419 results
Search Results
2. AN ASSESSMENT OF THE RELATION BETWEEN TRADITIONAL AND PAPER-AND-PENCIL FORMAL OPERATIONS TASKS.
- Author
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Tschopp, Jill K. and Kurdek, Lawrence A.
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SCIENCE education ,CURRICULUM ,STATISTICAL correlation ,HIGH school students ,COLLEGE students ,REGRESSION analysis ,SECONDARY education ,UNITED States education system ,EDUCATION research - Abstract
The article examines the relation between traditional and paper-and-pencil formal operations tasks in the U.S. The aim of the study was to provide information based on high school students' performance on both the Tomlinson-Keasey and Campbell measure and a set of traditional, individually administered tasks. The subjects used were 27 children from 9th- and 10th grade. The results of the study indicates that Pearson correlations between the traditional formal operations tasks and their paper-and-pencil analogs were generally low and nonsignificant.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Exhibit 8: Position Papers.
- Subjects
DENTAL education ,PROFESSIONAL peer review ,CLINICAL competence ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
The article presents position papers approved by the American Association of Dental Schools (AADS) related to dental education in the U.S. It mentions incorporation of peer review in dental school curricula provides an opportunity to learn skills of working with other practitioners and learn actual clinical skills. AADS believes that federal funds must be included to finance basic healthcare benefits.
- Published
- 1999
4. Reforming Dental Health Professions Education: A White Paper.
- Author
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DePaola, Dominick P. and Slavkin, Harold C.
- Subjects
ORAL medicine ,MEDICAL education ,ORAL hygiene ,DENTAL education ,UNITED States education system ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The oral health education system is in need of major reform! This is especially apparent in university-based education for the health professions. So-called preclinical as well as clinical education simply has not kept pace with or been responsive enough to shifting patient demographics and patient/population desires and expectations, changing health system expectations, evolving interdisciplinary expertise and practice requirements, new scientific discoveries and scientific information, focus on quality improvement, and/or integration of emerging technologies. Moreover, university-based "dental education" is the most costly professional degree education within the entire university portfolio, and dental student accumulated debt is increasing each year well beyond national inflation estimates. Today, we have an enormous opportunity to explore major reforms in health professional education. Through the Santa Fe "process" of open and candid engagements and discussions (see www.santafegroup.org), we advance an argument as well as a national strategy that can enable major reforms in the oral health education system. We further suggest that major revisions can result in an outcome-based education system that prepares oral health professionals to meet both the needs of patients/families/communities and the requirements of a changing health system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Leveraging Comprehensive Sexuality Education as a Tool for Knowledge, Equity, and Inclusion.
- Author
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Woolweaver, Ashley B., Drescher, Anne, Medina, Courtney, and Espelage, Dorothy L.
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DIVERSITY & inclusion policies ,HEALTH policy ,SCHOOL health services ,CURRICULUM ,SOCIAL stigma ,SEX education ,SEX distribution ,INTELLECT ,LGBTQ+ people ,SCHOOL administration ,SEXUAL health - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sexual education programs in the United States are rooted in inequitable structures and are often inadequate at educating marginalized student groups such as students of color, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer (LGBTQ+), women, and disabled students. CONTRIBUTIONS TO THEORY: Current sexual education is irregularly implemented and often excludes or misrepresents the experiences of students with marginalized identities. This theoretical paper specifically discusses ways that sexual education has been harmful or exclusionary for marginalized student groups and how a shift toward making sexual education inclusive and equitable will improve outcomes for students of all identities. IMPLICATIONS FOR SCHOOL HEALTH POLICY, PRACTICE, AND EQUITY: This paper discusses several recommendations on improving access to equitable sexual health education for all students including reviewing and improving sexual education curriculum and delivery, as well as the need for additional research focused on this topic. CONCLUSIONS: This article provides an overview on the current sexual education system, its inadequacies, and how comprehensive sexuality education programs can be leveraged as a tool for equity for students of all backgrounds, but particularly those who are underrepresented in sexual education curricula. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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6. The Role of Research in Science Teaching: An NSTA Theme Paper.
- Author
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Kyle Jr., William C., Linn, Marcia C., Bitner, Betty L., Mitchener, Carole P., and Perry, Bruce
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EDUCATION research ,SCIENCE education ,LEARNING ,CURRICULUM ,EDUCATION ,STUDENTS ,DECISION making ,TEACHERS - Abstract
The article discusses the role of research in improving science education in the U.S. The understanding of the process of teaching, learning, and schooling has improved. Thus, rapid societal changes has an impact on the image of the process of schooling in general, and the process of teaching and learning science in particular. With this regard, teachers must engage in constructing a curriculum to enhance the development of all students. Lastly, research should guide and inform policy formation and decision making regarding science teaching, preschool through college.
- Published
- 1991
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7. Dental hygiene and direct access to care: Past and present.
- Author
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Gadbury‐Amyot, Cynthia C., Simmer‐Beck, Melanie L., Lynch, Ann, and Rowley, Lisa J.
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PSYCHOLOGY of dentists ,ORAL hygiene ,HEALTH services accessibility ,ORAL health ,DENTAL care ,CURRICULUM ,MEDICAL care ,OCCUPATIONS ,HEALTH insurance reimbursement ,MEDICAL practice ,MEDICAID - Abstract
The American Dental Hygienists' Association (ADHA) defines direct access as the ability of a dental hygienist to initiate treatment based on their assessment of patient's needs without the specific authorization of a dentist, treat the patient without the physical presence of a dentist and maintain a provider–patient relationship. In 2000, there were nine direct access states; currently, there are 42 states that have authorized some form of direct access. The ADHA has been instrumental in these legislative initiatives through strong advocacy efforts. While research and data support the benefits of direct preventive/therapeutic care provided by dental hygienists, many barriers remain. This paper chronicles key partnerships that have influenced and advocated for direct access and the recognition of dental hygienists as primary healthcare providers. The National Governors Association released a report in 2014 suggesting that dental hygienists be 'deployed' outside of dental offices as one strategy to increase access to oral health care along with reducing restrictive dental practice acts and increasing the scope of practice for dental hygienists. The December 2021 release of the National Institutes of Health report, Oral Health in America, further supports greater access to dental hygiene preventive/therapeutic care. This paper also reflects on opportunities and barriers as they relate to workforce policy, provides examples of effective state policies and illustrates an educational curriculum specifically created to prepare dental hygienists to provide oral health services in settings outside of the dental office. Dental hygiene education must ensure that graduates are future‐ready as essential healthcare providers, prepared to deliver direct access to dental hygiene care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Teaching little kids big sentences: A randomized controlled trial showing that children with DLD respond to complex syntax intervention embedded within the context of preschool/kindergarten science instruction.
- Author
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Owen Van Horne, Amanda J., Curran, Maura, Cook, Susan Wagner, Cole, Renée, and McGregor, Karla K.
