642 results
Search Results
2. Recent papers of interest to teachers of psychology.
- Author
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Jarvis, Matt
- Subjects
FLIPPED classrooms ,TUTORS & tutoring ,PROJECT method in teaching ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
A review of several papers of interest to psychology teachers is presented, including "The Flipped Classroom Improves Student Achievement and Course Satisfaction in a Statistics Course: A Quasi-Experimental Study," by D. J. Peterson, "The Purpose of Tutorial Groups: Social Influence and the Group As Means and Objective," by M. Rosander and E. H. Chiriac, and "Exploring the Effects of Project-Based Learning in Secondary Mathematic Education" by V. L. Holmes and Y. Hwang.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. "You can't just check the box": the mathematics of ethnoracial contortions at a California high school.
- Author
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Gargroetzi, Emma C.
- Subjects
RACISM ,SECONDARY education ,MATHEMATICS education ,RACIALIZATION ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
This article brings critical and postcolonial theories together with extended ethnographic research in a predominantly Latinx high school in California's "South Bay" to theorize the co-production and co-naturalization of mathematical and racial essentialization. Analysis of vignettes and interview excerpts illuminates both student uptake and resistance to homogenizing narratives of mathematics and racial personhood. Student voices from Sierra High School both evidenced the existence, stakes, and personal consequences of narrowly bounded, taken for granted, conceptions of mathematics and racial personhood and challenged these homogenizing categories. This paper contributes theory illuminating the co-construction of mathematical and racial essentialization along with examples of local critique and resistance from youth and their adult allies at one high school in the USA. Implications suggest that decolonial work in mathematics education must jointly address the narrow and essentializing frames for race and racialization and for mathematics itself as co-producing and co-naturalizing each other. This study contributes insight into mechanisms that perpetuate and also resist or disrupt these processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Mental Health Education in Primary and Secondary Schools Based on Deep Learning.
- Author
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Wang, Chunqian and An, Yi
- Subjects
DEEP learning ,MENTAL health education ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children ,MIDDLE school education ,SECONDARY schools ,MENTAL health of students - Abstract
Strengthening the mental health education of primary and middle school students is a key measure to lead their healthy growth. This paper takes mental health early warning as the starting point to carry out research on mental health education in primary and secondary schools. Aiming at the defect that the existing methods cannot effectively warn the mental health of primary and secondary school students, this paper proposes a mental health early warning research method based on the deep learning models. The method firstly obtains the mental health data of college students through the symptom self-rating scale. Then, a mental health prediction model combining convolutional neural networks (CNN), deep residual networks (ResNet), and long short-term memory (LSTM) is adopted. Through in-depth processing and analysis of mental health data, the mental health status of students can be determined. Experiments show that this method can effectively improve the accuracy of mental health early warning compared with the currently commonly used mental health early warning methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A meta‐ethnographic understanding of children and young people's experiences of extended school non‐attendance.
- Author
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Corcoran, Shannon and Kelly, Catherine
- Subjects
EXTENDED School Year (Special education) ,CHILDREN with disabilities ,YOUNG adults ,AGE groups ,META-analysis ,SCHOOL children ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
The views of the children and young people experiencing Extended School Non‐Attendance difficulties are scarcely represented in the literature. This systematic literature review provides a much needed overview of the existing research evidence through a detailed synthesis of the lived experiences of persistently non‐attending young people, using a meta‐ethnographic approach. Ten qualitative, UK‐based papers were selected and analysed, each of which focused specifically on the direct views of school non‐attenders. Using Noblit and Hare's seven‐step approach, the analysis generated seven themes: (1) difficult relationships with peer group; (2) inconsistent relationships with and support from adults; (3) negative experiences of school transition; (4) negative experiences of learning in school; (5) emotional wellbeing and mental health needs; (6) others' negative perceptions of the individual's needs; (7) personal beliefs about attendance. Through reciprocal translation of these themes, the overarching higher‐order concept was developed relating to the impact of a sense of school belonging. The implications of this review include an enhanced emphasis on the need to gather young people's views early and to use their preferred terminology when discussing their difficulties. While outside the scope of this paper, further research should look to the translation into policy and practice in this area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Developing Primary School Students' Abilities to Evaluate the Evidence of Written Scientific Arguments.
- Author
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Skoumios, Michael
- Subjects
PRIMARY schools ,SCHOOL children ,TEMPERATURE ,DATA analysis ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
The engagement of students in processes for evaluating scientific arguments is particularly important for science education of all students. Research studying students' abilities to evaluate scientific arguments based on their evidence is limited. The present paper investigates the impact of a teaching sequence for temperature and heat, which is based on the teaching science-as-practice approach, on primary school students' abilities to evaluate the evidence of the written scientific arguments they read. The instructional material developed was implemented to 262 students aged 12 years. A questionnaire was developed and completed by the students before and after the implementation of the teaching–learning sequence. The data analysis showed that the teaching sequence significantly contributed to improving students' abilities to locate evidence in arguments, identify relevant supporting evidence that should be included in arguments, evaluate whether a piece of evidence is strong or weak, and compare and evaluate two arguments according to the evidence they include. This study provides preliminary evidence that a teaching sequence which is based on the teaching science-as-practice approach may be effective for increasing primary school students' abilities to evaluate the evidence of scientific arguments. The results of this study and their implications for both research and practice are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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7. Changing classroom culture, curricula, and instruction for proof and proving: how amenable to scaling up, practicable for curricular integration, and capable of producing long-lasting effects are current interventions?
- Author
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Nardi, Elena and Knuth, Eric
- Subjects
CLASSROOMS ,CULTURE ,MATHEMATICS education (Secondary) ,MATHEMATICAL proofs ,CURRICULUM ,LEARNING ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
This paper is a commentary on the classroom interventions on the teaching and learning of proof reported in the seven empirical papers in this special issue. The seven papers show potential to enhance student learning in an area of mathematics that is not only notoriously difficult for students to learn and for teachers to teach, but also critically important to knowing and doing mathematics. Although the seven papers, and the intervention studies they report, vary in many ways-student population, content domain, goals and duration of the intervention, and theoretical perspectives, to name a few-they all provide valuable insight into ways in which classroom experiences might be designed to positively influence students' learning to prove. In our commentary, we highlight the contributions and promise of the interventions in terms of whether and how they present capacity to change the classroom culture, the curriculum, or instruction. In doing so, we distinguish between works that aim to enhance students' preparedness for, and competence in, proof and proving and works that explicitly foster appreciation for the need and importance of proof and proving. Finally, we also discuss briefly the interventions along three dimensions: how amenable to scaling up, how practicable for curricular integration, and how capable of producing long-lasting effects these interventions are. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Unraveling a Secret : Vietnam's Outstanding Performance on the PISA Test
- Author
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Parandekar, Suhas D. and Sedmik, Elisabeth K.
