J. Russell, And Others); (38) "Teacher's Changing Conceptions of the Nature Of Mathematics" (D. Schifter); (39) "The Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic: Used and Confused" (R. Zazkis and S. Campbell); (40) "Delineating the Transformation of Subject-Matter Knowledge in Pedagogical Content Knowledge" (C. L. Ebert); and (41) "Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Curricular Knowledge and Teacher Change" (B. S. Rich, And Others). (WTB)
- Published
- 1994
47. Proceedings of the International Association for Development of the Information Society (IADIS) International Conference on Mobile Learning (12th, Vilamoura, Algarve, Portugal, April 9-11, 2016)
- Author
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International Association for Development of the Information Society (IADIS), Sánchez, Inmaculada Arnedillo, and Isaías, Pedro
- Abstract
These proceedings contain the papers of the 12th International Conference on Mobile Learning 2016, which was organized by the International Association for Development of the Information Society, in Vilamoura, Algarve, Portugal, April 9-11, 2016. The Mobile Learning 2016 Conference seeks to provide a forum for the presentation and discussion of mobile learning research which illustrate developments in the field. Full papers presented in these proceedings include: (1) Mobile Devices and Spatial Enactments of Learning: iPads in Lower Secondary Schools (Bente Meyer); (2) NetEnquiry--A Competitive Mobile Learning Approach for the Banking Sector (Marc Beutner, Matthias Teine, Marcel Gebbe and Lara Melissa Fortmann); (3) M-Learning Challenges in Teaching Crosscutting Themes in the Education of Young People and Adults (Marcos Andrei Ota and Carlos Fernando de Araujo Jr); (4) Mobile Learning: Pedagogical Strategies for Using Applications in the Classroom (Anna Helena Silveira Sonego, Leticia Rocha Machado, Cristina Alba Wildt Torrezzan and Patricia Alejandra Behar); (5) Experiencing a Mobile Game and its Impact on Teachers' Attitudes towards Mobile Learning (Hagit Meishar-Tal and Miky Ronen); (6) Exploring Mobile Affordances in the Digital Classroom (David Parsons, Herbert Thomas and Jocelyn Wishart); (7) Design, Development and Evaluation of a Field Learning Video Blog (Otto Petrovic); (8) Development and Evaluation of a Classroom Interaction System (Bingyi Cao, Margarita Esponda-Argüero and Raúl Rojas); (9) Visual Environment for Designing Interactive Learning Scenarios with Augmented Reality (José Miguel Mota, Iván Ruiz-Rube, Juan Manuel Dodero and Mauro Figueiredo); and (10) The Development of an Interactive Mathematics App for Mobile Learning (Mauro Figueiredo, Beata Godejord and José Rodrigues). Short papers presented include: (1) Conceptualizing an M-Learning System for Seniors (Matthias Teine and Marc Beutner); (2) Sensimotor Distractions when Learning with Mobile Phones on-the Move (Soledad Castellano and Inmaculada Arnedillo-Sánchez); (3) Personal Biometric Information from Wearable Technology Tracked and Followed Using an Eportfolio: A Case Study of eHealth literacy Development with Emerging Technology in Hong King Higher Education (Michele Notari, Tanja Sobko and Daniel Churchill); (4) An Initial Evaluation of Tablet Devices & What Are the Next Steps? (Tracey McKillen); (5) Information Literacy on the Go! Adding Mobile to an Age Old Challenge (Alice Schmidt Hanbidge, Nicole Sanderson and Tony Tin); (6) The Use of Digital Tools by Independent Music Teachers (Rena Upitis, Philip C. Abrami and Karen Boese); (7) Development of a Math Input Interface with Flick Operation for Mobile Devices (Yasuyuki Nakamura and Takahiro Nakahara); (8) Smartwatches as a Learning Tool: A Survey of Student Attitudes (Neil Davie and Tobias Hilber); and (9) The Adoption of Mobile Learning in a Traditional Training Environment: The C95-Challenge Project Experience (Nadia Catenazzi, Lorenzo Sommaruga, Kylene De Angelis and Giulio Gabbianelli). Reflection papers include the following; (1) Leadership for Nursing Work-Based Mobile Learning (Dorothy Fahlman); (2) Reflections on Ways forward for Addressing Ethical Concerns in Mobile Learning Research (Jocelyn Wishart); and (3) Mobile Learning: Extreme Outcomes of Everywhere, Anytime (Giuseppe Cosimo De Simone). Posters include: (1) Student Response Behavior to Six Types of Caller/Sender When Smartphones Receive a Call or Text Message during University Lectures (Kunihiro Chida, Yuuki Kato and Shogo Kato); and (2) Understanding the Use of Mobile Resources to Enhance Paralympic Boccia Teaching and Learning for Students with Cerebral Palsy (Fabiana Zioti, Giordano Clemente, Raphael de Paiva Gonçalves, Matheus Souza, Aracele Fassbinder and Ieda Mayumi Kawashita). Doctoral Consortium papers include: (1) Forms of the Materials Shared between a Teacher and a Pupil (Libor Klubal and Katerina Kostolányová); and (2) Mobile Touch Screen Devices as Compensation for the Teaching Materials at a Special Primary School (Vojtech Gybas and Katerina Kostolányová). Individual papers provide references, and an Author Index is provided.