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TREATMENT of language disorders ,TEACHING methods ,PHONOLOGICAL awareness ,COMPARATIVE grammar ,PROGRAMMED instruction ,CURRICULUM ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,LEARNING strategies ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,COMMUNICATION ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,SCHOOL children ,STATISTICAL sampling ,DATA analysis software ,LANGUAGE disorders in children ,SCIENCE ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: The language of the science curriculum is complex, even in the early grades. To communicate their scientific observations, children must produce complex syntax, particularly complement clauses (e.g., I think it will float; We noticed that it vibrates). Complex syntax is often challenging for children with developmental language disorder (DLD), and thus their learning and communication of science may be compromised. Aims: We asked whether recast therapy delivered in the context of a science curriculum led to gains in complement clause use and scientific content knowledge. To understand the efficacy of recast therapy, we compared changes in science and language knowledge in children who received treatment for complement clauses embedded in a first‐grade science curriculum to two active control conditions (vocabulary + science, phonological awareness + science). Methods & Procedures: This 2‐year single‐site three‐arm parallel randomized controlled trial was conducted in Delaware, USA. Children with DLD, not yet in first grade and with low accuracy on complement clauses, were eligible. Thirty‐three 4–7‐year‐old children participated in the summers of 2018 and 2019 (2020 was cancelled due to COVID‐19). We assigned participants to arms using 1:1:1 pseudo‐random allocation (avoiding placing siblings together). The intervention consisted of 39 small‐group sessions of recast therapy, robust vocabulary instruction or phonological awareness intervention during eight science units over 4 weeks, followed by two science units (1 week) taught without language intervention. Pre‐/post‐measures were collected 3 weeks before and after camp by unmasked assessors. Outcomes & Results: Primary outcome measures were accuracy on a 20‐item probe of complement clause production and performance on ten 10‐item unit tests (eight science + language, two science only). Complete data were available for 31 children (10 grammar, 21 active control); two others were lost to follow‐up. Both groups made similar gains on science unit tests for science + language content (pre versus post, d = 2.9, p < 0.0001; group, p = 0.24). The grammar group performed significantly better at post‐test than the active control group (d = 2.5, p = 0.049) on complement clause probes and marginally better on science‐only unit tests (d = 2.5, p = 0.051). Conclusions & Implications: Children with DLD can benefit from language intervention embedded in curricular content and learn both language and science targets taught simultaneously. Tentative findings suggest that treatment for grammar targets may improve academic outcomes. What this paper adds: What is already known on the subject: We know that recast therapy focused on morphology is effective but very time consuming. Treatment for complex syntax in young children has preliminary efficacy data available. Prior research provides mixed evidence as to children's ability to learn language targets in conjunction with other information. What this study adds: This study provides additional data supporting the efficacy of intensive complex syntax recast therapy for children ages 4–7 with Developmental Language Disorder. It also provides data that children can learn language targets and science curricular content simultaneously. What are the clinical implications of this work?: As SLPs, we have to talk about something to deliver language therapy; we should consider talking about curricular content. Recast therapy focused on syntactic frames is effective with young children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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9. Abstracts of Second- and Third-Place Undergraduate Papers.
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SERVICE learning ,AGRICULTURAL economics ,COMMUNITY-school relationships ,CURRICULUM ,AGRICULTURAL Conservation Program - Abstract
“Developing Enterprise Budgets for Sustainable School Gardens: Service Learning in a Global Context.” Ashley D. Jones, University of Arkansas–Fayetteville, second-place paper. Service learning programs are becoming a part of curricula in universities throughout the United States. The University of Arkansas–Fayetteville (UAF) established a service learning program that targeted the educational, health, social, and agricultural needs of a community. This research aimed to provide students, faculty, community members, and school officials with a template for crop budgets to evaluate the costs and returns of producing multiple crops at a school. Crops produced in a sustainable garden must meet three criteria: (1) exhibit minimal negative environmental impact; (2) provide just-in-time production of crops to meet school needs; and (3) be solvent, either generating net positive revenue from the sale of crop or providing cost savings by growing crops at the school rather than purchasing them elsewhere. This proposal focuses on developing enterprise budgets for four crops: chili peppers, cabbage, corn, and tomatoes using an interactive Excel
® budgeting tool. The design of the interactive budgets is to provide a framework that students at the University of Arkansas–Fayetteville can use in their service learning courses when examining the costs and benefits of agriculturally based projects, while also being a functional aid for the recipients of the service learning program. “Effect of Low and High Concentrate Supplementation on Milk Production, Milk Quality, and Overall Profitability in a Pasture-based Organic Dairy.” Stephanie Horton, California State University, Chico, third-place paper. Decreasing levels of concentrate supplementation and increasing consumption of forage offer a way for organic dairy farmers to reduce input costs. Thus, the objective of this study was to determine the effect of low and high concentrate supplementation on milk production, milk quality, and overall profitability in a pasture-based organic dairy. Two concentrate levels L and H (12% and 24% of dry matter intake [DMI], respectively) were investigated in a herd of seventy-six Holstein/Jersey cross cows for a forty-one-day treatment period. Milk yield, percentage fat, and somatic cell counts were comparable between groups. Protein percentage differed ( p < 0.05) among group L (3.04 ± 0.04) and H (3.18 ± 0.05). A difference ( p < 0.05) in percent solids nonfat between group L (8.78 ± 0.04) and H (8.93 ± 0.05) was identified. Overall, decreasing the concentrate supplementation levels from 24% to 12% of DMI was shown to have no impact on milk yield and little impact on milk quality in an intensively managed, pastured-based dairy. The income over feed costs (IOFC) were also significantly ( p < 0.01) greater for the low supplementation group, making intensive grazing a viable option for organic dairy farmers with high-quality pastures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
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10. Lesson learned from the pandemic for learning physics.
- Author
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Al‐Zohbi, Gaydaa, Pilotti, Maura A. E., Barghout, Kamal, Elmoussa, Omar, and Abdelsalam, Hanadi
- Subjects
ONLINE education ,STATISTICS ,NATIONAL competency-based educational tests ,INFERENTIAL statistics ,PHYSICS ,PROBLEM solving ,COMPUTER assisted instruction ,ONE-way analysis of variance ,CURRICULUM ,FISHER exact test ,LEARNING ,ACADEMIC achievement ,SEX distribution ,MATHEMATICS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DATA analysis ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,STUDENT attitudes ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Background: Valuable safeguards against fast‐spreading conjectures about learning in times of fear and uncertainty are evidence‐based approaches to the assessment of the impact of sudden and unforeseen disruptions on learning practices. The present research focused on physics learning in such times because conceptual and computational literacy in physics is critical to the development of a scientifically and technologically literate society. Objectives: The present research aimed (a) to offer an objective assessment of whether performance differences in a physics course of the general education curriculum existed between the face‐to‐face medium (familiar mode of instruction) and the online medium (unfamiliar mode of instruction) for both male and female students, and then (b) to develop a response to the evidence collected to ensure a quality education for all parties involved. The research intended to fill two critical gaps in the extant literature: mixed findings concerning students' performance in the face‐to‐face and online mediums as well as scarce coverage of specific domains of knowledge that are critical to STEM learners. Methods: Students' performance was examined as a function of the type of assessment (formative and summative), instructional mode (online and face‐to‐face), and gender. An understudied student population of STEM students of Middle Eastern descent without prior formal exposure to online instruction was targeted. Results and Conclusions: In both formative and summative assessments, male students performed better online than face‐to‐face, whereas the performance of female students was either higher online or equivalent between instructional mediums. The evidence collected suggested that consideration be given to remedies that foster academic success in the face‐to‐face instructional medium, particularly for male students. Takeaways: An evidence‐based approach to learning dismantled emotion‐driven expectations regarding the impact of the online medium on physics learning, and encouraged new perspectives about instruction. Lay Description: What is already known?: Ongoing debates on the impact of the pandemic on students' learning shape decisions regarding future reliance on the online medium for instruction. What this paper adds: The extant literature is mixed concerning performance in the face‐to‐face and online mediums, including particular domains of knowledge critical to STEM learning.This study focused on physics learning in an understudied population of STEM students who were unaccustomed to online instruction.Performance was higher online than face‐to‐face, but gender differences emerged. Implications for practice: Lessons learned focused on the flexibility of online learning and on the need to develop materials to enhance learning in males enrolled in face‐to‐face or hybrid/blended classes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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11. Population health in a global society: Preparing nurses for the future.
- Author
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Walton, AnnMarie Lee, Nikpour, Jacqueline A., and Randolph, Schenita D.