- Subjects
STUDENT CHARACTERISTICS ,MATH TEST ,SCHOOL CHILDREN ,EDUCATION LEVELS ,SCHOOL LIFE ,CLASSROOM ,MATHEMATICS ,QUALITY ASSURANCE ,SCHOOL HOURS ,WORKING STUDENTS ,EXAMINATION ,TEST SCORES ,SCHOOL PRINCIPALS ,VALUES ,DISSERTATION ,SUBJECTS ,TEACHER RATIOS ,EIGHTH-GRADE ,EDUCATION ,SCIENCE ,INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ASSESSMENT ,EARLY CHILDHOOD CARE ,VILLAGE SCHOOL ,CURRICULUM ,COLLEGE ,TEACHER ABSENTEEISM ,PEDAGOGICAL PRACTICES ,READING ,EDUCATIONAL REFORM ,PHYSICAL INFRASTRUCTURE ,TEACHERS ,STUDENT-TEACHER RATIO ,ACADEMIC SUCCESS ,TRUANCY ,INVESTMENT IN EDUCATION ,STUDENTS ,BASIC EDUCATION ,TEACHER MANAGEMENT ,UPPER SECONDARY EDUCATION ,CURRICULAR ACTIVITY ,STUDENT ATTITUDES ,INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION ,ECONOMICS OF EDUCATION ,SCHOOLS ,PARENTAL EDUCATION ,TEXTBOOK ,NUMBER OF STUDENTS ,LOWER SECONDARY ,TEACHER ,PLAY SCHOOL ,SECONDARY EDUCATION ,MATHEMATICAL CONCEPTS ,REPETITION RATES ,STUDENTS PER TEACHER ,TEACHER PERFORMANCE ,AVERAGE CLASS SIZE ,EDUCATIONAL PERFORMANCE ,STUDENTS IN MATHEMATICS ,EARLY CHILDHOOD ,SCHOOL INFRASTRUCTURE ,EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT ,SCHOOL AUTONOMY ,PERFORMANCE IN MATHEMATICS ,LEVEL OF EDUCATION ,DISCIPLINES ,STUDENT ASSESSMENT ,LITERATURE ,ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ,ABSENTEEISM ,STUDENT REPORTS ,FEES ,RESEARCH ,EDUCATIONAL OUTCOMES ,ACADEMIC STANDARDS ,INCENTIVES FOR TEACHERS ,LOWER SECONDARY EDUCATION ,HIGH SCHOOL ,SCIENCE SCORES ,SPORTS ,ADMISSION POLICIES ,INVESTMENTS IN EDUCATION ,ACHIEVEMENT DATA ,REFERENCE BOOKS ,ELEMENTS ,HIGH ACADEMIC STANDARDS ,CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT ,SCHOOL COMMITTEES ,OPEN ACCESS ,SCHOOL EDUCATION ,PAPERS ,STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT ,PARENT PARTICIPATION ,CLASSROOM ASSISTANTS ,PROBLEM SOLVING ,STUDENT ,PARENTAL SUPPORT ,TEACHER RATIO ,GRADUATION RATES ,AVERAGE ENROLLMENT ,HIGH SCHOOLS ,FORMAL EDUCATION ,UPPER SECONDARY ,SKILLS ,TEACHER-STUDENT RATIO ,TEACHER APPRAISAL ,READERS ,EDUCATIONAL POLICIES ,HUMAN RESOURCES ,PRIVATE SCHOOL ,INSTRUCTION ,TEACHING ,STUDENT FEES ,LEARNING ,ACHIEVEMENT ,PRIVATE SCHOOLS ,MATHEMATICS TEACHERS ,KNOWLEDGE ,PARENTS’ EDUCATION ,ATTITUDES ,SCHOOL INSTRUCTION ,BOOKS AT HOME ,LABOR MARKETS ,SCHOOL PROJECT ,CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES ,UNIVERSIT ,PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT ,COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT ,SCHOOL CLIMATE ,SCIENCE INSTRUCTION ,EDUCATIONAL INVESTMENTS ,SCHOOL ACHIEVEMENT ,CLASS SIZE ,EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES ,MATHEMATICS EDUCATION ,SCHOOL ,STUDENT-TEACHER RATIOS ,SCHOOLING ,EDUCATIONAL SYSTEMS ,POLITICAL SCIENCE ,SCHOOL MANAGEMENT - Abstract
This paper seeks to find an empirical explanation of Vietnam's outstanding performance on the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) in 2012. Only a few developing countries participate in the assessment. Those who do, with the unique exception of Vietnam, are typically clustered at the lower end of the range of the Programme for International student Assessment scores. The paper compares Vietnam's performance with that of a set of seven developing countries from the 2012 assessment's data set, using a cut-off per capita GDP (in 2010 purchasing power parity dollars) of $10,000. The seven developing countries' average performance lags Vietnam's by more than 100 points. The "Vietnam effect" is difficult to unscramble, but the paper is able to explain about half of the gap between Vietnam and the seven countries. The analysis reveals that Vietnamese students may be approaching their studies with higher diligence and discipline, their parents may have higher expectations, and the parents may be following up with teachers regarding those expectations. The teachers themselves may be working in a more disciplined environment, with tabs being kept on their own performance as teachers. Vietnam may also be benefiting from investments in pre-school education and in school infrastructure that are disproportionately higher when compared with Vietnam's per capita income level.
- Published
- 2016
9. Exploring the relationship between validity and comparability in assessment.
- Author
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Crisp, Victoria
- Subjects
TEST validity ,EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements ,EXAMINATIONS ,CRITERION referenced tests ,SCHOOL children ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
This article discusses how comparability relates to current mainstream conceptions of validity, in the context of educational assessment. Relevant literature was used to consider the relationship between these concepts. The article concludes that, depending on the exact claims being made about the appropriate interpretations and uses of the results of an assessment, several comparability concerns fall within the remit of validation. The current exploration supports the addition of comparability to validation studies and may be useful in the context of a growing emphasis on the provision of validity evidence for public examinations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. State school inspection policy in Norway and Sweden (2002–2012): a reconfiguration of governing modes?
- Author
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Hall, Jeffrey Brooks and Sivesind, Kirsten
- Subjects
SCHOOL inspections (Educational quality) ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION ,COMPARATIVE education ,SCHOOL administration ,SCHOOL children ,TEENAGERS ,ELEMENTARY education ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
There is growing research interest in school inspection throughout Europe; however, there have been few comparative studies between Swedish and Norwegian school inspectorates. Such a study is necessary since little is known about how inspection policies are shaped through ‘governing modes’ in the two Nordic countries. This paper explores the similarities and differences between state school inspection policies within the two countries from 2002 to 2012. Based on a rigorous, comparative document analysis of 23 policy documents, a particular focus is given to how school inspection adheres to professional-bureaucratic control as a mode of governing and/or details national expectations through performance audit, potentially intervening into school practices. We demonstrate that even if the cases of public administration seem to be somewhat homogenous from the outside, there is substantial evidence of major differences in the inspection policies of these two countries which can be explored by comparative analysis. Specifically, this paper contributes both conceptually and comparatively to understanding how a study of purposive and evaluative modes of governing can add to the field of school inspection studies. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Adapting educational practices in emergency remote education: Continuity and change from a student perspective.
