85 results on '"Hanna, P"'
Search Results
2. Young Students Exploring Measurement through Problem Solving and Problem Posing
- Author
-
Palmér, Hanna and van Bommel, Jorryt
- Abstract
The empirical data in this study are from a series of two lessons on measurement implemented in seven classes with 119 six-year-old students in Sweden. Both problem solving and problem posing were shown to be important in early mathematics when students in this study worked on one problem-solving task and one problem-posing task on measurement. As there are few studies specifically on problem posing in early mathematics and on young children's understanding of measurement, this study adds knowledge of value for both teachers and researchers. In the study, paper-and-pen work from the students was analysed together with interviews conducted after the students had worked on the two tasks. When solving the task on measurement, the students discerned shape, size, distance, and number as mathematical aspects of measurement. When asked to pose a similar task, only size and number reoccurred as mathematical aspects of measurement. However, other features from the problem-solving task reoccurred in the posed tasks: similar drawings were used in combination with questions on measurement as the mathematical content.
- Published
- 2023
3. Analysis of the Gap between Software Testing Courses at Universities and the Needed Skills by Industry
- Author
-
Samer Hanna
- Abstract
It is important that software testing courses at universities provide students with testing skills that are close to the skills needed by industry. To investigate if these courses do accomplish this role, this research provides comparison and empirical analysis of the topics provided by 80 software testing courses in nine countries around the world and the skills that are required by 400 software testing related job advertisements in the same investigated countries. Based on this analysis, the research provides a taxonomy of the testing topics by universities and the needed skills by industry. The main knowledge gaps between testing courses and job ads are explained in detail. The results revealed that the testing techniques with huge gap with industry are load testing, regression testing, performance testing, functional testing, penetration testing, accessibility testing, exploratory testing and compatibility testing. The gaps in other areas of testing are also specified by the research. Providing data analysis of the required testing skills by industry and comparing these skills with the topics of testing courses will help universities to modify the topics and learning outcomes of these courses to make them closer to industrial needs.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The Teaching of Numbers in Common Preschool Activities: A Delicate Balancing Act
- Author
-
Palmér, Hanna and Björklund, Camilla
- Abstract
This paper reports on a combined research-development project conducted in collaboration between researchers and preschool teachers in three Swedish preschools. The aim is to investigate how ongoing preschool activities may become the starting point for mathematics teaching in which toddlers are given the opportunity to distinguish necessary aspects of numbers. One challenge in preschool education is the balance between children's previous experiences and interests versus offering them new experiences and challenges towards a learning goal. In the article, empirical examples are used to illustrate how small changes in an activity may open up opportunities for toddlers to discern different critical aspects of numbers without losing the activity's initial intention. Principles for how early numeracy education can be designed to achieve this balancing act are presented and elaborated on.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Managing a Discourse of Reporting: The Complex Composing of an Asylum Narrative
- Author
-
Wadensjö, Cecilia, Rehnberg, Hanna Sofia, and Nikolaidou, Zoe
- Abstract
The aim of this study is to demonstrate how the presence of an emerging written record may affect the content of an asylum narrative, based on which a decision concerning the asylum claimant's right to receive protection eventually is taken. The lion's share of studies on interpreter-mediated asylum interviews to date focus on risks involved with assigning non-professionals to perform the interpreting. This study draws specifically on a 3.5 min-long sequence taken from an asylum interview involving a professional interpreter, working between Russian and Swedish, and the corresponding paragraph of the Swedish-language written minutes, produced in parallel by the caseworker at a Migration Agency office. The study demonstrates something that hasn't been highlighted much in the literature on asylum interviews, namely the mutual impact of the interpreter-mediated communicative format--the specific turn taking order and the restricted linguistic transparency--and the parallel record keeping; the intricate passage from two spoken languages to an asylum narrative in the form of a text written in one of these languages.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Interpreting Students' Ideas on the Availability of Energy and Matter in Food Webs
- Author
-
Wennersten, Lena, Wanselin, Hanna, Wikman, Susanne, and Lindahl, Mats
- Abstract
UNESCO has identified education for sustainable development (ESD) as a key factor in the achievement of sustainable development goals (SDGs). Education is important in developing awareness of how to preserve natural ecosystems and promote the uptake of renewable energy sources. Ecology education in primary school aims to give students a scientific foundation to further their education in biology and develop environmentally literate citizens who will protect, restore and promote the sustainable use of natural ecosystems. This early education includes awareness of how human welfare depends on resilient ecosystems. However, previous studies have shown that young students face serious challenges when constructing a holistic view of ecological relationships. In this study, we interpret students' written texts and drawings on processes in an ecosystem. By focusing on students' expressed ideas on the availability of energy and matter in the ecosystem, we construe four models. The students in our study propose, firstly, that energy flows or can circulate, and secondly, that matter circulates, is provided by the sun, or is created anew. The students often express fragmented processes, combined in different ways. According to our results, we propose aspects that can inform the design of primary school teaching of ecology for sustainable development.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Meeting Eye to Eye: The Power Relations in Triadic Mentoring of the Degree Project in Teacher Education
- Author
-
Manderstedt, Lena, Viklund, Sara, Palo, Annbritt, and Lillsebbas, Hanna
- Abstract
This study highlights and discusses power aspects within discourses discerned in articulations on triadic mentoring in degree projects in teacher education in Sweden. Each mentoring triad consisted of a pre-service teacher, a professional teacher acting as co-mentor, and a university mentor. As teacher education is to be based on a scientific foundation and proven experience, a symmetrical and complementary approach was to be implemented. Data from interviews, logbooks, and observations of mentoring were analysed discursively using CDA. Two main discourses were distinguished: "The hegemony of science," and "A gateway to the profession and science: The potential third space." The study shows that the academic paradigm tends to overshadow the symmetrical and complementary approach, but that the third space, the metaphorical meeting outside of the participants' comfort zone, potentially balances up the mentoring triads through the pre-service teachers' ownership of the process.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. 'They Aren't Waiting for an SLP, They Think 'What Can I as a Parent Do Now?'' Course Leaders' Perceptions of AAC Interventions Targeting Parents
- Author
-
Nordlund, Hanna and Fäldt, Anna
- Abstract