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ETHICAL decision making ,CURRICULUM ,MANN Whitney U Test ,WORLD health ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH status indicators ,NURSING education ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,POPULATION health ,CONTENT analysis ,NURSE practitioners - Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has reinforced awareness that the health of populations is inextricably linked around the globe. Nurses require increased knowledge and preparation in global health. Nursing educators need examples of how to improve content in the curriculum. Aims: The purpose of this paper is to describe reconceptualization of a master’s level nursing course entitled “Population Health in a Global Society” to include global health competencies. Methods: We identified four global health competencies within the following three domains: globalization of health and healthcare; collaboration, partnering, and communication; and sociocultural and political awareness. Implementation: We utilized guest lectures, a panel discussion, discussion forums and an independent research assignment. The methods used were well received by students, and the content delivered improved their perceived knowledge in global population health. Discussion: The global health domains and competencies provided a roadmap for improving our course to focus on population health from a global perspective. Conclusion: In order to prepare nurses to contribute to global population health, population health courses should integrate global health competencies. The content of the revised course will better prepare nurses who will practice in a wide variety of settings and is designed for interdisciplinary education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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12. Patients with Special Needs: Dental Students' Educational Experiences, Attitudes, and Behavior.
- Author
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Vainio, Lauren, Krause, Meggan, and Inglehart, Marita R.
- Subjects
DENTAL students ,DENTAL schools ,DENTAL education ,EDUCATIONAL accreditation ,CLINICAL education ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
Accreditation standards require U.S. dental schools to prepare their graduates for the diagnosis of treatment needs of patients with special health care needs (SHCN). The objective of this study was to explore dental students' perceptions of their education about these issues, their satisfaction with this education, and their professional attitudes and behavioral intentions concerning treating patients with SHCN in the future. Web-based survey data were collected from forty-nine dental student leaders in thirteen U.S. dental schools and paper-and-pencil survey data from 397 dental students at a Midwestern dental school. Most respondents agreed that it is important to be educated about providing care for patients with SHCN and that they will provide care for these patients in the future. However, their satisfaction with their education was not equally positive. Their perceived quality of their dental education was correlated with their confidence concerning treating SHCN patients; their confidence was in turn correlated with their intentions to include these patients in their patient families in their future professional lives. In conclusion, dental students are strongly motivated to learn about providing care for patients with SHCN. The better their dental education prepares them for this task, the more confident they will be when treating these patients and the more likely they will be to provide care for these patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
13. Pipelines to Pathways: Medical School Commitment to Producing a Rural Workforce.
- Author
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Longenecker, Randall L., Andrilla, C. Holly A., Jopson, Andrew D., Evans, David V., Schmitz, David, Larson, Eric H., and Patterson, Davis G.
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MEDICAL education ,MEDICAL schools ,RURAL health services ,RURAL conditions ,RESEARCH methodology ,LABOR demand ,PUBLIC health ,LABOR supply ,PRIMARY health care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COMMITMENT (Psychology) ,PHYSICIANS - Abstract
Purpose: Despite the efforts of numerous medical schools to produce rural physicians, many rural communities in the United States still experience physician shortages. This study describes the current landscape of rural efforts in US undergraduate medical education and catalogs medical school characteristics and activities that evidence has suggested, and that many experts in rural medical education believe, may result in more graduates choosing rural practice. Methods: This is a descriptive study of publicly available and rurally relevant characteristics of all 182 allopathic and osteopathic medical schools operating in the 50 states and the District of Columbia in 2016, with rural program information for these schools updated in 2019. The authors constructed a "rural program" definition in order to systematically catalog coordinated and strategic medical school efforts to produce a rural physician workforce. Findings: Few (8.2%) medical schools expressed an explicit commitment to producing rural physicians in public mission statements. However, most (64.8%) provided rural clinical experiences and many demonstrated their commitment in other ways. Only 39 (21.4%) did so through a formal rural program. Conclusions: In establishing an explicit rural program definition and documenting other markers of rural commitment, this paper provides a baseline for future studies of rural workforce production and medical school investment in these programs, activities, and personnel. Demonstrating the effectiveness of schools' rural physician education efforts will require collaboration across institutions and more intensive evaluations of programs involving students who, though relatively few in number, have great potential for contributing to the health of rural communities across the nation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Study: Counterfeits/fentanyl making drug use more deadly for adolescents.
- Author
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Knopf, Alison
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH policy , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *SAFETY , *NARCOTICS , *DISEASE clusters , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *DRUG overdose , *SOCIAL media , *FENTANYL , *CURRICULUM , *PARENTING , *HEALTH literacy , *SCHOOLS , *POLICY sciences , *DRUG counterfeiting , *DOSAGE forms of drugs , *PATIENT safety , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
As Scott E. Hadland, M.D., senior author of a dramatic paper published last week in the New England Journal of Medicine puts it, drug use among adolescents is not getting more common — it's at its lowest in almost 50 years. But it's getting more deadly, due to fentanyl. In "The Overdose Crisis among U.S. Adolescents," by Hadland and lead author Joseph Friedman, Ph.D., the problem is laid out clearly: After guns and car crashes, overdose (OD) deaths are now the third leading cause of death among adolescents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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15. The Influences of Global Trends in Teaching and Learning Chemistry on the Chemistry Curriculum in Israel.
- Author
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Mamlok‐Naaman, Rachel and Taitelbaum, Dorit
- Subjects
CHEMISTRY ,LEARNING by teaching ,CURRICULUM change ,SCIENTIFIC literacy ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,CURRICULUM ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors - Abstract
I this paper, we survey and focus on developments in the chemistry curriculum in Israel over the past 70 years, as influenced by changes and reforms in the curricula around the world and specifically in the United States, by political, cultural and socio‐economic factors, scientific and technological innovations, and theories and studies in learning and teaching. The mentioned studies refer also to the influence of the learners, the teachers, the content, the pedagogy of teaching and learning both in and out of school, and the assessment of students' achievement on the curriculum changes. Three periods of changes are discussed in the chemistry curriculum in Israel, from the 1960s to the beginning of the 21st century, as influenced by the above factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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16. GIS Course Planning: A Comparison of Syllabi at US College and Universities.
- Author
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Wikle, Thomas A. and Fagin, Todd D.
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHIC information systems ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,ORGANIZATION ,LOGISTICS ,CURRICULUM ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Despite the enormous growth of college courses dealing with spatial information, curriculum planning involving geographic information science ( GIS) courses and programs has received little attention within the GIS literature. As the number and variety of GIS courses expands, so too does the importance of both systematic and inclusive planning and campus-wide coordination. In this article we explore course planning through an exploration of 312 GIS course syllabi used at US colleges and universities with the goal of characterizing the degree to which learning resources, student evaluation methods, and course topics have become standardized across institution types, academic levels, and disciplines. Our findings reveal a consensus in the use of GIS software across courses but no similar agreement in the use of textbooks. Hands-on activities were used as evaluation methods in nearly every course in the sample regardless of institution type or academic level. However, quizzes, tests and final exams were used more often in community colleges while papers and projects were used more frequently in four-year and comprehensive research universities. The frequency of topic categories listed on syllabi was relatively consistent across institutions, academic levels and disciplines with a few topics such as vector analytic operations, data models, and data creation/acquisition/editing included on more than 50% of syllabi. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Maternal nutrition and weight management in pregnancy: A nudge in the right direction.
- Author
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Walker, R., Kumar, A., Blumfield, M., and Truby, H.