- Published
- 2016
48. Considering the Alignment between Teachers' Conceptions of Justification and Their Visions for Equitable Instruction
- Author
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Kristen Bieda, Megan Staples, Kristin Doherty, Serena Anthonypillai, Alicia Matthews-Johnson, and Jihye Hwang
- Abstract
While proving, and more broadly conceived "reasoning and sense-making," have received a great deal of attention in mathematics education research over the past three decades, recently scholars have argued for the importance of justification as a learning and teaching practice. As teachers work toward realizing goals for more equitable classroom environments, little is known about whether teachers' conceptions about mathematical practices, such as justification, reflect an understanding of how students' engagement in those practices can support more than just mathematical achievement. In this paper, we present findings from our analysis of interviews with 10 secondary mathematics teachers engaged in participatory action research to explore connections, and potential disconnections, between teachers' conceptions of justification and their visions for equitable instruction. [For the complete proceedings, see ED657822.]
- Published
- 2023
49. Examine Important Strategic Roles of Leadership and Management of Teachers' Retention and Impact on Organisational Performance with Reference to an HE Institution in Inner London
- Author
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Achinewhu-Nworgu, Elizabeth and Nworgu, Queen Chioma
- Abstract
The paper has focused on important leadership and management strategic roles in employee retention with reference to a London higher education institute. It analyses some of the reasons for high turnover and theories around effective leadership and management roles in retaining hard working employees, with reference to teachers in a higher education institution in inner London cities. When discussing teachers, it includes lecturers that teach in higher education. Retaining hard working teachers has been an issue in HE institutions, particularly, since the Brexit and COVID-19 crisis, therefore, important to explore the issue in the context of the leadership and management strategic roles to reduce high turnover. The mini research uses mixed methods, quantitative and qualitative data collection with thematic analysis of the key findings from literature and comments from teachers on why they will like to stay or leave their jobs for another employer. Having sampled the opinions of small sampled participants and the literature sourced, it is obvious that teacher retention is a big issue in education with some teachers wanting to leave or stay. Those wanting to stay will do so if they are motivated with better pay and compensation and effective leadership and management of education institute and those leaving would live due to poor pay and heavy workload. The most interesting to note is that most of the participants love the job they do as long as their students are achieving their qualifications. [For the complete Volume 21 proceedings, see ED629259.]
- Published
- 2023
50. Mapping Teacher Moves When Facilitating Mathematical Modelling
- Author
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Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia (MERGA), Brown, Jill P., and Stillman, Gloria A.
- Abstract
This paper explores use of a set of diagrammatic tools for representation and analysis of the moves a teacher makes implementing a mathematical modelling task. The focus here is on identifying what the teacher did so we can subsequently interrogate this, as to the why. Data include pre and post lesson teacher interviews and transcripts of a video and audio-recorded task implementation. The analytical tools developed, with one teacher and one task early in a three-year project were particularly useful in ascertaining what the teacher moves were as we subsequently sought to determine reasons for these.
- Published
- 2023
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