Parental interventions can help parents use strategies to support their child's language and communication development. The ComAlong courses are parental interventions that focus on responsive communication, enhanced milieu teaching, and augmentative and alternative communication. This interview study aimed to investigate the course leaders' perceptions of the three ComAlong courses, ComAlong Habilitation, ComAlong Developmental Language Disorder, and ComAlong Toddler, and to evaluate their experiences of the implementation of the courses. Qualitative content analysis was used to analyze the interview data. Thereafter, three categories resulted from the findings: Impact on the Family, A Great Course Concept, and Accessibility of the Courses. The results indicate that participants perceived that the courses had positive effects on both parents and themself. Furthermore, it was described that parents gained knowledge about communication and strategies in how to develop their child's communication; however, the courses were not accessible to all parents. The collaboration between the parents and course leaders improved, and course leaders viewed the courses as an important part of their work. The following factors had an impact on the implementation: several course leaders in the same workplace, support from colleagues and management, and recruitment of parents to the courses.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Questionnaire-Taking Motivation: Using Response Times to Assess Motivation to Optimize on the PISA 2018 Student Questionnaire
- Author
-
Lundgren, Erik and Eklöf, Hanna
- Abstract
This study aims to assess student motivation to provide valid responses to the PISA student questionnaire. This was done by modeling response times using a three-component finite mixture model, comprising two satisficing response styles (rapid and idle) and one optimizing response style. Each participant's motivation was operationalized as their probability of providing an optimizing response to questionnaire items. Overall, the model offered a good fit to the data. Results indicate that most responders were motivated to optimize, with a slight decline toward the end. Further, results showed a positive effect of questionnaire-taking motivation on PISA performance, suggesting a positive relationship to test-taking motivation. In conclusion, response times can be valuable indicators for assessing survey response quality and may serve as a proxy for test-taking motivation.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Sámi: The Sámi Language in Education in Sweden, 2nd Edition. Regional Dossiers Series
- Author
-
Fryske Akademy (Netherlands), Mercator European Research Centre on Multilingualism and Language Learning, Hettema, Lieuwe Jan, and Outakoski, Hanna
- Abstract
This regional dossier aims to provide a concise description of the European minority language, Sámi in Sweden, in education. Aspects that are addressed include features of the education system, recent educational policies, main actors, legal arrangements and support structures, as well as quantitative aspects such as the number of schools, teachers, pupils, and financial investments. Because of this fixed structure the dossiers in the series are easy to compare. This information serves several purposes and are relevant for policymakers, researchers, teachers, students and journalists who wish to explore developments in minority language schooling in Europe. They can also serve as a first orientation towards further research, or function as a source of ideas for improving educational provisions in their own region. Every Regional dossier begins with an introduction about the region concerned, followed by six sections that each deals with a specific level of the education system (e.g. primary education). Sections eight and nine cover the main lines of research into education of the concerned minority language, the prospects for the minority language in general and for education in particular. The tenth section gives a summary of statistics. Lists of regulations, publications and useful addresses concerning the minority language, are given at the end of the dossier. [This regional dossier was originally compiled by Mikael Svonni.]
- Published
- 2020
11. Bridging the Gap between Policy and Practice: Unpacking the Commercial Rhetoric of 'Google for Education'
- Author
-
Carlsson, Hanna
- Abstract
This paper unpacks the commercial rhetoric of "Google for Education." Through the analysis of information published on the official "Google for Education" website, the paper seeks to make visible how this service promotes and reproduces certain ways of talking, thinking about and doing education. The aim is to contribute to a critical discussion of the potential implications of allowing major commercial players to take the lead in the development of digital infrastructure in education. Guiding the analysis is the notion of 'problem' understood as central for "Google for Education"'s success story. The case of Sweden, in which "Google for Education" has become widely used, forms the vantage point for this discussion. The study makes visible how "Google for Education," in the commercial rhetoric, is constructed as the solution to problem representations by being positioned as a much-needed bridge, in the shape of digital information infrastructure, between digital policy and educational practice. However, "Google for Education" is far from simply a practical solution to a set of expensive and urgent problems. To uncritically embrace Google as the information infrastructure of education is to hand over power to one actor, which closes doors to alternative paths of doing and knowing in education.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. A Preschool for All Children? -- Swedish Preschool Teachers' Perspective on Inclusion
- Author
-
Ginner Hau, Hanna, Selenius, Heidi, and Björck Åkesson, Eva
- Abstract
Building on the Salamanca Statement from 1994, the United Nations Sustainability Development Goals 2030 embraces inclusion for children in early childhood education. The European Agency for Special Needs and Inclusive Education in 2015-2017 completed a project on inclusive early childhood education, focusing on structures, processes, and outcomes that ensure a systemic approach to high-quality Inclusive Early Childhood Education (IECE). An ecosystem model of IECE was developed with a self-reflection tool for improving inclusion. This study's aim was to investigate practitioners' perspective on the inclusive processes and supportive structures defined in the ecosystem model, to contribute to a deeper understanding of how inclusive practice might be enabled and how barriers for inclusion can be removed. The self-reflection tool was administered in a heterogeneous municipality in Sweden, where inclusive settings are standard. Documentation from approximately 70 teachers on 27 teams was received. The documentation was analysed with qualitative content analysis based on the ecosystem model. The results showed a strong emphasis on group-related processes, whereas data on individual-related processes were scarce. This one-sided focus on the group level might endanger the inclusive processes and outcomes concerning the individual child.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Simply Quality? State Governance of Swedish Preschools' Work with Children in Need of Special Support
- Author
-
Palla, Linda and Sjögren, Hanna
- Abstract
The purpose of this critical study is to generate knowledge about decisions by education authorities that serve an advisory and normative function for Swedish preschool education at the operational level, with a focus on work with children in need of special support. This has been achieved by scrutinising documents generated in conjunction with a quality audit within the framework of the Swedish Schools Inspectorate's three-year focus on preschools from 2015 to 2017. The analysis shows that the documents can be understood as discursive expressions within and for a regime of truth, wherein the effects of power contribute to certain norms and values gaining precedence in the operationalisation of what constitutes qualitative special support. The analysis further shows that the state quality audit focuses on instrumental and measurable understandings of quality and highlights sameness rather than difference by downplaying the ethical and pedagogical aspects of the special support.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Among Facilitators, Instructors, Advisors and Educators -- How Teachers Educate for Sustainability in Design and Craft Education
- Author
-
Hofverberg, Hanna and Westerlund, Stina
- Abstract