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PREVENTION of obesity ,OBESITY & psychology ,RISK of childhood obesity ,SOCIAL stigma ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,REGULATION of body weight ,COMMUNICATION ,DIET ,CURRICULUM ,HEALTH promotion ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL personnel ,MEDICAL protocols ,WEIGHT gain ,ATTITUDES toward obesity ,PREGNANCY ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Suboptimal maternal nutrition and excessive gestational weight gain (GWG) establish in mothers and their offspring a weight gain trajectory towards overweight and obesity. Therefore, pregnancy may be the best opportunity to disrupt the generational cycle of obesity. More than half of women in the UK now enter pregnancy overweight or obese, highlighting that if interventions are not targeted towards women in higher weight categories before conception they are likely to 'miss the mark'. To address issues of suboptimal maternal nutrition and excessive GWG in antenatal care, health professionals need to consider how women's requirements and expectations may have changed in recent years and the impact of weight stigma on the care of women who are obese. This paper aims to drive changes in clinical practice guidelines, medical curricula, the language used by health professionals, and ultimately promote maternal nutrition and weight management in pregnancy as key priorities during antenatal care. Evidence indicates that women want non-judgemental, simple and encouraging guidance in these areas. Small changes to health professionals' practice can improve how advice regarding nutrition and weight management in pregnancy is delivered, and has the potential to reduce overweight and obesity prevalence in women and their children in the years to come. Surely that goal is worth pursuing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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18. Curriculum and Case Notes.
- Author
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Reingold, David
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,PROFESSIONAL education ,CURRICULUM ,UNITED States education system - Abstract
Information about several papers and discussion reports on professional education for public service presented at the 2006 Park City APPAM Spring Conference in Utah on is presented. The managerial challenges of running a policy school was examined by Sandra Archibald, Dean of the Evans School at the University of Washington. Angela Evans' paper tried to assist those who lead schools of public policy and administration in assessing their pedagogies and curricula
- Published
- 2008
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19. Matching Geospatial Concepts with Geographic Educational Needs.
- Author
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GOLLEDGE, REGINALD G., MARSH, MEREDITH, and BATTERSBY, SARAH
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GEOGRAPHY education ,AREA studies ,SPATIAL ability ,GEOSPATIAL data ,GEOGRAPHIC information systems ,GEOGRAPHICAL positions ,EARTH sciences ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
In this paper, we assume that learning to comprehend the geospatial environment would be significantly facilitated by developing a multi-level task ontology that identifies various levels and complexities of geospatial concepts. We suggest that, apart from four spatial ‘primitives’– identity, location, magnitude, and space-time – all geospatial concepts involve ‘inheritance’ characteristics. The more complex and abstract the concept, the larger the inheritance links that need to be appreciated to enhance concept understanding. For example, many basic geospatial concepts – such as direction and distance – are first-order derivatives from the ‘location’ primitive, whereas concepts such as spatial association, map projection or interpolation are high-order concepts that require several layers of geospatial concepts in their derivation. Having offered a five-level ontology for concept organisation, we suggest sets of tasks that could establish an understanding of concepts, thus directly making the environment more legible in a spatial sense. We develop this framework in the context of the teaching of geography in grades from kindergarten to the final years of high school (grade 12 in the United States system). Our conceptualisation is grounded in the US school system – in which geography is usually absent in the curriculum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The creation of evidence in 'evidence-based' drug prevention: a critique of the Strengthening Families Program Plus Life Skills Training evaluation.
- Author
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Gorman, D. M., Conde, E., and Huber, J. C.
- Subjects
CURRICULUM ,DRUG abuse education ,ALCOHOLISM education ,SOCIAL learning ,INSTRUCTIONAL systems ,CURRICULUM change ,DATA analysis ,HEALTH education - Abstract
School-based curricula have become a mainstay of drug prevention policy in the United States and are increasing in popularity in other parts of the world. The promotion and dissemination of these interventions has been driven in large part by the creation of lists of programmes which, it is claimed, are grounded in scientific evidence demonstrating their effectiveness. Recently concerns have been raised about the data analysis and presentation practices used in evaluations of a number of programmes that appear on these lists. Here we examine a series of papers from an evaluation of an intervention that combined the Strengthening Families Program 10 - 14 and Life Skills Training Program, each of which is among the most widely advocated universal drug prevention programmes. The data analysis and presentation practices employed in the evaluation of this combined programme include one-tailed significance testing, alpha levels of 0.10, changes in outcome variables across publications and use of the post-test data as the baseline when assessing change over time. Taken together, these practices severely limit the claims that can be made about the results presented in the evaluation. Specifically, we believe that far from supporting the evaluators' claims concerning the rigour of the findings and their generalisability and public health significance, the results are very fragile, of little practical significance and quite possibly analysis-dependent. [Gorman DM, Conde E, Huber JC Jr. The creation of evidence in 'evidence-based' drug prevention: a critique of the Strengthening Families Program Plus Life Skills Training evaluation. Drug Alcohol Rev 2007;26:585 - 593] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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21. The Current Status of the Anatomical Sciences Curriculum in U.S. and Canadian Dental Schools.
- Author
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Guttmann, Geoffrey D.
- Subjects
DENTAL education ,OCCUPATIONAL training ,DENTAL schools - Abstract
The anatomical sciences form one of the major building blocks of the basic medical sciences in the professional training of dentists. This paper defines the courses and classifies the formats of teaching for each course within the anatomical sciences curriculum. Information was gathered from the Internet, specifically the American Dental Education Association (ADEA) website links to U.S. and Canadian dental schools and their online catalogues or bulletins as well as online course syllabi. The results demonstrate the distribution of schools in the United States and Canada teaching anatomical sciences in the following categories: stand-alone, sequential, and multifaceted courses for gross anatomy; stand-alone and integrated courses for histology; stand-alone, integrated, incorporated, and no course for neuroanatomy; and stand-alone, incorporated, and no course in embryology. This paper concludes with the proposition that a survey of the usage of anatomical knowledge in use in a typical dental general practice needs to be conducted. The results of such a survey need to be evaluated with the intention of determining what should be taught in a dental clinical anatomical sciences curriculum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Using Classroom Assessment Techniques to Improve Foreign Language Composition Courses.
- Author
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Carduner, Jessie
- Subjects
FOREIGN language education ,COMPOSITION (Language arts) ,CLASSROOMS ,STUDENTS ,LANGUAGE teachers ,INSTRUCTIONAL systems ,EDUCATIONAL evaluation ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
The article focuses on the use of Classroom Assessment Techniques (CAT) to improve foreign language composition courses in the U.S. CAT examine students' language development which can assist instructors to prioritize goals and evaluate effectiveness of instructional techniques. Though used to examine learning by particular course and encourage systematic data collection, CAT do not provide evidence for evaluating students wherein it should be used for formative purposes. It is also used to focus on learning particular needs.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Editorial: Notes From Bergamo.
- Author
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Good, Ronald
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,CURRICULUM ,THEORY (Philosophy) ,RESEARCH - Abstract
The article discusses about Bergamo Conference and provides information about events that happened during the current year's conference in the U.S. The Bergamo Conference, which is organized each year by the editors of "JCT: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Curriculum Studies," promotes critical discourse in curriculum theory and practice. The event includes presentation of research papers that are often playful and metaphorical rather than literally descriptive of the papers' contents.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR A SEMINAR IN EVOLUTION.
- Author
-
Daniel, Jr., Joseph C.
- Subjects
EVOLUTIONARY theories ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,SCIENCE education ,EDUCATION ,SEMINARS ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,CURRICULUM ,PERIODICALS ,BIOLOGISTS ,BIOLOGY - Abstract
The article discusses a bibliography for a seminar on evolution. Colleges and universities in the U.S. teach evolution as a seminar course. Since the field is broad, journals and other papers have appeared with discussions and other necessary data useful to students and instructors alike. Leading evolutionary biologists in America have been welcomed to participate with the recent papers. The contributors include Dean Amadon of he American Musesum of Natural History, George W. Beadle of the California, Alan A. Boyden of Rutgers University, Bayard H. Brattstrom of Adelphi College and others.