- Author
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Manca, Stefania and Delfino, Manuela
- Subjects
DISTANCE education ,EDUCATION ,COVID-19 pandemic ,SCHOOL children ,SECONDARY school students ,IMMIGRANT students ,STUDENT participation ,EDUCATIONAL cooperation - Abstract
In this study, we adopt an ecological perspective to reflect on how a specific Italian school cluster adapted to the challenges of the COVID‐19 pandemic by focusing on how students experienced the interplay between continuity and change in school teaching and learning practices caused by the pandemic. Specifically, the study investigates how the school's physical/virtual learning system was (re)configured to provide new opportunities for learning to a thousand‐plus population of primary and secondary students, and how they reacted to the transition to distance learning in terms of participation, autonomy, motivation and engagement. The research adopts a mixed method approach, based on school management system data and a survey tool, and analyses the students' response to the emergency from the perspectives of the students themselves, their teachers and their parents. While these converged in positive evaluation of the experience, a number of lessons were learnt, such as the importance of building on favourable pre‐existing conditions and leveraging a solid shared school culture to promote a prompt reaction to the emergency. Significantly, students with an immigrant background displayed varying degrees of participation in online activities. Overall, for each of the three stakeholder groups surveyed, solid pre‐existing digital competence levels and close collaboration within the school community were the most important factors for non‐traumatic transition to distance learning. Practitioner notesWhat is already known about this topic? Research on the relationship between the COVID‐19 pandemic and the effects on teaching and learning processes is constantly increasing.Most recently published studies focus on higher education, while very few investigate the impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic on K‐12 education.Very few papers have studied the interplay between change and continuity within an educational ecosystem in times of crisis.What this paper adds? This is one of the first studies to analyse the process of systematic transition from onsite learning to online learning within the Italian school system in response to the pandemic.This study employs a multiple perspective research approach to analyse Emergency Remote Education in a sizeable school cluster, with a specific focus on student response.Teachers, students and their families all saw solid pre‐existing digital competence and close school community collaboration as key factors facilitating rapid adjustment to the emergency.Implications for practice and policy Having a solid common school culture to rely on facilitates prompt emergency reaction.Encouraging the creation of professional communities of practice that comprise both expert and novice teachers can help prepare educators to deal with an educational emergency through adoption and appropriate use of technological solutions.Collaboration between school and families proves to be a key factor for dealing with emergencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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12. Narrow identity resources for future students: the 21st century skills movement encounters the Norwegian education policy context.
- Author
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Hilt, Line T., Riese, Hanne, and Søreide, Gunn Elisabeth
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,INFORMATION economy ,LEARNING ,PROGRESSIVISM ,DISCOURSE analysis ,PRIMARY education ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
21st century skills is a global network of corporate and governmental influences that promotes competences suited to fit the future knowledge economy. Through a discourse analysis of an influential Official Norwegian Report, 'The School of the Future. Renewal of Subjects and Competences' (NOU 2015:8), this paper explores how ideas of 21st century skills are translated into the Norwegian education policy context. Firstly, the paper analyses the context-specific reasons for receptiveness by investigating discursive warrants. Secondly, the paper identifies how the policy document constructs a set of preferred subject positions that constitute an image of an ideal student. Thirdly, the paper investigates the discursive framing of these subject positions. We find that the policy document constructs an image of an ideal student who is creative, responsible, cooperative, engaged, self-regulated and in complete control of herself, her learning and her future. This image draws on more pronounced neo-liberal discourses, but also well-established discourses in the Norwegian context, such as social democratic progressivism. This intertwining of discourses shows how traits of homogeneity related to global ideas, as well as heterogeneity related to the Norwegian policy context, are both visible in the Norwegian translation of 21st century skills. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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13. Nurturing learning or encouraging dependency? Teacher constructions of students in lower attainment groups in English secondary schools.
- Author
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Mazenod, Anna, Francis, Becky, Archer, Louise, Taylor, Becky, Tereshchenko, Antonina, Hodgen, Jeremy, and Pepper, David
- Subjects
LEARNING ,ABILITY grouping (Education) ,TEACHER expectations ,TEACHING methods ,ACADEMIC achievement ,SCHOOL children ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
'Ability' or attainment grouping can introduce an additional label that influences teachers' expectations of students in specific attainment groups. This paper is based on a survey of 597 teachers across 82 schools and 34 teacher interviews in 10 schools undertaken as part of a large-scale mixed-methods study in England. The paper focuses on English and mathematics teachers' expectations of secondary school students in lower attainment groups, and explores how low-attaining students are constructed as learners who benefit from specific approaches to learning justified through discourses of nurturing and protection. The authors argue that the adoption of different pedagogical approaches for groups of low-attaining learners to nurture them may in some cases be fostering dependency on teachers and cap opportunities for more independent learning. Furthermore, more inclusive whole-school learning-culture approaches may better allow for students across the attainment range to become independent learners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. School-to-school support within a competitive education system: views from the inside.
- Author
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Armstrong, Paul Wilfred and Ainscow, Mel
- Subjects
SCHOOL improvement programs ,EDUCATIONAL change ,EDUCATIONAL leadership ,AUTODIDACTICISM ,SCHOOL districts ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children ,PRIMARY education - Abstract
This paper draws on evidence from a study carried out in England to explore how schools can support one another’s improvement within a policy context that emphasises competition. The findings offer some reasons to be optimistic, and are suggestive of the capacity and potential of the school system in England to “self-improve” through collaborative means. However, light is also thrown on a number of barriers that need to be overcome to make such an approach work. The paper argues that developing a greater understanding of the social complexities involved in school-to-school support requires research that takes account of the views of those involved. With this in mind, the paper reflects on the experiences of a group of school leaders in England, leading to lessons that are likely to be relevant to those in other national contexts where competition is seen as a driver for school improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Analyzing the use of history in mathematics education: issues and challenges around Balacheff’s cKȼ model.
- Author
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de Vittori, Thomas
- Subjects
MATHEMATICS education ,TEACHING ,THEORY of knowledge ,MATHEMATICAL models ,LEARNING ,SCHOOL children ,SECONDARY education ,HISTORY - Abstract
Part of the international reflection on the use of history in mathematics teaching consists in a quest of frameworks and models suitable for empirical studies. Following this demand, this paper explores the way Balacheff’s cKȼ model, a model taken from the didactics of mathematics, can be used in the analysis of learning at student level. In the first part of this paper, Balacheff’s cKȼ model (conceptions, knowledge, ȼoncepts) is shortly presented, and in the second part, the relationship between the epistemological background of the model and the use of the history of mathematics is explored in order to show a possible suitableness. The third part addresses an example of a school activity (about ancient Indian geometry) in which the model is applied and the historical issues clarified. Questioning the role of problems both in the cKȼ model and in the use of history, the last part shows how a study at the students’ conception level enlightens the way in which historical elements can interact with contemporary mathematical learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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16. Editorial.
- Author
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Morris, Paul, Rao, Nitya, and Sayed, Yusuf
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE education ,EDUCATION ,ADULTS ,SCHOOL children ,ELEMENTARY education ,SECONDARY education ,HIGHER education - Abstract
An introduction is presented for the featured articles within the March 2014 issue, focusing on schooling in African countries, including contributions by Shoko Yamada, Christine Smith Ellison, and Roger Jeffery.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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17. Empowering minority students: a study of cultural references in the teaching content.
- Author
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Aasebø, Turid Skarre and Willbergh, Ilmi
- Subjects
MINORITY students ,SELF-efficacy ,TEACHING ,SCHOOL children ,TEENAGERS ,PRIMARY education ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
Using references to the world outside the classroom is an intrinsic part of teaching content. Cultural references, however, might present a challenge for minority students. This paper investigates how teaching can contribute to the empowerment of all students through a qualitative observational case study of two Norwegian primary and secondary schools. Plenary teaching in two classes at each school was observed for two weeks. Using an abductive research process inspired by linguistic translatory research and Bildung-centred general didactics, we developed categories of universal and particular cultural references in classroom teaching. Universal references are general topics concerning all human beings, while particular references presuppose knowledge of specific cultures. The results are discussed in relation to multicultural research, as well as the 'postcolonial paradox'. The article concludes that teaching can contribute to the empowerment of all students by combining universal and particular cultural references so that different realms of the human condition are displayed. The challenge for the teacher in this endeavour is to increase the use of non-Western references and to be aware of the postcolonial paradox as an inevitable dilemma when teaching in culturally diverse classrooms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Reflections on the medium of instruction for ethnic minorities in Xinjiang: the case of bilingual schools in Urumqi.