Design and craft education, like that of the Swedish school subject, Sloyd, has great potential for Education for Sustainable Development (ESD). With so many possibilities, it is relevant to investigate what teachers teach about sustainability, and how. Therefore, the aim of this article is to examine what Sloyd teachers express that they do as they educate for sustainability in design and craft education (Grades 3-9). This aim is guided by two research questions: (1) What ESD content is prominent in Sloyd teachers' statements about their teaching? and (2) What expected learning outcomes and teaching strategies become visible in the Sloyd teachers' statements about ESD? Our analysis of the qualitative questionnaires answered by 70 teachers shows that working with design and craft materials is a key factor for the teachers. Specifically, three learning outcomes have been identified: to utilise material, to use sustainable materials and to become a maker with materials. The most common teaching strategies are instructing and advising strategies, where the goal is known beforehand by the teacher. The findings are discussed in relation to the mix of sustainability concepts and different logics that emerge in the teachers' expressions and also in relation to what consequences the findings have for teaching ESD in design and craft education.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Programming in Preschool--With a Focus on Learning Mathematics
- Author
-
Palmér, Hanna
- Abstract
This article presents a teaching intervention where programming was used to facilitate preschoolers' learning of mathematics, especially in their development of spatial thinking. In the intervention, the programming was made with a small programmable robot especially designed for young students. The results indicate that the children developed their ability to mentally compare and connect movements in reality with maps and symbols. Further, the children showed ability to mentally envision, hold in mind, and conceptualize actions and relationships between paper maps, gridded maps, and symbols. Thus, the intervention indicates potential in teaching mathematics through programming in preschool.
- Published
- 2017
16. Collective but Diverse: Preschool Teachers Networking to Develop Toddler Mathematics
- Author
-
Palmér, Hanna and Björklund, Camilla
- Abstract
This article focuses on professional development among teachers within a Swedish national network on toddler mathematics education. The activities within this network can be understood as participant-oriented collective professional development based on a knowledge of practice approach. An inventory of toddler mathematics was performed within this network through observations of authentic mathematical activities. The inventory made diversity in the participating teachers' perceptions of toddler mathematics visible; different activities were labelled similarly and opposite, similar activities were labelled differently. The inventory made clear the need for theoretical influence and discussions in practical inquiry. The addition of theoretical notions made previous invisible diversity among the network members visible, and strengthened the opportunities for further collective professional development. Diversity becoming visible contributed to the knowledge of practice approach, as well as the development of the professional language of the participating teachers.
- Published
- 2017
17. The Importance of Pedagogical and Social School Climate to Bullying: A Cross-Sectional Multilevel Study of 94 Swedish Schools
- Author
-
Hultin, Hanna, Ferrer-Wreder, Laura, Engström, Karin, Andersson, Filip, and Galanti, Maria Rosaria
- Abstract
Background: Bullying is a public health issue with long-term effects for victims. This study investigated if there was an association between pedagogical and social school climate and student-reported bullying victimization, which dimensions of pedagogical and social school climate were associated with bullying, and if these associations were modified by individual-level social factors. Methods: The study had a cross-sectional multilevel design with individual-level data on bullying from 3311 students nested in 94 schools over 3 consecutive school years. School climate was measured with student and teacher questionnaires, aggregated at the school level. The association between school climate and bullying victimization was estimated with multilevel mixed-model logistic regression. Results: In schools with the most favorable school climate, fewer students reported being bullied. This was especially evident when school climate was measured with the student instrument. Students in schools with favorable climate had an adjusted odds ratio of bullying of 0.74 (95% CI: 0.55-1.00) compared to students in schools with the worst climate. Results from the teacher instrument were in the same direction, but less consistent. Conclusions: Improvement in school climate has the potential to affect students both academically, and socially, as well as decrease the prevalence of bullying.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Enhancing Young Children's Understanding of a Combinatorial Task by Using a Duo of Digital and Physical Artefacts
- Author
-
van Bommel, Jorryt and Palmér, Hanna
- Abstract
In mathematics education, digital tools have been used to enhance young children's understanding of specific subject matter. In such implementations, the digital tool can replace, amplify or transform 'ordinary' mathematics teaching. In an initial study, systematization and duplication were identified as critical when young children were to solve a combinatorial task. Therefore, a digital version of the task was developed and combined with a non-digital version, to introduce the use of dual artefacts. The digital version of the task enabled the children to visually explore systematization as well as the principle of completion. After using this digital version of the task, the children's written records became more systematic and included fewer duplications. We conclude that the digital version of the task reinforced young children's understanding of the combinatorial task and that the use of dual artefacts enhanced children's understanding of what a combinatorial problem encompasses.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Classroom Bodies: Affect, Body Language, and Discourse When Schoolchildren Encounter National Tests in Mathematics
- Author
-
Silfver, Eva, Jacobsson, Maritha, Arnell, Linda, Bertilsdotter-Rosqvist, Hanna, Härgestam, Maria, Sjöberg, Magdalena, and Widding, Ulrika
- Abstract
The aim of this paper is to analyse how Swedish grade three children are discursively positioned as pupils when they are taking national tests in mathematics and when they reflect on the testing situation afterwards. With support from theories about affective-discursive assemblages, we explore children's body language, emotions, and talk in light of the two overarching discourses that we believe frame the classroom: the 'testing discourse' and the 'development discourse'. Through the disciplinary power of these main discourses children struggle to conduct themselves in order to become recognized as intelligible subjects and 'ideal pupils'. The analysis, when taking into account how affects and discourses intertwine, shows that children can be in 'untroubled', 'troubled', or ambivalent subject positions.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Entangled Threads and Crafted Meanings -- Students' Learning for Sustainability in Remake Activities
- Author
-
Hofverberg, Hanna
- Abstract
This article explores the significance of students' encounters with materiality in general and with crafting materials in particular when learning for sustainability. The aim of the explorative study is to illustrate a research approach that can show what students and the material do in correspondence and what stories emerge from this activity. An explorative analysis is conducted via video recordings of a remake project in a Grade 8 handicrafts class in Sweden. The stories that the students recognise are the material's texture, shape and construction, which emerge from the materiality intrinsic to the crafting process and the intentions of the students, as these are visible in action. These stories provide possibilities, as well as set limits for, what is possible to remake. The stories are elaborated on by threading back to materiality concerns found in historical remake practice to recognise the educational possibilities for remaking pedagogy.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. How Does the Number of Actions on Constructed-Response Items Relate to Test-Taking Effort and Performance?