- Published
- 1959
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Focus on Early Adolescence: A New Emphasis for the Science Education Directorate.
- Author
-
Katzenmeyer, Conrad
- Subjects
CURRICULUM planning ,SCIENCE education ,TEENAGERS ,EDUCATIONAL programs ,SCIENCE students ,CURRICULUM ,SCIENCE & state - Abstract
The article discusses the rationale for the new program of science education for early adolescence planned by the Science Education Directorate of the U.S. National Science Foundation. This paper drafts the rationale for the new effort, the ongoing planning effort, and probable future plans. For now, the primary area of need for early adolescence are: better information about science education, formal and informal instructional programs, and research and case studies of learning, development, and instructional practices. The program's first priority will be the expansion of the information base, followed by development of prototype models for in-service and pre-service staff improvement.
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Science Teacher Education: An Assessment Inventory.
- Author
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Tamir, Pinchas, Lunetta, Vincent N., and Yager, Robert E.
- Subjects
TEACHER training ,INVENTORIES ,CURRICULUM ,UNITED States education system ,TEACHER educators ,SCIENCE teachers ,SCIENCE ,INSTRUCTIONAL systems - Abstract
The article reports on the inventory that should facilitate conversation, communication, and assessment of programs and goals in secondary science teacher education in the U.S. The features of this contemporary idealized program have been used as a basis for the development of The Science Teacher Education Inventory presented in the paper. Teacher educators are invited to use the inventory that follows; it can be completed in about one hour. The inventory can be used in self-assessment, and it should promote dialog concerning the relative importance of some of the items. It should stimulate a sharing of insights, instructional approaches program emphases and goals. It should facilitate program change.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. RECENT SCIENCE COURSES OF STUDY.
- Subjects
CURRICULUM ,SCIENCE ,UNITED States education system ,ELEMENTARY schools ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
A list of educational courses related to science in various states of the U.S. is presented. The list includes Study Outlines for the English Year Science, Courses of Study in Biology, Elementary Science in the Elementary School Curriculum in Pasadena, Science Units Grade 6 in Shorewood, The Progress of Science, Courses of Study in Science for Junior High School in Malden.
- Published
- 1937
28. MODELS AND THE CURRICULUM.
- Author
-
de Vito, Alfred
- Subjects
CURRICULUM ,ELEMENTARY education ,SCIENTIFIC development ,SCIENCE education ,MENTAL models theory (Communication) ,MATHEMATICAL models - Abstract
The article presents information on the use of models as a valuable adjunct to learning and participating in the scientific enterprise. The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) has proposed the concept of models at the elementary level, integrating steps in learning the scientific approach. According to the AAAS the activity of model formulation should help to give the student a real "feel" for the potentialities and satisfactions of the scientific approach. According to the educator R.D. Anderson, a "mental model" is a theoretical form or structure which is hypothesized on the basis of observations of natural phenomena. The Physical Science Study Committee has described models as ideas, pictures, systems of concepts which describe the things one investigate. The construction of a physical or mathematical models is the creative heart of all science. A paper "The Scientific Approach to Knowledge" by the AAAS states that the best way to achieve the generalization and retention of "process" skills is to continue to provide for a kind of "process" emphasis in instruction. Students should be instructed in the scientific approach to the generation of organized knowledge.
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. AN ANALYSIS OF THE MATHEMATICAL CONCEPTS NECESSARY FOR THE COLLEGE PHYSICAL SCIENCE COURSE.
- Author
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Hannon, Herbert
- Subjects
SCIENCE education ,CURRICULUM evaluation ,PHYSICAL sciences ,PHYSICAL sciences education ,CURRICULUM ,EDUCATION ,INSTRUCTIONAL systems - Abstract
The article presents an analysis of the mathematical concepts necessary for the college physical science course in the U.S. The purpose of this paper is to analyze the physical science course at Western Michigan University to determine the mathematical concepts with which the student must be familiar in order to understand the physical concepts involved in the course material. According to the author the outline of the workbook prepared by the physical science staff at the university constitutes the outline of the material to be studied and includes wealth of questions and exercises.
- Published
- 1959
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. An exploratory international study into occupational therapy students' perceptions of professional identity.
- Author
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Ashby, Samantha E., Adler, Jessica, and Herbert, Lisa
- Subjects
CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CURRICULUM ,FIELDWORK (Educational method) ,SENSORY perception ,PROBABILITY theory ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,SOCIALIZATION ,SURVEYS ,CLINICAL competence ,JUDGMENT sampling ,PROFESSIONAL identity ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,OCCUPATIONAL therapy students ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Background/aim The successful development and maintenance of professional identity is associated with professional development and retention in the health workforce. This paper explores students' perspectives on the ways pre-entry experiences and curricula content shape professional identity. Methods An online cross-sectional survey was sent to students enrolled in the final year of entry-level programmes in five countries. Descriptive statistical analyses of data were completed. Results The results reflect the perceptions of 319 respondents from five countries. Respondents identified professional education (98%) and professional socialisation during placement (92%) as curricula components with the greatest influence on professional identity formation. Discipline-specific knowledge such as, occupation-focussed models and occupational science were ranked lower than these aspects of practice. The students' length of programme and level of entry-level programme did not impact on these results. Conclusion When designing curricula educators need to be mindful that students perceive practice education and professional socialisation have the greatest affect on professional identity formation. The findings reinforce the need for curricula to provide students with a range of practice experiences, which allow the observation and application of occupation-based practices. It highlights a need for educators to provide university-based curricula activities, which better prepare students for a potential dissonance between explicit occupation-based curricula and observed practice education experiences. The study indicates the need for further research into the role curricula content, and in particular practice education, plays in the multidimensional formation of professional development within entry-level programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Urban Elementary STEM Initiative.
- Author
-
Parker, Carolyn, Abel, Yolanda, and Denisova, Ekaterina
- Subjects
STEM education ,ELEMENTARY school curriculum ,ELEMENTARY education ,SCHOOL districts ,EDUCATIONAL change - Abstract
The new standards for K-12 science education suggest that student learning should be more integrated and should focus on crosscutting concepts and core ideas from the areas of physical science, life science, Earth/space science, and engineering/technology. This paper describes large-scale, urban elementary-focused science, technology, engineering, and mathematics ( STEM) collaboration between a large urban school district, various STEM-focused community stakeholders, and a research-focused private university. The collaboration includes the development of an integrated STEM curriculum for grade K-5 with accompanying teacher professional development. This mixed-methodology study describes findings from focus group interviews and a survey of teachers from Title I elementary schools. Findings suggest the importance of the following critical features of professional development: (a) coherence, (b) content focus, (c) active learning, (d) collective participation, and (e) duration to the success of large-scale STEM urban elementary school reform [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Treatment planning in dentistry using an electronic health record: implications for undergraduate education.
- Author
-
Tokede, O., Walji, M., Ramoni, R., White, J. M., Schoonheim‐Klein, M., Kimmes, N. S., Vaderhobli, R., Stark, P. C., Patel, V. L., and Kalenderian, E.