- Author
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Zhang, Qi and Yang, Ting
- Subjects
BILINGUAL education ,UIGHUR (Turkic people) ,KAZAKHS ,SCHOOL children ,SECONDARY education ,PRIMARY education - Abstract
The medium of instruction (MoI) is regulated in the bilingual education of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in two ways. One requires most school subjects to be taught through Mandarin, whereas the other demands that all subjects be delivered with Mandarin as the MoI. A field trip to the capital city, Urumqi, was conducted in 2017 to investigate the implementation of the MoI as stated in the policy. This paper first outlines the history of bilingual education in the region, with a focus on Chinese language education. It then investigates the change of MoI from the ethnic minority language to Mandarin Chinese. The two current modes of bilingual education in Xinjiang are also discussed in detail. The paper further examines the regulations on MoI through interviews with students and teachers from four Urumqi schools. Their understanding of the regulations on MoI usage demonstrates the difficulties of implementing such a policy, one initially proposed with good intentions. Through a thorough examination of official documents as well as interview data, this study shows the discrepancies between national and current regional policies, between planned aim and in-class practice, and between the transitional and balanced types of bilingual education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The frustrations of digital fabrication: an auto/ethnographic exploration of '3D Making' in school.
- Author
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Nemorin, Selena
- Subjects
RAPID prototyping ,THREE-dimensional printing ,TECHNOLOGY ,LEARNING ,PROTOTYPES ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
Following initial educational enthusiasms for 'Making' technologies and the 'Maker Movement', increasing numbers of students are now using digital fabrication programs and equipment in school. Given the current lack of empirical research exploring the realities of Making as a school activity, this paper presents an in-depth auto/ethnographic account of 3D printing-currently, one of the most popular Maker technologies in schools. Investigating the case of an 8 week Year 9 design project, this paper seeks to broaden understandings of how 3D printing technologies and practices are shaping 'what counts' as learning within contemporary school settings. In particular, this research focuses on the experiences of Making within a school context; what is learned through these experiences; and how the process of Making in school feels. This paper highlights three key issues that have been marginalised to date in discussions of Making in schools: (1) lack of pragmatic engagement, (2) affective labour of failing; and (3) mediated alienation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Can student interdependence be experienced negatively in collective music education programmes? A contextual approach.
- Author
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Sarazin, Marc
- Subjects
INTERDEPENDENCE theory ,MUSIC education ,SOCIAL cohesion ,SOCIAL network analysis ,EMBEDDEDNESS (Socioeconomic theory) ,STUDENT engagement ,SCHOOL children ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
Many studies and accounts argue that collective music-making can contribute to building social cohesion and training social skills, and particularly that student interdependence in collective music education programmes can foster this. I argue that this implies two assumptions: first, that students mostly experience interdependence in music programmes positively, and second that their experiences of interdependence are not significantly affected by their experiences in other settings. To address these assumptions, this paper reports on findings from a mixedmethods case study of a French in-school collective music education programme targeting disadvantaged students. The findings suggest that students could experience interdependence negatively in the music programme, and that this was informed by the tendency for interdependence to be framed negatively in the school context. Further, the study suggests that the school's pedagogical notion of the cadre led students to frame negative interdependence not as an encouragement to act cohesively, but rather as an adult imposition. The paper ends by discussing the implications of these findings and arguing for further studies investigating the mechanisms that link different collective music-making and educational settings with positive outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Fostering empirical examination after proof construction in secondary school geometry.
- Author
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Komatsu, Kotaro
- Subjects
GEOMETRY education in secondary schools ,SECONDARY schools ,MATHEMATICAL proofs ,MATHEMATICS education (Secondary) ,TEACHER role ,CRITICAL thinking ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
In contrast to existing research that has typically addressed the process from example generation to proof construction, this study aims at enhancing empirical examination after proof construction leading to revision of statements and proofs in secondary school geometry. The term 'empirical examination' refers to the use of examples or diagrams to investigate whether a statement is true or a proof is valid. Although empirical examination after proof construction is significant in school mathematics in terms of cultivating students' critical thinking and achieving authentic mathematical practice, how this activity can be fostered remains unclear. This paper shows the strength of a particular kind of mathematical task, proof problems with diagrams, and teachers' roles in implementing the tasks, by analysing two classroom-based interventions with students in the eighth and ninth grades. In the interventions, the tasks and the teachers' actions successfully prompted the students to discover a case rejecting a proof and a case refuting a statement, modify the proof, properly restrict the domain of the statement by disclosing its hidden condition, and invent a more general statement that was true even for the refutation of the original statement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The current situation and strategy of Olympic education for primary and secondary school students based on Science-Technology-Engineering-Art-Mathematics education in the context of physical literacy.
- Author
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Jia Li and Lei Yuan
- Subjects
SCHOOL children ,SECONDARY school students ,PRIMARY education ,PHYSICAL education ,SECONDARY education ,MIDDLE school education - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is the influence of Science-Technology-Engineering-Art-Mathematics (STEAM) education on the Olympic education of primary and middle school students. The research object is the Beijing Olympic model school. The frame structure and educational concept of STEAM education are studied, and a questionnaire survey on the current situation of Olympic education is conducted. Finally, improvement measures based on the survey results are provided combined with STEAM education, and the teaching effect is analyzed. The results show that after the improvement of the educational model, the student's mastery of the Olympic knowledge has been greatly improved. The proportion of students who can master all knowledge increases from 5.78 to 8.45%, by 2.67%. The proportion of students with knowledge of most Olympic sports increases from 48.6 to 55.67%, by 7.07%. The proportion of students with little or no knowledge drops to 1.54%. Meanwhile, students are increasingly interested in Olympic events, especially after being inspired by the STEAM education model. The proportion of students who are very concerned about Olympic events has increased by 6.45%. The proportion of students who are more concerned about Olympic events has increased by 5.11%. Thus, the Olympic education work has achieved some results. Students gradually become interested in the Olympic events. They begin to actively pay attention to the Olympic events and learn the Olympic spirit. Then, their physical literacy is improved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. INTERCONNECTION OF FAMILY CIRCUMSTANCES AND THE SELECTION OF SECONDARY EDUCATION.
- Author
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Dubovicki, Snježana and Zorić, Maja
- Subjects
SECONDARY education ,STUDENTS ,VOCATIONAL schools ,SCHOOL choice ,FAMILIES ,OCCUPATIONAL science ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
Choosing a high school or future profession is important and is most often the first big decision in every student's life. The occupation is well chosen if it is in accordance with students' abilities, affinities, labor market requirements, and the family circumstances in which the student lives. This decision affects the overall future life of the student, defines them and directs them to a certain path. This paper presents the results of the research on the interconnection between socioeconomic conditions of the family, the values that are encouraged in the family and students' opinions on the factors influencing the choice of occupation and choice of high school. The research was conducted on a sample of 163 students from the first to the third grade of a three-year vocational school. The research results show that 63.73% of parents enrolled in three-year vocational school have completed secondary school, and 21.57% of them have completed primary school. A total of 66.67% of parents are employed, and 60.74% of students live with both parents. The results of the research show that students in most cases wanted to enroll in a three-year vocational school. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
24. The new special educational needs (SEN) legislation in England and implications for services for children and young people with social, emotional and behavioural difficulties.