- Author
-
Ivanova, Militsa, Michaelides, Michalis, and Eklöf, Hanna
- Abstract
Collecting process data in computer-based assessments provides opportunities to describe examinee behaviour during a test-taking session. The number of actions taken by students while interacting with an item is in this context a variable that has been gaining attention. The present study aims to investigate how the number of actions performed on constructed-response items relates to self-reported effort, performance, and item cluster position in the test. The theory of planned behaviour was used as an interpretative framework. Data from two item clusters of the 2015 Swedish Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) Science administration were utilised. Results showed that the number of actions was significantly related to performance on the items, self-reported test-taking effort, and cluster position. Latent variable models were examined separately for performance-level groups. Overall, the number of actions performed on constructed-response items as a behavioural indicator in testing situations may be useful in gauging test-taking engagement.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Within-Item Response Processes as Indicators of Test-Taking Effort and Motivation
- Author
-
Lundgren, Erik and Eklöf, Hanna
- Abstract
The present study used process data from a computer-based problem-solving task as indications of behavioural level of test-taking effort, and explored how behavioural item-level effort related to overall test performance and self-reported effort. Variables were extracted from raw process data and clustered. Four distinct clusters were obtained and characterised as high effort, medium effort, low effort, and planner. Regression modelling indicated that among students that failed to solve the task, level of effort invested before giving up positively predicted overall test performance. Among students that solved the task, level of effort was instead weakly negatively related to test performance. A low level of behavioural effort before giving up the task was also related to lower self-reported effort. Results suggest that effort invested before giving up provides information about test-takers' motivation to spend effort on the test. We conclude that process data could augment existing methods of assessing test-taking effort.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Quality of Clinical Education--A Three-Year Follow-Up among Undergraduate Nursing Students in Finland and Sweden
- Author
-
Melender, Hanna-Leena, Jonsén, Elisabeth, and Hilli, Yvonne
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to compare the experiences of a group of Swedish and two Finnish groups of student nurses (n = 86) on the quality of clinical education over time. The data was collected using an instrument including four factors. In the comparison of the years 2009, 2010 and 2011/2012 (n = 86), there were no statistically significant differences between years in the whole data. In year 2009 Swedish students (n = 41) evaluated clinical preception and learning in clinical education lower than Finnish students (n = 45). In the year 2010 Finnish students' evaluated clinical preception lower than Swedish students. In year 2011/2012 Swedish students evaluated learning objectives in clinical education lower than Finnish students. The follow-up group and the dropout group did not differ from each other regarding the background variables or reports on the quality of clinical education.
- Published
- 2014
24. Strength through Diversity's Spotlight Report for Sweden. OECD Education Working Papers, No. 194
- Author
-
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) (France), Cerna, Lucie, Andersson, Hanna, Bannon, Meredith, and Borgonovi, Francesca
- Abstract
Within OECD countries, Sweden has historically welcomed large numbers of migrants, in particular migrants seeking humanitarian protection. Since 2015, this large influx of new arrivals with multiple disadvantages has put a well-developed integration system under great pressure and highlighted a number of challenges for education policy given current institutional frameworks. PISA 2015 shows that immigrant students fare considerably worse than native students in terms of academic and well-being outcomes also after accounting for differences in social-economic background. The OECD has identified four priority areas for Sweden for closing the gap between immigrant and native students: (1) Facilitating the access of immigrants to school choice, (2) Building teaching capacity, (3) Providing language training and (4) Strengthening the management of diversity. The findings in this Spotlight Report are based on existing OECD work in the area of immigrant integration in education, OECD and national data, a questionnaire on the range of policies and practices in Sweden and good practice examples for the integration in the education system in peer-learner countries and regions [Austria, Germany, the Netherlands and North America (Canada and the United States)], which were identified of particular relevance for Sweden. The report also includes policy pointers on what policies and practices Sweden could adopt to respond to the current integration challenges in the four priority areas.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. How Do Secondary School Students Explain Bullying?