- Subjects
DENTAL therapeutics ,ELECTRONIC health records ,MEDICAL protocols ,DENTAL literature ,PRACTICE of dentistry ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
Objective Treatment planning, an essential component of clinical practice, has received little attention in the dental literature and there appears to be no consistent format being followed in the teaching and development of treatment plans within dental school curricula. No investigation, to our knowledge, has been carried out to explore the subject of treatment planning since the advent of electronic health record ( EHR) use in dentistry. It is therefore important to examine the topic of treatment planning in the context of EHRs. Methods This paper reports on how 25 predoctoral dental students from two U.S. schools performed when asked to complete diagnosis and treatment planning exercises for two clinical scenarios in an EHR. Three calibrated clinical teaching faculty scored diagnosis entry, diagnosis-treatment (procedure) pairing, and sequencing of treatment according to criteria taught in their curriculum. Scores were then converted to percent correct and reported as means (with standard deviations). Results Overall, the participants earned 48.2% of the possible points. Participants at School 2 earned a mean of 54.3% compared with participants at School 1, who earned 41.9%. Students fared better selecting the appropriate treatment (59.8%) compared with choosing the correct diagnoses (41.9%) but performed least favorably when organizing the sequence of their treatment plans (41.7%). Conclusion Our results highlight the need to improve the current process by which treatment planning is taught and also to consider the impact of technology on the fundamental skills of diagnosis and treatment planning within the modern educational setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Conceptual maps of the leading MBA programs in the United States: Core courses, concentration...
- Author
-
Segev, Eli, Raveh, Adi, and Farjoun, Moshe
- Subjects
MASTER of business administration degree ,BUSINESS education ,CURRICULUM ,BUSINESS schools ,SCHOOL rankings ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,SCHOOLS ,PERFORMANCE evaluation - Abstract
This paper captures the structure of MBA programs in 25 leading U.S. business schools at the beginning of the revolution these programs are undergoing. It is a study of strategic groups in the MBA industry, and a baseline for examining adaptation and strategic change in educational institutions. We use the Co-plot method to map the schools according to the 1993 structure of their core courses and existing areas of concentration. The maps indicate similarities among business schools and shed light on their 1994 ranking. Each of the five top schools has been found to be in a different cluster of MBA program structures. The findings suggest that program structure content-the particular mix of core and concentration areas—in itself is not a source of superior performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Development and Evaluation of a Staff Training Program on Palliative Care for Persons With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities.
- Author
-
Hahn, Joan E. and Cadogan, Mary P.
- Subjects
CONFIDENCE ,CURRICULUM ,INTELLECTUAL disabilities ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,HUMAN services programs ,COURSE evaluation (Education) - Abstract
Persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD) face barriers and disparities at end of life. Among these barriers are limited educational opportunities and a paucity of targeted training materials on palliative care for staff who provide their day-to-day care. This paper reports on a three-phase project undertaken to develop, implement, and evaluate a palliative care curriculum and educational program that is responsive to the unique learning needs of staff providing services and supports for individuals with I/DD living in long-term care settings. Participants' ratings of their levels of preparation and confidence to provide palliative care improved from pretraining to posttraining. Posttraining use of materials and practice changes in palliative care occurred. When training is developed in partnership with the staff who will use these training resources, it has the potential to sustain its use and to alter the care practices to address the palliative care needs of persons with I/DD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Scholarly Tracks in Emergency Medicine.
- Author
-
Regan, Linda, Stahmer, Sarah, Nyce, Andrew, Nelson, Bret P., Moscati, Ronald, Gisondi, Michael A., and Hopson, Laura R.
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,CURRICULUM ,EMERGENCY medical services ,EMERGENCY medicine ,HOSPITAL medical staff ,INTERNSHIP programs ,MEDICAL schools ,MEDICAL education ,STUDY & teaching of medicine ,VOCATIONAL guidance ,CLINICAL competence ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Over the past decade, some residency programs in emergency medicine (EM) have implemented scholarly tracks into their curricula. The goal of the scholarly track is to identify a niche in which each trainee focuses his or her scholarly work during residency. The object of this paper is to discuss the current use, structure, and success of resident scholarly tracks. A working group of residency program leaders who had implemented scholarly tracks into their residency programs collated their approaches, implementation, and early outcomes through a survey disseminated through the Council of Emergency Medicine Residency Directors (CORD) list-serve. At the 2009 CORD Academic Assembly, a session was held and attended by approximately 80 CORD members where the results were disseminated and discussed. The group examined the literature, discussed the successes and challenges faced during implementation and maintenance of the tracks, and developed a list of recommendations for successful incorporation of the scholarly track structure into a residency program. Our information comes from the experience at eight training programs (five 3-year and three 4-year programs), ranging from 8 to 14 residents per year. Two programs have been working with academic tracks for 8 years. Recommendations included creating clear goals and objectives for each track, matching track topics with faculty expertise, protecting time for both faculty and residents, and providing adequate mentorship for the residents. In summary, scholarly tracks encourage the trainee to develop an academic or clinical niche within EM during residency training. The benefits include increased overall resident satisfaction, increased success at obtaining faculty and fellowship positions after residency, and increased production of scholarly work. We believe that this model will also encourage increased numbers of trainees to choose careers in academic medicine. ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 2010; 17:S87-S94 © 2010 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Tobacco education in dentistry and dental hygiene.
- Author
-
GORDON, JUDITH S., ALBERT, DAVID A., CREWS, KAREN M., and FRIED, JACQUELYN
- Subjects
SMOKING cessation ,DENTISTRY ,SMOKELESS tobacco ,DENTAL hygiene ,DENTAL schools ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
Introduction and Aims. Dentists and dental hygienists are in a unique position to motivate and assist their patients to quit smoking and using smokeless tobacco, and there is ample evidence that they can be effective. Tobacco plays a major role in the development and treatment of many oral diseases, and the repeated nature of dental treatment provides multiple opportunities for information, advice and brief counselling. However, dentists and dental hygienists in practice report lack of training in effective tobacco cessation skills as a significant barrier to incorporating these behaviours into routine care. Design and Methods. In this paper, we summarise the rationale for addressing tobacco use within dentistry and dental hygiene, review the extant policies regarding provision of tobacco-related education, and make recommendations for the content and format of tobacco dependence treatment training in undergraduate curricula and continuing education courses. Results. Although worldwide dental education organisations have policies encouraging their members to provide tobacco cessation services to their patients, there are no national standards for tobacco cessation curriculum in US dental schools. In addition, tobacco cessation is not considered a clinical competency. Discussion and Conclusions. For dental professionals to systematically assist their patients to quit tobacco, changes must be made to the ways treatment of tobacco dependence is viewed within dentistry and taught at the undergraduate and post-graduate levels. Until that time, the dental profession will continue to fall short of the Clinical Practice Guidelines and the policies set out by its professional organisations.[Gordon JS, Albert DA, Crews KM, Fried J. Tobacco education in dentistry and dental hygiene. Drug Alcohol Rev 2009;28:517–532] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Islam and the politics of enchantment.
- Author
-
Starrett, Gregory
- Subjects
PUBLIC sphere ,ISLAM ,VIOLENCE ,CURRICULUM ,INTELLECTUALS ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
The North American public sphere is suffused with claims and counter-claims about the relationship between Islam and violence. Schools and publishers have responded with training programmes for teachers and curriculum units for students introducing them to the Middle East and its dominant religious tradition. Such programmes are often accused by local parents and national intellectuals of pandering to Muslim sensitivities by whitewashing distasteful historical events and even proselytizing young people. Focusing on a 2002 lawsuit filed against California's Byron Union School District, by parents upset by a classroom role-playing exercise on Islam, this paper argues that political fears about terrorist infiltration into US society are building on powerful emotional and cultural concerns about the nature of ritual and the spiritual safety of children exposed to information about other religions. By encouraging public education as a response to political and cultural tensions, educators may in fact be heightening the public's concerns about Islam as a comprehensive threat. Résumé Dans la sphère publique nord-américaine, on entend dire tout et son contraire à propos de la relation entre l’islam et la violence. En réponse, les écoles et les éditeurs ont produit des programmes de formation des enseignants et des unités d’enseignement présentant le Moyen Orient et sa tradition religieuse dominante. Les parents, au niveau local, et les intellectuels au niveau national accusent souvent ces programmes de flatter la susceptibilité musulmane en occultant les événements historiques déplaisants, et même de faire du prosélytisme auprès des jeunes. En se concentrant sur un procès intenté en 2002 au district scolaire de Byron Union en Californie par des parents troublés par un jeu de rôles en classe sur le thème de l’islam, l’auteur affirme que les craintes politiques d’infiltration terroriste dans la société américaine s’enracinent dans de puissantes inquiétudes émotionnelles et culturelles relatives à la nature du rituel et à la sécurité spirituelle des enfants exposés à des informations sur d’autres religions. En encourageant la sensibilisation publique en réponse aux tensions politiques et culturelles, les éducateurs pourraient en réalité attiser les craintes d’une opinion publique qui perçoit dans l’islam une menace omniprésente. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Is Dentistry at Risk? A Case for Interprofessional Education.
