9,846 results
Search Results
202. An exploratory study that uses textual analysis to examine the financial reporting sentiments during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Non, Normawati and Ab Aziz, Norazlin
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- 2023
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203. Emoticons in Student-Professor Email Communication
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Baggia, Alenka, Žnidaršic, Anja, and Tratnik, Alenka
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Emoticons have become a common phenomenon in email correspondence between students and professors. Even though the use of emoticons in formal writing is considered inappropriate and unprofessional, more and more students are using these nonverbal communication tools to add context or emphasis to their email messages to professors. This paper examines the association between the use of emoticons and professors' perceptions of higher education students' email messages with and without emoticons in two countries, Serbia and Slovenia. The students' emails were collected and assessed on several levels. The students' messages were examined with particular attention to the appropriateness of the students' writing style. In addition, the students' level of digital literacy, their attitude toward a professor, and gender differences in the use of emoticons were examined. Furthermore, an online questionnaire was used to identify characteristic differences between students who use emoticons and students who do not. The results show that messages with emoticons are rated lower on several dimensions than messages without emoticons. In addition, students who use emoticons show lower digital literacy and perceive their professors as more understanding and helpful. Emoticon use is not related to gender. The results suggest that students should avoid using emoticons even if they have a positive attitude toward their professor.
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- 2022
204. Serious Video Games for Agricultural Learning: Scoping Review
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Ismael E. Espinosa-Curiel and Carlos A. Garcia de Alba-Chavez
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Serious video games provide a immersive learning environment for agriculture by simulating real-life challenges scenarios. However, empirical evidence of their effectiveness is sparse. This scoping review follows PRISMA-ScR guidelines to summarize literature on serious video games for agricultural learning, highlighting research trends and identifying gaps. We systematically searched nine prominent research databases for papers on serious video games for agriculture learning published between January 2000 and July 2022. Two independent reviewers conducted screening, data extraction, and synthesized the collected data using a narrative approach. The initial search identified 3,297 articles, of which 0.58% (n = 19) were included in the review. Most reviewed games were released in the last five years, with a predominant presence in the mobile platform. They commonly employed a simulation-based approach, featuring 2-D graphics and designed for single-player experiences. These games mainly target students, focusing on crop production and sustainable agriculture. Educational theories were often unspecified in the studies. Evaluation protocols primarily consisted of pilot studies, emphasizing user experience and knowledge enhancement. Positive outcomes, such as improved user experiences, knowledge, and attitude and behavior changes, were commonly observed in these studies. This study highlights advancements in using serious video games for agricultural learning over 20 years. However, it stresses the need for deeper exploration of game elements' impact on user experience and effectiveness. Creating games for underrepresented players and specific agricultural challenges is essential, as is enhancing theoretical foundations and learning approaches. Rigorous research designs are vital for assessing game effectiveness across short, medium, and long terms.
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- 2024
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205. Teachers in 'International Schools' as an Emerging Field of Inquiry: A Literature Review of Themes and Theoretical Developments
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Adam Poole and Tristan Bunnell
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This review article identifies the trends and developments regarding teachers in international schools from 1998 until 2022. International school teachers as a group are worthy of study as the number of schools delivering a curriculum in English outside of an English-speaking nation has grown considerably in recent years. Amidst continuous statistical growth there has been major structural changes as the arena has attracted a local middle class and the attention of commercial entities. As a result, the profit driven 'non-traditional' arena is now the dominant one, centred upon The Asia-Pacific and the Middle-East. This literature review analysed 69 peer-reviewed academic journal papers with regard to their thematic focus, methods, and theoretical frameworks. Three distinct phases of literature can be identified, with a sociological lens appearing after 2012 and a major period of growth beginning in 2015, and a large number of research gaps can be identified.