- Author
-
Thornberg, Robert and Delby, Hanna
- Abstract
Background: In order to support efforts to prevent bullying, more needs to be understood about students' own explanations of bullying in their everyday school lives. In-depth qualitative analysis can contribute important insights regarding insider perspectives in terms of how students understand and explain the social interaction patterns of bullying. Purpose: The aim of the study was to examine, in detail, how a small sample of lower secondary school students explain why bullying happens and to develop a grounded theory analysis based on the students' perspectives. Method: The participants in the study were 17 Swedish lower secondary school students aged between 13 and 15 years. A total of 17 qualitative interviews and 3 follow-up interviews were conducted. Grounded theory methods based on a constructivist position were used to explore and analyse the data. Findings: The findings are based on data collected from young people who had witnessed bullying. The analysis of their explanations of why bullying happens resulted in six categories: social positioning, victim constructing, bullying normalising, rule diffusion, rule resistance and cultural ideals. These categories are interrelated, and the core process of bullying was identified as social positioning. The analysis suggested that the main concern of those who engage in bullying is to gain and maintain a high social status. Victims, in turn, were socially constructed as 'different' and 'wrong', and were connected with a low-status position. Conclusions: The study draws attention to the need for students' understandings of bullying to be considered -- for example, through student consultations. It is hoped that the current findings could be helpful as a starting point when investigating students' perspectives and giving students a voice in bullying prevention approaches at school.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Knowing What to Do: Exploring Meanings of Development and Peer Support Aimed at People with Autism
- Author
-
Bertilsdotter Rosqvist, Hanna
- Abstract
Non-autistic people is frequently described as best positioned to provide support to autistic people. But what could autistic peer support, where the support actor is another person with autism, mean? The aim of this paper is to explore different meanings of development and peer support at an autistic-only work place in Sweden. The analyses in this paper is based on data from a field work among a group of autistic self-advocates in Sweden. The group is working together in a three-year autist led project aiming at supporting young adults with autism with life strategies and with peer-to-peer mentoring as well as educating employers about autistic abilities. In the group ideas of an alternative autistic development to be nurtured and supported by autistic peer support is brought forward. Support to autistic people has to be based on understandings on autistic functionality and ways of developing and learning. This includes support in executive function, formulating goals and future aspirations, support in to get to know your abilities, embrace and cherish your strengths and interests, and get to know your difficulties including strategies to manage them, without reinforcing a sense of failure.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. More of the Same: A Critical Analysis of the Formations of Teacher Students through Education for Sustainable Development
- Author
-
Sjögren, Hanna
- Abstract
Despite the good intentions in policies promoting education for sustainable development (ESD), this paper shows that, as university scholars and teachers, we need to critically engage with how student subjectivities are formed when global initiatives materialise in local educational practices. The analysis in this paper is based on focus groups with teacher instructors in Sweden, where the participants discuss how they work with education for sustainable development. The analysis focuses on how the teacher instructors discuss their students. The analysis shows that the preferred teacher student has an active lifestyle, participates in public debates, is happy, and consumes eco-friendly goods, often in line with the teacher instructors themselves. In conclusion, the author argues that those engaging with education for sustainable development should seek to widen its scope by critically engaging with how those under education are formed through taken for granted norms of good intentions and education for sustainable development in the present.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Inclusive Spaces in Post-Secondary Education -- Exploring The Experience of Educational Supports for People with a Neuropsychiatric Disability
- Author
-
Winberg, Kerstin, Bertilsdotter Rosqvist, Hanna, and Rosenberg, David
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate the experiences of studying among people with a neuropsychiatric disability who received support from a Supported Education (SEd) programme, and people who did not receive this support. The research employed a narrative approach, where 14 participants with a neuropsychiatric diagnosis were asked to write a short reflective narrative about their experience of studying, with/without support from a SEd intervention. The results show that the persons without support from the model relied on their family as their primary support, and that support from formal support providers was not available prior to receiving a formal diagnosis. Those who received services from SEd were generally satisfied with the support they received, and did not emphasise the family as support givers in the same way. The study points to the importance of developing neurodiverse spaces, which can serve as transitional environments and that can help supported education models adapt to the needs of this group.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Collective and Individual Perspectives on Preschool Mathematics within a Professional Development Programme
- Author
-
Palmér, Hanna
- Abstract
This article explores collective and individual perspectives on preschool mathematics within a professional development programme. All seven teachers at one Swedish preschool participated in a one-year research-based professional development programme. At the beginning and then again at the end of the programme, the teachers collectively wrote down their goals for mathematics teaching at the preschool. In the article, these goals will be compared to three teachers' individual writings during the year. This comparison indicates that the professional development of these teachers may have been collective, but not joint, as the collectively written goals seem to imply slightly different things for the individual teachers. Thus, what may look like collective goals for the teaching of mathematics at one preschool may in fact imply quite large differences in the mathematics teaching of individual teachers. If collective professional development programmes are to have an impact, differences between teachers need to be made visible and, as a next step, be the basis for the development of professional language as well as evaluation and planning of preschool mathematics and further professional development.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Composition of School Meals in Sweden, Finland, and Iceland: Official Guidelines and Comparison with Practice and Availability
- Author
-
Juniusdottir, Ragnheidur, Hörnell, Agneta, Gunnarsdottir, Ingibjorg, Lagstrom, Hanna, Waling, Maria, Olsson, Cecilia, Talvia, Sanna, and Olafsdottir, Anna S.
- Abstract
Background: Nutritious and attractive school meals can improve health equality and public health. Current official guidelines and recommendations on food and nutrient composition of school meals in 3 Nordic countries; Sweden, Finland, and Iceland, are described and compared with actual practice, ie, availability of foods and nutrients in served reference meals in 3 selected areas in each country. Methods: A country comparison was made between official guidelines, and actual practice was studied in participating schools. Reference portions of school meals (N = 170) provided in 24 compulsory schools were photographed and weighed. Food and nutrient availability were compared with official guidelines in each country. Results: Emphasis of recommendations on whole-grain bread in Sweden, whole grains in Finland, and fish in Iceland were reflected in food availability. The energy content of the meals provided was lower than guidelines and there was a large variation in energy content between days. Conclusions: The guidelines regarding food availability were quite well followed, but the large variation in energy and nutrient content of provided school meals between days indicates a need for standardization.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The Successful Test Taker: Exploring Test-Taking Behavior Profiles through Cluster Analysis
- Author
-
Stenlund, Tova, Lyrén, Per-Erik, and Eklöf, Hanna
- Abstract
To be successful in a high-stakes testing situation is desirable for any test taker. It has been found that, beside content knowledge, test-taking behavior, such as risk-taking strategies, motivation, and test anxiety, is important for test performance. The purposes of the present study were to identify and group test takers with similar patterns of test-taking behavior and to explore how these groups differ in terms of background characteristics and test performance in a high-stakes achievement test context. A sample of the Swedish Scholastic Assessment Test test takers (N = 1891) completed a questionnaire measuring their motivation, test anxiety, and risk-taking behavior during the test, as well as background characteristics. A two-step cluster analysis revealed three clusters of test takers with significantly different test-taking behavior profiles: a "moderate" (n = 741), a "calm risk taker" (n = 637), and a "test anxious" risk averse (n = 513) profile. Group difference analyses showed that the "calm risk taker" profile (i.e., a high degree of risk-taking together with relatively low levels of test anxiety and motivation during the test) was the most successful profile from a test performance perspective, while the "test anxious risk averse" profile (i.e., a low degree of risk-taking together with high levels of test anxiety and motivation) was the least successful. Informing prospective test takers about these insights can potentially lead to more valid interpretations and inferences based on the test scores.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The Quest for Significance: Attitude Adaption to a Radical Group Following Social Exclusion
- Author
-
Bäck, Emma A., Bäck, Hanna, Altermark, Niklas, and Knapton, Holly
- Abstract
It is a human fundamental to desire to be valued, loved and respected--to be significant. Social exclusion induce significance loss which elicits a 'quest for significance'--the search for opportunities to re-gain significance. The present article establishes this relation in a laboratory experiment (N = 71, mean age = 28, SD = 10.42, 65% women, 35% men), showing that socially excluded individuals who are subsequently included by a radical group, adapt their attitudes in line with this group. We use a modified version of the well-known paradigm 'Cyberball' to elicit the quest for significance. The results show that when experiencing social exclusion, highly rejection sensitive individuals tend to adapt to the radical group's opinions. The results are important, highlighting a mechanism in the radicalization process and the importance of taking social factors into account in this process.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Human-Material Relationships in Environmental and Sustainability Education--An Empirical Study of a School Embroidery Project
- Author
-
Hofverberg, Hanna and Kronlid, David O.