- Author
-
Wilder, Rebecca S., O'Donnell, Jean A., Barry, J. Mark, Galli, Dominique M., Hakim, Foroud F., Holyfield, Lavern J., and Robbins, Miriam R.
- Subjects
DENTAL health education ,CONDUCT of life ,DENTAL schools ,DENTAL students ,MEDICAL care ,DEVELOPMENTAL psychology ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
The goal of interprofessional education (IPE) is to bring various professional groups together in the educational environment to promote collaborative practice and improve the health care of patients. Interest in IPE has been sparked by several factors in the health care system, including the increased awareness of oral-systemic connections, an aging population, the shift of the burden of illness from acute to chronic care, and lack of access to basic oral care. Increasingly, since the publication of the U.S. surgeon general's report in 2000, the dialogue surrounding IPE in dentistry has escalated. But how has dentistry changed regarding IPE since the report was released? This position paper argues that little has changed in the way dental students are taught and prepared to participate in IPE. The authors contend that academic dentistry and organized dentistry must take the lead in initiating and demanding IPE if dental students are to be prepared to work in the health care environment of the twenty-first century. Included are reasons why IPE is necessary and why dentistry must lead the conversation and participate in the solution to the oral health care crisis. It explores existing models and alternate approaches to IPE, barriers to implementation, and proposed strategies for academic institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
39. Children Left Behind in AYP and Non-AYP Schools: Using Student Progress and the Distribution of Student Gains to Validate AYP.
- Author
-
Choi, Kilchan, Seltzer, Michael, Herman, Joan, and Yamashiro, Kyo
- Subjects
MULTIVARIATE analysis ,NO Child Left Behind Act of 2001 ,LEARNING ,EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements ,CURRICULUM ,STUDENT development ,SCHOOL administration ,SCHOOL districts ,ADEQUATE Yearly Progress (Education) - Abstract
The No Child Left Behind Act ( NCLB, 2002 ) establishes ambitious goals for increasing student learning and attaining equity in the distribution of student performance. Schools must assure that all students, including all significant subgroups, show adequate yearly progress (AYP) toward the goal of 100% proficiency by the year 2014. In this paper, we illustrate an alternative way of evaluating AYP that both emphasizes individual student growth over time and focuses on the distribution of student growth between performance subgroups. We do so through analyses of a longitudinal data set from an urban school district in the state of Washington. We also examine what these patterns tell us about schools that have been designated as meeting their AYP targets and those that have not. This alternative way of measuring AYP helps bring to light potentially important aspects of school performance that might be masked if we limit our focus to classifying schools based only on current AYP criteria. In particular, we are able to identify some schools meeting Washington state's AYP criteria in which above-average students are making substantial progress but below-average students making little to no progress. In contrast, other schools making AYP have below-average students making adequate progress but above-average students showing little gains. These contrasts raise questions about the meaning of “adequate” progress and to whom the notion of progress refers. We believe that closely examining the distribution of student progress may provide an important supplementary or alternative measure of AYP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Trends in the placement of posterior composites in dental schools.
- Author
-
Lynch, Christopher D., McConnell, Robert J., and Wilson, Nairn H. F.
- Subjects
DENTAL education ,DENTAL schools ,DENTAL students ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to review trends in the teaching of posterior composites in the United States, Canada, Ireland, and the United Kingdom over the last fifteen years. The authors compared the results of surveys of the teaching of posterior composites performed in 1989, 1997, and 2004-05. Historical and contemporary international trends were investigated. The amount of clinical and didactic teaching of posterior composites has increased over the past fifteen years. From a time over fifteen years ago, when very few dental students placed posterior composites in dental school, approximately one-third of posterior plastic restorations placed by U.S., Irish, and UK dental students are now composite, with the corresponding finding for Canadian dental schools being approximately 50 percent. Some variations were noted between dental schools in terms of the teaching of contraindications to placement as well as lining and basing techniques. There was some inappropriate teaching of techniques, in particular, in relation to the use of transparent matrix bands and light transmitting wedges. There was also evidence of limited student exposure to newer forms of technology, notably LED curing light units. There have been clear increases in the teaching of posterior composites in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Ireland in recent years; however, the proportion of posterior composite restorations placed by dental students relative to dental amalgams does not yet match the typical situation in contemporary clinical practice. Dental schools have a responsibility to ensure that their curricula are evidence-based to best prepare their students to meet the needs and expectations of their future patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
41. Distance Education in the U.S. and Canadian Undergraduate Dental Curriculum.
- Author
-
Andrews, Kenneth G. and Demps, Elaine L.
- Subjects
INTERNET in education ,CURRICULUM ,DENTAL education ,DENTAL schools - Abstract
A major trend at all levels of education in recent years has been the advent of distance learning and, more specifically, the use of computers and communications capabilities to provide online learning. The purpose of this study was to determine the extent to which distance learning and online technologies are being employed by dental schools in the United States and Canada. Two groups were surveyed: academic deans and faculty members of U.S. and Canadian dental schools. Thirty-eight academic deans responded to a paper-based survey, and more than 400 faculty members responded to a web-based survey. The results of these surveys indicate that online delivery of content and information has a bright future in the delivery of the dental school curriculum. At the same time, formidable obstacles must be addressed for this approach to be successful. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Art, Design & Technology - a Plea to Reclaim the Senses.
- Author
-
Jarvis, Michael and Lewis, Thérèse
- Subjects
ART education ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
The paper explores the inherent confusion surrounding the existence of design in two foundation areas of the English National Curriculum. We argue that this is a consequence of a fundamental misunderstanding about the nature of art, design and technology, Whereas technology should be considered as a cross-curricular set of skills and knowledge with a variety of technologies applicable to different subject domains, design more properly belongs to the diffuse subject of art with its range of skills, crafts and cultural knowledge bases. We argue that design and technology can learn from the expressive and open-ended processes of art making. If the practice of design is to operate effectively in the classroom then it needs to embrace more exploratory strategies to playing and making. Teachers of all age groups need to foster a greater engagement with sensory materials to enable pupils to create a context for the making of personal meanings, The notion of the teacher practitioner is a key component and the studio practice of artists and designers provides a useful framework in the adoption of such approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The First Telecommunications Engineering Program in the United States.