- Author
-
Norwich, Brahm and Eaton, Andrew
- Subjects
SCHOOL children ,TEENAGERS ,ELEMENTARY education ,SECONDARY education ,EDUCATIONAL law & legislation ,SPECIAL education ,SCHOOLS ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,BEHAVIOR disorders in children ,STUDENTS with disabilities ,MENTAL health services ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper analyses the first significant change to Special Educational Needs (SEN) legislation in England for over a decade, a change that promises new approaches to identification and assessment, increased parental choice and enhanced pupil outcomes. The paper aims to examine to what extent this new framework can live up to its claims in the field of emotional and behavioural difficulties. It analyses the policy context and some key details of this legislation by focussing on approaches such as person-centred planning, multi-professional collaborations and recent mental health initiatives in schools. It also explores what can be expected from the legislative requirements for collaboration between health, social care and education agencies to improve outcomes for children and young people. The paper concludes by addressing tensions between medical and social model assumptions by proposing a systemic approach to multi-agency working and an educationally oriented and integrated functional framework for identifying and assessing emotional and behavioural difficulties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. How might educational research into children’s ideas about light be of use to teachers?
- Author
-
Mark Hardman and John-Paul Riordan
- Subjects
STUDY & teaching of light ,STUDENT attitudes ,TEACHER-student communication ,SCIENTIFIC apparatus & instruments ,PHYSICS education (Elementary) ,PHYSICS education (Secondary) ,SCHOOL children ,TEENAGERS ,ELEMENTARY education ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
This paper offers a synthesis of research evidence around teaching light to primary and secondary school pupils as part of the Institute of Physics Promoting and Interpreting Physics Education Research (PIPER) project. Conceptual change literature describes many of the difficulties young people can have understanding the phenomenon of light, and this knowledge can be useful in the classroom. Pupil–teacher dialogue is used to illustrate some of the pedagogical challenges teachers face in this topic. This paper also highlights the range of influences on pupils from everyday life and from the classroom, with a view to promoting teacher awareness of conceptual change research evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The challenge of same-sex provision: How many girls does a girls' school need?
- Author
-
Renz, Flora
- Subjects
SCHOOLGIRLS ,SCHOOLBOYS ,STATUS (Law) ,SCHOOL children ,SEX education ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
Can a girls' school include a boy and remain a single-sex school? Is there something intrinsic to being a girls' school that exists separately to pure demographic issues? Does single-sex education, and specifically female single-sex education, have an inherent value that is different to that of mixed sex education? To address these questions, this paper draws on some initial findings from a wider research project on the Future of Legal Gender. Specifically, this paper will consider the implications for single-sex services if legal gender status were to be reformed. Especially, what would the consequences be for reform options which (re)allocate authority to organisations or individuals to determine gender criteria and individual status in terms of eligibility to receive or access services? The article uses the example of single sex schools to consider two key questions regarding potential reforms in this area. Firstly, what aims is gender differentiation currently trying to achieve? And secondly, how do service providers, including secondary education providers, currently engage with challenges to their differentiation criteria?. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
27. Struggling to achieve desired results from your AR projects? Insights from the Evaluative Study of Action Research may help.
- Author
-
Robinson, Fiona, Piggot Irvine, Eileen, Youngs, Howard, and Cady, Phil
- Subjects
ACTION research in education ,SNOWBALL sampling ,MIXED methods research ,OPEN-ended questions ,LIKERT scale ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to share the results of a global inquiry into the outcomes and impacts of action research (AR) projects. This is one of a series of papers associated with the Evaluative Study of Action Research (ESAR), an initiative launched by an international team of seven action researchers, to understand if the espoused intents articulated in AR projects are realized and why certain project inputs and processes may result in more effective outputs and outcomes than others. After identifying nearly 500 global AR projects through a snowball sampling methodology, a mixed methods approach was used to distribute a survey of Likert-scale and open-ended questions to project leads. In total, 195 projects were approved for inclusion in the ESAR global AR directory and 174 participants completed the related short survey. A key finding of our study was that the majority of global projects (85.7%) resulted in changes in outcomes. Furthermore, there was no particular combination of inputs, or implementation tactic, to predictably create such change. Our research supports the use of AR as a methodology to identify and achieve espoused change among groups while remaining adaptive to embrace the nuances of unpredictable, contextual and culturally specific situations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Schools, policy and social change: Scottish secondary education in the second half of the twentieth century.
- Author
-
Paterson, Lindsay
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL change , *SECONDARY education , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *SCHOOL children , *SOCIAL classes - Abstract
The analysis uses a unique series of surveys of school students in Scotland, covering the whole of the second half of the twentieth century, to investigate whether educational reforms can reduce inequalities of educational progress and attainment, and the role of school history in mediating these intentions. This period included the policy reforms that ended selection for public-sector schools between the mid-1960s and the early 1980s. Information on school attended enables the analysis to investigate whether and how the histories of schools interact with national policy. The main conclusions are that inequality of attainment and progression fell throughout the half century, but that the change was slow. Although policy may have created the conditions under which this equalisation took place, it probably was not its main cause, and the ways in which policy had its impact was modified by schools' histories. The paper also illustrates the ways in which a series of surveys can be used to understand social change, and the compromises which have to be made to achieve comparability over a long period of time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Gender differences in students' progress from elementary to secondary education in India: who are performing better?
- Author
-
Kumar, Deepak, Pratap, Bhanu, and Aggarwal, Archana
- Subjects
ELEMENTARY education ,SECONDARY education ,ACHIEVEMENT gains (Education) ,GENDER inequality ,SCHOOL children ,ECONOMIC status - Abstract
This paper analyzes gender differences in the progress of students from elementary to secondary education in India by using India Human Development Survey (2004–05 and 2011–12) panel data. Using a logit model analysis, we have examined how post-enrollment, a child's family background, household educational inputs and process indicators determine his/her elementary and secondary school completion (SSC). Our findings suggest that even after accounting for school accessibility, family socioeconomic status plays an important role in the manifestation of gender inequality in school progression. Secondary school completion has emerged as the major stumbling block for scheduled castes, scheduled tribes and Muslim children, particularly for girls belonging to low-economic-status households. Family educational inputs and student process indicators are also significant influencers of SSC. We find a significant gap in the performance of private and government school children that narrows as family economic status improves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. How Do Federal Policy Shocks to State Spending Impact Returns to Primary and Secondary Education?
- Author
-
Williams, Miesha Jamell
- Subjects
SECONDARY education ,PRIMARY education ,COMMON Core State Standards ,SCHOOL children ,HISPANIC Americans ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
The article offers information about the federal policy shocks to state spending impact returns to primary and secondary education in the U.S. It mentions that federal education policy and state spending as intimately linked regarding primary and secondary school students' success and disappointments ex post a federal policy change.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Nurture and nurture groups.