- Abstract
In recent discussions about the widening and opening up of anthropocentric perspectives in environmental and sustainability education (ESE) research, a recurrent issue has been what reasonably could be a subject of inquiry and an agent of knowledge. This article aims to showcase an empirical study of the relevance of human-material relationships in crafting learning processes by following an embroidery project with year 8 students in the Swedish craft subject of educational sloyd. How the human-material correspondence unfolds in the crafting learning process is analysed with the aid of Ingold's practice of correspondence and Sørensen's notion of participation, performance and imagination. Rather than assuming that materials contribute to certain environmental and sustainability aims, the analysis empirically demonstrates how the human-material correspondence unfolds. The analysis identifies three human-material relationships: attuning, troubling and tracing correspondence. Drawing on the findings, the human-material relevance for environmental and sustainability education and research is further discussed.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Teachers' Involvement in Children's Mathematizing--Beyond Dichotomization between Play and Teaching
- Author
-
Björklund, Camilla, Magnusson, Maria, and Palmér, Hanna
- Abstract
The focus of this article is on mathematics teaching in a play-based and goal-oriented practice, such as preschool, and on how different lines of actions may impact children's learning opportunities. Video recordings of authentic play activities involving children and nine teachers from different preschools were analyzed qualitatively to answer the following research questions: (1) What lines of action do teachers use when they teach mathematics in play? and (2) What implications may different ways of teaching have for children's learning opportunities? The analysis revealed four different categories: confirming direction of interest; providing strategies; situating known concepts; and challenging concept meaning. As these differ regarding both the mathematics content focused on and the kind of knowledge emphasized, they have implications for children's learning opportunities.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The Role of and Connection between Systematization and Representation When Young Children Work on a Combinatorial Task
- Author
-
Palmér, Hanna and van Bommel, Jorryt
- Abstract
This article is about the systematization and representation young children spontaneously use when they are working on a combinatorial task. In this article, documentations from 123 children working on the same task are analysed. The question asked is if there are any connections between the systematizations and representations used in the documentations and how the children solve the task. The results indicate that there are some connections between systematization and representations and that both prepossess children's solutions. In this paper, we provide some possible reasons; however, we also state that more studies are needed to give deeper insights on these issues.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Additive and Multiplicative Effects of Working Memory and Test Anxiety on Mathematics Performance in Grade 3 Students
- Author
-
Korhonen, Johan, Nyroos, Mikaela, Jonsson, Bert, and Eklöf, Hanna
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate the interplay between test anxiety and working memory (WM) on mathematics performance in younger children. A sample of 624 grade 3 students completed a test battery consisting of a test anxiety scale, WM tasks and the Swedish national examination in mathematics for grade 3. The main effects of test anxiety and WM, and the two-way interaction between test anxiety and WM on mathematics performance, were modelled with structural equation modelling techniques. Additionally, the effects were also tested separately on tasks with high WM demands (mathematical problem-solving) versus low WM demands (basic arithmetic). As expected, WM positively predicted mathematics performance in all three models (overall mathematics performance, problem-solving tasks, and basic arithmetic). Test anxiety had a negative effect on problem-solving on the whole sample level but concerning basic arithmetic only students with lower WM were affected by the negative effects of test anxiety on performance. Thus, students with low WM are more vulnerable to the negative effects of test anxiety in low WM tasks like basic arithmetic. The results are discussed in relation to the early identification of test anxiety.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Recycling, Crafting and Learning--An Empirical Analysis of How Students Learn with Garments and Textile Refuse in a School Remake Project
- Author
-
Hofverberg, Hanna and Maivorsdotter, Ninitha
- Abstract
Creative remake assignments using garments and textile refuse are common educational projects to promote environmental and sustainability actions. However, very little empirical research has been carried out on the learning processes of remake projects. In this article, the aim is to examine how students learn with garments and textile refuse when engaging in a remake project. The exploration is conducted in a Swedish crafts class, educational sloyd, as a case. Practical epistemological analysis and the concept of transactant are used to analyse and be attentive to the learning process. The findings show how students transact with the idea of a product, the material's capabilities and the remake techniques. Further, the transactants show what participates and makes the learning process turn in specific directions, which is further discussed in the paper. Based on this empirical research, we may increase our understandings of how the learning processes is made in the remake project, and that knowledge can help us understand, and thus improve the quality of remake projects in relation to the environmental and sustainability aims.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Combining Entrepreneurship and Mathematics in Primary School -- What Happens?