- Author
-
BURNHAM, GERALD O., CANTRELL, CYRUS D., FARAGO, ANDRAS, FUMAGALLI, ANDREA, KIASALEH, KAMRAN, OSBORNE, WILLIAM P., and PRAKASH, RAVI
- Subjects
TELECOMMUNICATIONS engineers ,ENGINEERING education ,CURRICULUM ,HIGH technology industries - Abstract
In the summer of 1998, the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and computer Science (the Jonsson School) at The University of Texas at Dallas (UTD) obtained approval from the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board to offer BS and MS degrees in Telecommunications Engineering (TE). These are the first TE degree programs in the United States and the BS program received ABET accreditation for classes to begin in the fall of 1999. This paper discusses the need for such a program at UTD from the perspective of industry as well as the academic justification for a separate degree. The implementation of the program as a combination of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science is addressed as well as the tradeoffs necessary in combining these curricula. Many of the issues are similar to the ones addressed in a Computer Engineering program. However, the resulting tradeoffs are different in the case of a Telecommunications Engineering program. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Manufacturing: A Strategic Opportunity for Engineering Education.
- Author
-
TODD, ROBERT H., RED, W. EDWARD, MAGLEBY, SPENCER P., and COE, STEVEN
- Subjects
GROUP work in education ,MANUFACTURED products ,ENGINEERING education ,INTERNET ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
This paper examines the importance of the manufacturing enterprise and the need for manufacturing education. The objective is to present a case for the expansion of manufacturing-related education as a strategic opportunity for engineering education. A brief history of engineering education is presented, as well as an exploration of the current ABET criteria for various engineering disciplines. Approaches for achieving manufacturing-related education are presented noting that Mechanical Engineering and Industrial Engineering are often most closely associated with manufacturing. Surveys of industry reveal the need for manufacturing education and identify preferred approaches. If manufacturing is to be included as part of a mechanical engineering program, there are a number of possible approaches. Of all the new technologies that will impact engineering education, none is larger than the Internet. The number of manufacturing educational programs in the United States is growing substantially. New manufacturing programs are encouraged along with review of educational content in traditional engineering disciplines-especially the related discipline of mechanical engineering. Analysis leads us to believe that manufacturing represents a strategic [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. A Cure for Bioengineering? A New Undergraduate Core Curriculum.
- Author
-
DESAI, TEJAL A. and MAGIN, RICHARD L.
- Subjects
BIOENGINEERING ,ENGINEERING education ,CURRICULUM ,BIOTECHNOLOGY ,BIOLOGY education ,UNDERGRADUATE programs - Abstract
Student interest, industry growth, and medical advances highlight a growing need for baccalaureate trained bioengineers. However, undergraduate bioengineering curricula have not kept pace with the recent rapid growth of biotechnology, bioinformatics, and cellular level bioengineering. It is the premise of this paper that a new baccalaureate core curriculum in cell and tissue engineering is needed to foster the full development of bioengineering as a core engineering discipline. Employment opportunities for baccalaureate Bioengineering graduates in the emerging biologically-based engineering industry (e.g. bioinformatics, cell and tissue engineering, neural engineering) are increasing. We describe a new undergraduate B.S. bioengineering curriculum in cell and tissue engineering with an emphasis in interfacial molecular approaches. This curriculum is integrated with traditional bioengineering topics and has its technical emphasis in molecular biology, nanotechnology, and computational modeling. Thus, the future bioengineer can be expected to design, model, fabricate, and control living systems and their fundamental constituents at the same level of detail as an electrical engineer uses SPICE and CAD tools to develop a microelectronic or micro-electro-mechanical device. Such engineers would be expected to take their place in industry, graduate school, or medicine with a clear mastery of cell and tissue-based bioengineering. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. A re‐introduction of the psychodynamic approach to the standard clinical psychology curriculum.
- Author
-
Levendosky, Alytia A., Turchan, Joshua E., Luo, Xiaochen, and Good, Evan
- Subjects
PSYCHODYNAMICS ,CLINICAL psychology ,PSYCHODYNAMIC psychotherapy ,PATIENT-professional relations ,CURRICULUM ,THERAPEUTIC alliance ,PRODUCT returns - Abstract
Objective: There is a strong evidence‐base for a psychodynamic approach, supporting primary theoretical tenets as well as the treatment effectiveness. Additionally, there are increasing calls from the field for more individualized treatment for clients, and the lack of training in multiple orientations limits the ability of students in clinical psychology Ph.D. programs in the United States to personalize their treatments. The accumulated evidence‐base for contemporary relational psychodynamic theory and therapy places it in good standing to return to the standard clinical psychology curriculum, along with other evidence‐based approaches. Methods: We use data from the Insider's Guide (which describes clinical Ph.D. programs in the United States) from three time points over 20 years to document the waning psychodynamic approach in clinical psychology programs. We review the scientific evidence for four primary tenets of a contemporary psychodynamic approach: three related to development—from healthy to psychopathological: (1) unconscious processes; (2) internal representations of self and other; (3) dimensional model of psychopathology, and a fourth tenet that builds on these three and is the foundation for a contemporary psychodynamic approach to psychotherapy: (4) therapeutic relationship as a primary mechanism of change. Results/Conclusions: Based on the review of the evidence, we make specific recommendations for clinical psychology training programs about how to include a psychodynamic approach in the curriculum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Equity Challenges for the Early Childhood Curriculum.
- Author
-
Naughton, Glenda Mac
- Subjects
CURRICULUM ,CHILD development ,CHILD care ,SOCIAL justice ,DEVELOPMENTAL psychology ,SOCIAL development - Abstract
Curriculum documents from the USA, UK and Australia show remarkable harmony on the need for a develop mentally-based curriculum in producing quality early childhood programmes. This paper uses a detailed discussion ofa grass roots level research project in Australia to explore the contention that a curriculum built solely on these principles and the practices that develop from them is likely to be sexist. Several aspects of the curriculum that need rethinking in relation to gender equity goals are identified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. EVALUATING INSTRUCTION: THE COMPLEMENTARY USE OF CLINICAL INTERVIEWS.
- Author
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Finley, Fred N.
- Subjects
SCIENCE education ,INSTRUCTIONAL systems ,CURRICULUM ,EDUCATIONAL programs ,GRADUATE study in education ,EDUCATIONAL evaluation ,CURRICULUM evaluation ,SCHOOL districts - Abstract
This article evaluates the instruction of science education in the U.S. Twenty–four second grade students were randomly selected from each of two second–grade classrooms in a large rural school district. The content domain for the program was established by two researchers who analyzed the program script and the actual program. Comparisons of the pretest and posttest interviews revealed a different picture of the impact of the instruction. The results of the clinical interview indicated that the tenets of the instructional design, the actual instruction, and the expenditure of resources for additional similar instruction were warranted.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Student Protest--Will the Art Department Be a New Target?
- Author
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Berland, John C. and Oglesby, Dwayne L.
- Subjects
LEGAL status of students ,SCHOOL discipline ,SCHOOL administration ,COLLEGE discipline ,STUDENT activism ,STUDENT protesters ,STUDENT political activity ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
Discusses how student protests in the United States revolve around problems such as military research on campus, black study programs, curricula reforms, and the rules governing life in student dormitories. Consideration of the suspension and arrest of certain student activist leaders; Suggestion that a large majority of students are conservative, content, and apathetic towards their rights; Procedural due process in matters of discipline; Indications from a questionnaire that was sent to the department heads of art departments across the U.S.
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. GRADUATE EDUCATION IN QUANTITATIVE METHODS IN THE AACSB SCHOOLS.
- Author
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Burford, Roger L. and Williams, Donald R.
- Subjects
BUSINESS education ,QUANTITATIVE research ,BUSINESS schools ,UNDERGRADUATE programs ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
The status of Quantitative Methods in business education is perhaps less "standard" and less understood than any other field. This is probably even more true at the graduate than at the undergraduate level. Courses which are normally considered to be Quantitative Methods courses are often housed in a wide range of departments. Some courses which would normally be classified as Quantitative Methods courses are also housed in colleges other than Business Administration. In order to determine the current status of graduate quantitative methods curricula in schools of business, a survey was made of the member institutions of the American Association of Collegiate Schools of Business. This paper presents the survey findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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