- Author
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Coleman, Marianne and Cooper, Paul
- Subjects
NURTURING behavior ,EDUCATIONAL psychology ,SCHOOL children ,TEENAGERS ,PRIMARY education ,SECONDARY education ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
An introduction is provided to articles within the issue on topics, including the principles of nurture in schools of north-west England, teachers' well-being and nurture groups in Scotland's secondary schools.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Generation X leaders from London, New York and Toronto.
- Author
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Edge, Karen, Descours, Katherine, and Oxley, Laura
- Subjects
GENERATION X ,GROUP identity ,EDUCATIONAL leadership ,RACISM in education ,PRIMARY education ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
Inspired by scholarly calls to focus more intently on the influence of context on leaders’ construction and negotiation of identity, this paper draws on evidence from our Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) project in London, New York City and Toronto. Throughout the paper, we strive to illuminate how the city-based context influences how race/ethnicity is experienced and described. We use social identity theory, organisational fit and in-group prototypes to frame school leaders’ explicit discuss race/ethnicity when reflecting on identity. We describe our data gathering process using our Professional Identity card-sort Tool, which guided leaders’ reflections on identity. The analysis details how we extracted and interpreted evidence from leaders who were explicit about the interrelationship between their own personal racial/ethnic identification and its alignment or misalignment with their school-level communities. We explore how different city contexts influence leader experience of in-groups and out-groups and the related leadership challenges and opportunities. In conclusion, we reflect on the influence that structures, policies and communities have on how leaders experience identity and the possible implications for their work. We also explore the value of attending to potential context-based identity-driven experiences for school leader development and support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Continuous and comprehensive evaluation (CCE): policy and practice at the national level.
- Author
-
Yagnamurthy, Sreekanth
- Subjects
SCHOOL boards ,FOCUS groups ,CURRICULUM planning ,FORMATIVE tests ,DECISION making ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
There is a growing agreement among the academic community, in schools and among researchers, concerning the advantages of formative assessment and the limitations of large-scale assessment. In this paper, the school-based assessment reform of the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) popularly known in India as continuous and comprehensive evaluation (CCE) is studied in the context of the curriculum policy outlined by the National Focus Group (NFG) on Examination Reforms and the National Curriculum Framework 2005 (NCF 2005). The necessity, importance and scope of CCE have been a matter of debate among stakeholders. This paper focuses on how curriculum planners have conceived of school-based assessment and how it is implemented by CBSE. Though CBSE makes extensive reference to NCF 2005 in its manual, its scheme of CCE contradicts with the philosophy of that framework. At the same time, CBSE's CCE is more in alignment with the position of the NFG, which formed the basis for NCF 2005 on students’ assessment. The author considers that these conceptual differences in policy and implementation framework have created confusion. Furthermore, decentralised decision-making on assessment, less rigid recording and reporting procedures, flexible timeframes, and continuous engagement with teachers are necessary for effective implementation of CCE. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. School leadership and the cult of the guru: the neo-Taylorism of Hattie.
- Author
-
Eacott, Scott
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL leadership ,TAYLORISM (Management) ,TEACHER effectiveness ,ACADEMIC achievement ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
As one of the central institutions of society, schooling is subject to significant public interest and scrutiny. Fads and fashion successfully developed elsewhere are often rebadged and relaunched in education for the purpose of improvement. Such interventions are often quickly identified as intruders and frequently fade into obscurity, but what of internal interventions, the education research that becomes widely accepted and promoted? In this paper I argue that contemporary thought and analysis in Australian school leadership has submitted to the cult of the guru. Specifically, I contend that dialogue (much less debate) has settled on the work of John Hattie’s meta-meta-analysis giving rise to the Cult of Hattie. This paper is not an attack on Hattie as a person, or even his work, rather an argument about the conditions which have facilitated the rise of a guru. I argue that the uncritical acceptance and proliferation of this cult is a tragedy for Australian school leadership. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Urban inequality, social exclusion and schooling in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
- Author
-
Cameron, Stuart James
- Subjects
URBAN poor ,EQUALITY ,SOCIAL marginality ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,HOUSEHOLDS ,PRIMARY education ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
This paper asks whether education is a viable route to better livelihoods and social inclusion for children living in poor urban areas in Dhaka, Bangladesh. It uses qualitative interviews with 36 students aged 11-16, living in slum and middle-class areas, and also draws on data from a larger, mixed-methods study to provide context. Many children from slums are excluded altogether from education, while others are incorporated into the system but on unfavourable terms. The paper identifies three principal ways in which this adverse incorporation can happen: through differential access to different types and quality of school; through obstacles that prevent children from poorer households from progressing through the system and reaching higher levels; and through subordinate power relations in the school, embodied in systems of assessment, labelling of students and discipline. These are likely to limit the potential for education to be a socially transformative institution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. A framework for aligning needs, abilities and affordances to inform design and practice of educational technologies.
- Author
-
Antonenko, Pavlo D., Dawson, Kara, and Sahay, Shilpa
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL technology ,USER-centered system design ,COGNITIVE psychology ,EDUCATION of people with dyslexia ,TEACHING methods ,CHILDREN ,SCHOOL children ,SECONDARY education ,ELEMENTARY education - Abstract
This paper addresses the need for enhancing our awareness of user-centered design in educational technology through a more explicit and systematic alignment between the needs of educational technology users (learners and educators) and the affordances provided by the technology. First, we define the term 'affordance' and discuss it from the perspectives of cognitive psychology and user interaction design. Next, we propose a taxonomy of functional affordances that builds on prior research and reflects the current trends in the design of educational technologies. The paper is concluded with an illustration of how explicit alignment of needs, abilities, and affordances can inform the evaluation of an educational technology designed to support dyslexic readers. The four-step framework applied in this analysis helps (a) define user needs, (b) identify a potentially appropriate technology, (c) understand the abilities the technology affords and (d) align technological affordances with the specific needs of the target users. This framework is a step toward increased recognition of the importance of user-centered design of educational technologies; it provides the needed guidance and structure for aligning needs, abilities, and affordances during the design, implementation, and evaluation of technologies for learning and teaching. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Facilitating student well-being: relationships do matter.
- Author
-
Graham, Anne, Powell, Mary Ann, and Truscott, Julia
- Subjects
STUDENT well-being ,SOCIAL belonging ,SCHOOL environment ,TEACHER-student relationships ,SCHOOL children ,TEENAGERS ,PRIMARY education ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
Background:Alongside academic and vocational goals, schools are increasingly being called upon to address student well-being. Existing evidence suggests that strong relationships and a sense of connectedness in school communities are important for fostering subjective well-being. However, identifying the specific nature of such relational dynamics, and accommodating the ‘personal’ within school cultures increasingly dominated by ‘performance’ narratives, remains a problematic task. Purpose:This paper draws on Honneth’s recognition theory to offer fresh insight intohowrelationships act to facilitate and limit the experience of well-being at school. We suggest that such an approach holds considerable potential for developing teachers’ understanding of the tacit and explicit ways they and their students experience being cared for, respected and valued and the ways in which such actions impact on well-being. Design and methods:The paper reports the qualitative findings from a large mixed-method study, involving students and staff across primary and secondary schools in three regions of Australia. The qualitative phase involved focus groups with 606 primary and secondary students and individual interviews with 89 teachers and principals. Results:Across the focus groups and interviews, students and teachers placed substantial emphasis on the importance of relationships, while reporting differences in their views aboutwhichrelationships support well-being. Alongside this, there were differences in the importance teachers and students placed on each of the three strands of Honneth’s recognition theory (translated for this study as being cared for, respected and valued) for influencing student well-being. Conclusions:The findings affirm the critical role that relationships play in promoting well-being in the context of schools. Using recognition theory to analyse students’ and teachers’ views and experiences of well-being provides much greater insight intohowthese relationships are enacted – this being through the mutual experience of being cared for, respected and valued – within the context of schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. To be genuine in artificial circumstances: evaluating the theatre analogy for understanding teachers' workplace and work.