- Author
-
Palmér, Hanna and Johansson, Maria
- Abstract
This article reports on an educational design research study exploring the potential of combining entrepreneurship and mathematics -- two of the key competencies stressed as important in a society of lifelong learning. The aim of the study was to explore what happens when entrepreneurship is integrated into mathematics lessons. Eight Swedish primary schools were involved in the iterative design wherein researchers and teachers together planned, implemented, and evaluated lessons. The results indicate that combining entrepreneurial and mathematical competencies may produce a win-win situation. Entrepreneurial competencies can be of value when students are learning mathematics, and at the same time mathematics teaching can be organised so that students develop both mathematical and entrepreneurial competencies.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Access and Stratification in Nordic Higher Education. A Review of Cross-Cutting Research Themes and Issues
- Author
-
Isopahkala-Bouret, Ulpukka, Börjesson, Mikael, Beach, Dennis, Haltia, Nina, Jónasson, Jón Torfi, Jauhiainen, Annukka, Jauhiainen, Arto, Kosunen, Sonja, Nori, Hanna, and Vabø, Agnete
- Abstract
The purpose of this review is to investigate cross-cutting research themes and issues related to access and stratification in Nordic higher education (H.E.) (Denmark, Iceland, Finland, Norway and Sweden). We synthesise how recent changes in H.E. policy, practise, and appropriations have influenced educational opportunities along social class, gender and age. In this review we highlight results and conclusions shared by various recent Nordic studies. The emphasis is on the common trends and patterns related to social stratification in access.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Meaning-Making across Languages: A Case Study of Three Multilingual Writers in Sápmi
- Author
-
Lindgren, Eva, Westum, Asbjørg, Outakoski, Hanna, and Sullivan, Kirk P.H
- Abstract
Sápmi is a geographical area that runs across the Kola Peninsula in Russia to northern Finland, Norway and Sweden. All Sami languages have been going through a rapid language change process and many of the traditional language domains have disappeared during the last decades due to previous national and local language policies. Nevertheless, recent growth of positive attitudes towards Sami languages and culture both within and outside the Sami group has given new momentum to the language revitalisation process. At the same time, English is becoming more present in the Sami context through tourism, media and popular culture. This study investigates 15-year-old writers' meaning-making in three languages they meet on a daily basis: North Sami, the majority language Finnish/Norwegian/Swedish and English. Data were collected in schools where writers wrote two texts in each language, one argumentative and one descriptive. Using a functional approach, we analyse how three writers make meaning across three languages and two genres. Results show that writers made use of similar ways of expressing meaning on the three levels we investigated: ideational, interpersonal and textual, but also how the production differed between the texts, and how context and content interacted with writers' meaning-making in the three languages.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Nordic Children's Conceptualizations of Healthy Eating in Relation to School Lunch
- Author
-
Berggren, Linda, Talvia, Sanna, Fossgard, Eldbjørg, Arnfjörð, Unnur Björk, Hörnell, Agneta, Ólafsdóttir, Anna Sigríður, Gunnarsdóttir, Ingibjörg, Wergedahl, Hege, Lagström, Hanna, Waling, Maria, and Olsson, Cecilia
- Abstract
Purpose: Pupils' perspective should be better taken into account when developing nutrition education at school. The purpose of this paper is to explore Nordic children's perspectives on the healthiness of meals in the context of school lunches. Design/methodology/approach: In total, 78 focus group discussions were conducted with 10-11-year-old girls and boys (n = 457) from schools in Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden, which were participating in the Nordic school meal project ProMeal during the school year 2013-2014. A flexible discussion guide and stimulus material in the form of 14 photographs displaying different school lunch contexts were used. The discussions were analyzed using thematic analysis. Findings: These Nordic children seem to share the adult-set aim of healthy eating in the school context as a socio-cultural norm. Although healthy eating was constructed as a rational, normative and acceptable way to eat at school, unhealthy eating was emphasized as negotiably acceptable when eaten occasionally and under certain circumstances (e.g. at special occasions). Unhealthy eating also comprised emotionally laden descriptions such as enjoyment and disgust. Practical implications: Children's conceptualizations of healthy eating are connected to nutritional, socio-cultural, emotional and normative dimensions, which should be reflected also when developing nutrition education in school. Originality/value: The need for research exploring children's experiences of, and understandings about, school lunch motivated this unique multicenter study with a large number of participating children. In the focus groups a child-oriented, photo-elicitation method was used.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Group Differences in Test-Taking Behaviour: An Example from a High-Stakes Testing Program
- Author
-
Stenlund, Tova, Eklöf, Hanna, and Lyrén, Per-Erik
- Abstract
This study investigated whether different groups of test-takers vary in their reported test-taking behaviour in a high-stakes test situation. A between-group design (N = 1129) was used to examine whether high and low achievers, as well as females and males, differ in their use of test-taking strategies, and in level of reported test anxiety and motivation. The results showed differences between high and low achievers on a number of test-taking strategies, where high achievers reported using successful strategies to a higher extent. There were also gender differences: females, for example, reported using random guessing to a higher extent than males. Further, low achievers, especially females, reported significantly higher levels of test anxiety than high achievers, and high achievers reported slightly higher levels of motivation when compared to low achievers. To conclude, test-taking behaviour might bring additional variance to test scores, whether or not this is irrelevant variance is discussed.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Integrating Mathematical Learning during Caregiving Routines: A Study of Toddlers in Swedish Preschools
- Author
-
Palmér, Hanna, Henriksson, Jenny, and Hussein, Rania
- Abstract
In recent years the interest in preschool mathematics has increased. However, studies seldom focus on children under the age of three and research is scarce on the early use of mathematics observed in natural settings. This article reports a study of mathematical possibilities during diaper changing in a preschool setting. A diaper change can be a communicative moment when the child can experience mathematics with a professional preschool teacher, but it can also be a moment of mechanical routine with no pedagogical context. The intention of the study presented here was to investigate the mathematical potential preschool teachers described in relation to diaper changing and to examine the ways this potential was put into action. Both similarities and differences emerged regarding the mathematical potential preschool teachers described in relation to diaper changing and the mathematical content that they were observed to communicate. The results show that it is possible to communicate mathematical content in a pedagogical way during diaper changes, making this routine a learning opportunity for children. However, the results also show variations in the observed range and context of such communication, and therefore the potential for mathematical learning during diaper changes seems to differ widely.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Professional Primary School Teacher Identity Development: A Pursuit in Line with an Unexpressed Image
- Author
-
Palmér, Hanna
- Abstract
The results presented in this article are taken from a case study of novice primary school mathematics teachers' professional identity development from the perspective of the teachers themselves. The empirical material was collected through self-recordings, observations and interviews. The results show how the professional identity development of these novice teachers becomes a pursuit in line with their image of a primary school teacher. To develop a sense of themselves as primary school teachers they need to establish their own criteria--individual (including graduation and personal knowledge) and social (the ability to work in one school, have colleagues and have a class of their own for which they do the planning and teaching). These criteria are shown to be both a precondition for and a part of professional identity development. The novice teachers' image of what it means to be a primary school teacher directs their actions and becomes the goal of their professional identity development. Because of its high impact, student and novice teachers' image of primary school teachers ought to be made visible in both teacher education and teacher induction.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Implementation of Problem-Based Learning in Environmental Chemistry
- Author
-
Jansson, Stina, So¨derstro¨m, Hanna, Andersson, Patrik L., and Nording, Malin L.
- Abstract
Environmental Chemistry covers a range of topics within the discipline of chemistry, from toxicology to legislation, which warrants interdisciplinary study. Consequently, problem-based learning (PBL), a style of student-centered learning which facilitates the integration of multiple subjects, was investigated to determine if it would be a more appropriate instructional method for teaching Environmental Chemistry than the traditional teacher-centered education model. This article describes the practical aspects of course development and implementation of PBL in a master's level course in Environmental Chemistry. Overall, the results, which were collected from the initial two years of the course, indicated that the students were pleased and found PBL to be an efficient methodology for not only learning, but also acquiring an in-depth understanding of Environmental Chemistry. This is intended as a case-study with the target audience consisting primarily of high school and undergraduate chemistry teachers, but may also be useful for teachers in other subject areas with an interest in student-centered education.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Modeling the Test-Taking Motivation Construct through Investigation of Psychometric Properties of an Expectancy-Value-Based Questionnaire
- Author
-
Knekta, Eva and Eklöf, Hanna
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the psychometric properties of an expectancy-value-based questionnaire measuring five aspects of test-taking motivation (effort, expectancies, importance, interest, and test anxiety). The questionnaire was distributed to a sample of Swedish Grade 9 students taking a low-stakes (n = 1,047) or a high-stakes (n = 536) test. Structural equation modeling largely supported theoretical assumptions and psychometric properties were acceptable. Expectancies and importance were significant predictors of effort, and effort significantly predicted performance in both test situations. Furthermore, measurement invariance across test situations was investigated. Partial scalar invariance was obtained and latent mean comparisons showed significantly higher levels of reported test-taking motivation in the high-stakes context. The study findings suggest that the present instrument can be used in low- as well as high-stakes assessment contexts not only to get an extended knowledge of test-takers' perceptions of tests but also to control for lack of motivation when stakes are low for test-takers.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Children's Mathematical Achievement and How It Relates to Working Memory, Test Anxiety and Self-Regulation: A Person-Centred Approach
- Author
-
Nyroos, Mikaela, Jonsson, Bert, Korhonen, Johan, and Eklöf, Hanna
- Abstract
Meeting the challenges of teaching to all individuals requires a multifaceted approach, especially from the Swedish standpoint of inclusive education for all pupils. In the context of applied standards for receiving special educational provision, the present paper strives to shed light on the scope of novel indicators which can accommodate pupils' different needs. Founded on three established and robust psycho-educational concepts -- working memory, test anxiety and self-regulation -- all of which are important for educational, social, emotional and behavioural development, the present study examines those concepts in terms of profiles and their relations to mathematical achievement. A battery of tests was completed by 624 children between the ages of 8 and 10 to assess their working memory, test anxiety, self-regulation, and mathematical achievement. Person-centred analyses confirmed the negative academic outcomes associated with the aforementioned variables but also revealed individual variations that warrant attention. Further, pupils labelled with an 'At-risk' profile were more likely to achieve low Maths scores, compared to pupils with an 'In-vigour' profile. An implication for special educational provision is discussed, and practical suggestions are provided.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Human-Animal Relations beyond the Zoo: The Quest for a More Inclusive Sustainability Education
- Author
-
Sjögren, Hanna, Gyberg, Per, and Henriksson, Malin
- Abstract
This study investigates human-animal relations in sustainability education. To understand what educational relationships and boundaries are challenged and/or strengthened in education promoting future sustainable societies, we argue that educational theory and practice must move beyond the anthropocentric framework's sole focus on relationships between humans. Drawing on focus group interviews with teacher instructors at eight Swedish universities, we discuss cases in which sustainability education benefits from being understood as crafted via human-nonhuman relations. By concentrating on human-animal relations, we discuss the political and ethical implications arising from relationships being created in certain ways and not others. The empirical examples illustrate how the relations between teacher instructors and various animals can be a critical starting point for understanding the limitations and possibilities fostered by sustainability education.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Using Tablet Computers in Preschool: How Does the Design of Applications Influence Participation, Interaction and Dialogues?
- Author
-
Palmér, Hanna
- Abstract
The results in this article explore whether and how the design of applications used on tablet computers influences the interaction and dialogues that occur between children and pedagogues, the participation of children in the activities and the mathematics that can be learned. While mathematics offered a lens to explore the use of tablet devices, child--teacher interactions is the focus of this article. Twelve pedagogues were observed as they used different applications with 25 preschool children. These applications were categorised based on their classification (boundaries of the application) and framing (form of the application). It was shown that the same pedagogue interacted differently with the children based on the application they were using. Further, the children's participation as well as the structure and content of the dialogues between pedagogues and children differed based on classification and the framing of the application used. The results indicate that the design of the applications influences the pedagogues and the educational context in which children are invited to participate.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A Cross-National Comparison of Reported Effort and Mathematics Performance in TIMSS Advanced
- Author
-
Eklöf, Hanna, Pavešic, Barbara Japelj, and Grønmo, Liv Sissel
- Abstract
The purpose of the study was to measure students' reported test-taking effort and the relationship between reported effort and performance on the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) Advanced mathematics test. This was done in three countries participating in TIMSS Advanced 2008 (Sweden, Norway, and Slovenia), and the present study is the first to make a cross-national comparison of reported effort in the TIMSS context. Students in all three samples on average reported a rather low level of motivation to spend effort on the low-stakes TIMSS test and in all nations, there was a statistically significant relationship between reported effort and test performance. These patterns of results were similar for the three nations, although there were also differences. The Swedish students reported the lowest level of invested effort, and the relationship between reported effort and test performance was strongest for Sweden. Although the study has limitations, findings are potentially important and suggest that student effort and motivation needs continued monitoring in low-stakes assessment contexts such as TIMSS, Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), or National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP).
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.