- Author
-
O'Neill, D. Kevin
- Subjects
TEACHER educators ,TEACHER education ,TEACHING methods ,LEARNING ,MASSIVE open online courses ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
This paper provides teachers and teacher educators with food for thought by developing a broad, contemporary re-evaluation of the often-used analogy between teaching and the theatre. It does so by synthesizing insights from scholarly works in education with insights from writing about theatre, including both historical work and published interviews with practicing stage actors. This approach throws into relief particular ways in which teaching does and does not resemble acting as described by its present-day practitioners. A key parallel is observed between the central challenges faced by teachers and actors: acting requires being truthful in imaginary circumstances, while teaching requires being genuine in artificial circumstances. Using work on bildung, the nature of this challenge is examined, and a call is made to help teachers and students better appreciate the intimate, reciprocal and shared nature of good teaching – a challenge in a culture where corporate interests aggressively promote personalized and "anytime, anywhere" learning. The paper also addresses the phenomenon of massive online courses, which enthusiasts like to believe teach themselves. This idea, I suggest, is as absurd as the notion that a great theatre building could obviate the need for a strong cast.. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A systematic review of concept mapping-based formative assessment processes in primary and secondary science education.
- Author
-
Hartmeyer, Rikke, Stevenson, Matt P., and Bentsen, Peter
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL evaluation ,FEEDBACK control systems ,SCIENCE education ,CONCEPT mapping ,FORMATIVE tests ,PRIMARY education ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children ,TEENAGERS - Abstract
In this paper, we present and discuss the results of a systematic review of concept mapping-based interventions in primary and secondary science education. We identified the following recommendations for science educators on how to successfully apply concept mapping as a method for formative assessment: firstly, concept mapping should be constructed in teaching, preferably on repeated occasions. Secondly, concept mapping should be carried out individually if personal understanding is to be elicited; however, collaborative concept mapping might foster discussions valuable for developing students' understanding and for activating them as instructional resources and owners of their own learning. Thirdly, low-directed mapping seems most suitable for formative assessment. Fourthly, technology-based or peer assessments are useful strategies likely to reduce the load of interpretation for the educator and are compatible with timely feedback. Finally, elaboration should be part of the feedback, activating students as the owners of their own learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Just how flexible is the German selective secondary school system? A configurational analysis.
- Author
-
Glaesser, Judith
- Subjects
SECONDARY education ,SOCIAL mobility ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
School systems may be usefully characterized according to Turner's proposed ideal types of sponsored and contest mobility. Germany is a critical case with respect to this typology because its secondary school system is stratified and selective, and yet it offers the opportunity for upward and downward mobility. Drawing on an analysis of a German longitudinal dataset, this paper addresses the question of flexibility or rigidity of the school system, exploring the ways in which factors other than pupils' ability influence selection processes within that system. Both academic ability and ascriptive factors act together to facilitate or hinder changes of academic routes within the school system. The methodological focus of the paper is on the introduction to an innovative method, Charles Ragin's Qualitative Comparative Analysis, a method based on set theory. It involves the identification of necessary and sufficient conditions for a given outcome, taking conjunctions of causal conditions into account. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Medium of instruction policies in Ghanaian and Indian primary schools: an overview of key issues and recommendations.
- Author
-
Erling, Elizabeth J., Adinolfi, Lina, Hultgren, Anna Kristina, Buckler, Alison, and Mukorera, Mark
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,ENGLISH language acquisition ,EDUCATIONAL quality ,LANGUAGE policy ,PRIMARY schools ,PRIMARY education ,POSTSECONDARY education ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
This paper reports on a rigorous literature review of research into medium of instruction in Ghana and India, whose language-in-education policies represent two contrasting models of use of local languages and the development of competence in English. The paper begins by briefly overviewing the language-in-education policy in these two countries and sets out the methodological approach underpinning this review. It then turns to the initial findings, which are discussed in two parts: the first categorises the three areas of research explored in the empirical studies reviewed, namely the effectiveness of language-in-education policies, problems hindering the implementation of these policies, and attitudes to these policies. The second provides an overview of the recommendations for how, given the obstacles in implementing the current policies, to better ensure the effectiveness of language-in-education policies in Ghana and India. Together these findings show that similar issues arise that contribute to challenges of providing equitable, quality education, and similar recommendations have been put forward as a result. This paper thus provides a valuable overview of key issues in the role of language-in-education policies in improving equity and quality in education in LMICs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Language choice and education quality in Eastern and Southern Africa: a review.
- Author
-
Trudell, Barbara
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL quality ,ENGLISH language acquisition ,CLASSROOM activities ,LANGUAGE policy ,PRIMARY education ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
In 2014, UNICEF commissioned a review of language policy and education quality in the 21 countries of UNICEF’s Eastern and Southern Africa Region. This paper examines findings from the review, related to the role of English and local languages in current education practice in the region. National language policies and implementation practices are examined, as is the mismatch between the two. The evident widespread use of English as the language of instruction in primary classrooms of Eastern and Southern Africa, even where the pupils do not speak English, generates two central questions: (1) Is English really the villain in this context? And (2) Why do teachers and pupils in these classrooms have to choose one language or another as medium of instruction? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Sports coach as transformative leader: arresting school disengagement through community sport-based initiatives.
- Author
-
Morgan, Haydn J. and Bush, Anthony J.
- Subjects
COACHING (Athletics) ,STUDENT attitudes ,SPORTS for children ,LEADERSHIP ,SOCIAL alienation ,SOCIAL integration ,SCHOOL children ,TEENAGERS ,MIDDLE school education ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
Reducing social exclusion through interventions designed to sustain school engagement is a key aim of the education and social policy of any government. This paper is a response to the call for there to be morefocusedempirical sports coaching research through examining the transformative potential of community-based sports coaches to support schools in arresting school disengagement. By embracing an understanding that challenges the definitional core of sports coaching as simply improving the sporting performance of an individual or team, and, drawing theoretically on the work of Carlisle et al. and Shields, the role of ‘coach as transformative leader’ is articulated. Analysis of data collected by means of semi-structured interviews with a group of community-based sports coaches (n= 8) revealed three factors salient to our understanding of re-engaging young people with formal education through sport. These were the impact of the community sport programme; the relationship between schools and community sports groups; and the implementation of transformative leadership qualities by sport coaching practitioners. Importantly, this paper explicates the pivotal function that coaching practice which embraces transformative leadership principles can have on reorienting young people from disadvantaged backgrounds towards more optimistic futures and educational objectives. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Career orientations and career cultures: individual and organisational approaches to beginning teachers’ careers.
- Author
-
Coldwell, Mike
- Subjects
SCHOOL environment ,PROFESSIONAL identity ,SECONDARY school teachers ,PRIMARY school teachers ,SECONDARY schools ,PROFESSIONAL education ,SECONDARY education ,PRIMARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
Despite the very large literature on teacher careers from an individual perspective, there is relatively little that links the perspectives of teachers themselves to how schools as organisations approach careers. The aim of this paper is, first, to outline how teachers’ orientations towards careers change across three dimensions, and, second, to examine how schools as organisations deal with career, developing a model of organisational responses, including developing a concept of ‘career culture’, derived from an analysis of interviews regarding the first three years of teaching conducted with senior leaders and second-year teachers themselves. By considering the fit between individuals’ career orientations and school career cultures, the paper surfaces both the fluid nature of these orientations and the subsequent potential instability of the fit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Glocalisation and English language education in Chinese context.
- Author
-
Rai, Laxmisha and Deng, Chunrao
- Subjects
GLOCALIZATION ,ENGLISH language ,EDUCATION ,ENGLISH teachers ,LANGUAGE & languages ,PRIMARY education ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
With the frequent interaction between China and the world, glocalisation, the combination of globalisation and localisation, is an unavoidable trend. This paper argues that the association of local situation with global awareness is one of the ways to assimilate English for daily use in Chinese context. The fundamental idea is that the use of activities and materials with both local and global situations can bring more awareness and interest within learners than materials that merely reflect unfamiliar global context because the latter is beyond learners' experience. The initial sections of this paper uses qualitative data derived from purposive sampling to explain the notion of glocal English and reasons of its importance. The final part analyses sample learning materials and provides implication for textbook development. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. DEVELOPMENT OF THE TARGET PROGRAM IN THE INSTITUTION OF GENERAL SECONDARY EDUCATION REGARDING THE MANAGEMENT OF THE PROCESS OF FORMATION OF BUSINESS QUALITIES OF SCHOOLCHILDREN.
- Author
-
Martynets, Liliia
- Subjects
SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children ,ORGANIZATION management ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
The most effective in the first problems of managing lighting systems in the first place is the program-centralized input. In the paper, the last steps of the school curriculum are discovered and the process of shaping the school curriculum is controlled. In general, the development of the whole program with clearly defined goals, objectives, predicted results, which is balanced with personnel and minds, obvious resources, is necessary. In the statistics, it is indicated, that the main program is intended for such goals: it is directed to the forecast of changes, updating the effectiveness of the foundation of the development and implementation of the strategy of development; it can make innovations straightforward, ensures the systematicity of the processes in the implementation of the innovation; works on the mission of the school, laying foundation for the image. The approximate structure of the program is determined: substantiation of the problem; theoretical and methodological foundations; the purpose and objectives of the program; stages of program implementation; measures for the implementation of the program; Expected results; analysis and evaluation of the results of the innovation program. It is established, that the development of the program has the following support: organizational support of the program -- modernization of the working curriculum in accordance with the conceptual objectives of the institution; regulatory and legal support of the program -- adjustment of the package of documents: development programs of the educational institution; target programs, regulations; scientific and methodological support of the program -- theoretical substantiation of the subject of experimental research work; creation of a diagnostic complex for studying the personal sphere of pupils; organization of seminars, pedagogical consultations, scientific-practical conferences as effective means of directing self-educational activity of teachers on improvement of own experimental-research competence; development of special courses, focused on the formation of business qualities of pupils; material and technical support of the program -- improvement of development of a methodical office; creation of a media cabinet; expansion of the school library fund, use of Internet opportunities, etc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The search for deep learning: a curriculum coherence model.
- Author
-
McPhail, Graham
- Subjects
CURRICULUM planning ,CONCEPTUAL design ,PRIMARY school teachers ,PRIMARY education ,SECONDARY education ,SCHOOL children - Abstract
The primary objective of this paper is to present a curriculum design model that extends the 'Powerful Knowledge' ideas of social realist theory. The Model called 'Curriculum Design Coherence' (CDC) hypothesizes an approach in which subject concepts and the subject's epistemic structure are central to the design process to enable deep learning. The model differentiates and then links subject concepts, subject content, subject competencies, and assessment. The underlying premise is that deep learning for students is more likely if teachers utilize and make visible the epistemic structure of the area of study; the subject concepts and subject competencies to be taught and their inter-relationships as 'knowledge-that' (epistemic knowledge) and 'knowledge-how-to' (procedural knowledge). The usefulness of the model for coherence in curriculum design is currently being tested by primary and secondary school teachers in New Zealand and England. The study takes a realist approach utilizing qualitative methods including workshops, analysis of curricular materials, and teacher interviews. The model is in the early stages of testing and some initial findings indicate its usefulness along with the challenges for teachers in engaging deeply with the structure of their subject [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Editorial.
- Author
-
Graham, Ted
- Subjects
INTERNET in education ,ALGEBRA software ,MATHEMATICS education (Secondary) ,SCHOOL children ,TEENAGERS ,ELEMENTARY education ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which the editor discusses various reports within the issue on topics including the use of Internet based formative assessment tool by elementary school teachers, the use of computer algebra system, and the use of game building in mathematics for secondary students.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Unpacking teachers' moves in the classroom: navigating micro- and macro-levels of mathematical complexity.
- Author
-
Wasserman, Nicholas
- Subjects
MATHEMATICS teachers ,PEDAGOGICAL content knowledge ,MATHEMATICS education ,SCHOOL children ,TEENAGERS ,ELEMENTARY education ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
The work that mathematics teachers do is frequently mathematical in nature and different from other professions. Understanding and describing common ways that teachers draw upon their content knowledge in the practice of teaching is important. Building on the descriptions by McCrory et al. (Journal for Research in Mathematics Education 43(5) 584-615, ) of two primary ways teachers use their content knowledge-decompressing and trimming-this paper differentiates between micro- and macro-levels of mathematical complexity as a way to extend and further conceptualize the moves that teachers make at a more nuanced grain size. This paper explains and portrays their counterparts, micro-level trimming and macro-level decompressing, which we discuss as concealing and foreshadowing complexity, respectively. Support for their use in teachers' work is provided through specific examples. Implications for the mathematical preparation and professional development of teachers are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The effects of setting on classroom teaching and student learning in mainstream mathematics, English and science lessons: a critical review of the literature in England.
- Author
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Wilkinson, Shaun D. and Penney, Dawn
- Subjects
ABILITY grouping (Education) ,CLASSROOM dynamics ,LITERATURE reviews ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,EDUCATION ,MATHEMATICS education ,ENGLISH language education ,SCHOOL children ,TEENAGERS ,ELEMENTARY education ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
In England and Wales government pressures to raise attainment has led many schools to implement structured “ability” grouping in the form of setting. The introduction of selective grouping has been justified with the assumption that the differentiation of students by “ability” advances students’ motivation, social skills, independence and academic success in national tests and examinations because students are “better engaged in their own learning”. This paper critically engages with this assumption. Drawing upon qualitative research conducted in primary and secondary mathematics, science and English setted classrooms in England the aim of this literature review is to consider how teachers’ pedagogic practices with low, middle and high “ability” sets facilitates and/or constrains students’ learning and potential achievement. We also explore why, despite strenuous criticism and moves towards egalitarianism in schools, the segregation of students on the basis of “ability” continues to be a common feature in schools in England and Wales. This literature review draws attention to a number of substantive issues including (but not restricted to) fixed and permanent grouping; the potential misplacement of students to sets and a culture of stereotyping where learners within a set are taught as a single homogenous unit. We conclude the paper by suggesting foci for future research in the hope of eliciting renewed critical interest in and investigation of setting by “ability” in a broader range of subjects of the curriculum. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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