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- 2024
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206. Twisted Knowledge Construction on X/Twitter: An Analysis of Constructivist Sensemaking on Social Media Leading to Political Radicalization
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Renato Russo, Paulo Blikstein, and Ioana Literat
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Purpose: This study aims to identify how Brazilian followers of an X/Twitter profile engage in theory-building processes leading up to the January 8, 2023 riots in Brasília, the Brazilian capital. This paper seeks to understand how cognitive and sociocultural processes weave together to weaponize collective knowledge construction that, in isolation, could be seen as virtuous but, in specific contexts, might lead to radicalization. Design/methodology/approach: This study uses qualitative content analysis of comments on ambiguous X/Twitter posts published by a conspiratorial profile associated with former President Jair Bolsonaro. Content was published in the three weeks that preceded the coup d'état attempt by Bolsonaro supporters on January 8, 2023. Findings: Findings point to users' resorting to intuitive knowledge to support sensemaking processes in their search for subliminal meanings in tweets. That includes, for example, attempts to crack binary code-encrypted messages. This study also identified practices of cross-media sourcing, where users collect evidence from alternative social media channels to interpret messages containing verbal and visual information. Finally, this study found that religious symbols are often instrumentalized and become a lens through which followers organize information to integrate with their existing knowledge and assumptions. Research limitations/implications: With this work, the authors build on existing scholarship on epistemologies used by conspiratorial and radicalized groups as they engage in systematic sensemaking and often refer to religion to interpret messages that motivate extreme political position-taking. This study addresses a similar phenomenon as it unfolds in an understudied geographical context (Brazil) and seeks to demonstrate how individuals engage in collective sensemaking practices. The authors hope that their findings inform educators as they explore the affordances of social media to foster positive collective learning experiences in reasoning supported by social media. Originality/value: The originality of this study is twofold. First, this study uses an analytical lens that draws on the learning sciences and cognitive science for inquiry of radicalization happening around social media. The authors understand that social media lend themselves particularly interesting to the analysis, as they are settings where notions of mastery blur, and individuals engage in conversations on complex, controversial topics. With that engagement, they demonstrate willingness to reason collectively. Second, this study investigates how those phenomena unfold in an understudied context, responding to calls for more diversity in research in the learning sciences as well as in media studies.
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- 2024
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207. The Costs of School Exclusion: A Case Study Analysis of England, Wales and Scotland
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Kyann Zhang, Alice Tawell, and Sara Evans-Lacko
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The cost of permanent exclusion from school is an issue that has been gaining increasing attention in recent years. However, efforts to estimate these costs have mainly focused on those incurred after the student has been excluded, such as those for alternative education providers. Less focus has been given to costs associated with processes leading up to exclusion, including the time spent by school staff and other professionals (e.g. counsellors, special education needs specialists) in efforts to prevent exclusion, or to mitigate negative outcomes. Moreover, the unpaid time and effort spent by parents/carers during this process often go unaccounted for, despite significant financial implications from foregone productivity and income. In this paper, we use a series of five case studies based on in-depth interviews with different stakeholders from England, Scotland and Wales to illustrate the potential involvement of the professionals and parents/carers in the process leading up to -- or the measures preventing -- permanent exclusion, and estimate the associated costs. It is important to highlight these costs for future resource planning, as well as to present a more comprehensive picture of the true costs of permanent exclusion.
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- 2024
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208. A Systematic Review of the Use of Simulation Games in K-12 Education
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Samah H. Almaki, Mnyero A. Gunda, Khairuddin Idris, Abdul Talib M. Hashim, and Siti Rahaimah Ali
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Despite simulation games (SGs) being a novel pedagogical tool that can soundly represent real environments to enhance students' learning outcomes, knowledge, and skills, there is still a lack of an overview of the current theoretical understanding of using simulation games as a pedagogical method to develop K-12 learning outcomes. Taking an explanatory perspective, we examined the recent empirical studies in simulation games through a systematic search method following the PRISMA guidelines, and then discussed the benefits, limitations, and recommendations of using simulation games in K-12 education during the period of 2016 and continued to 2021 via six databases: Web of Science, Scopus, and ScienceDirect, ERC, ERIC, IEEE. Twenty-four papers were identified as the result of the data extraction process. We identified the benefits and limitations of implementing learning games in k-12 education. Findings revealed that simulation games used as teaching tools could develop student learning outcomes across the different subjects owing to features such as learners' engagement and motivation, a safe interactive environment, and increased academic performance and achievements. An important avenue for future research is to examine a new insights into and practical advice on the meaningful inclusion of simulation games in K-12 education.
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- 2024
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209. Review of Studies Conducted in Nanotechnology Education: A Meta-Synthesis Study
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Aliye Gocmen, Hilal Karabulut, and I. Afsin Kariper
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Nanoscience and Technology (NST) have revolutionized the world. It has led to many innovations since it entered our lives. Meanwhile, the number and quality of people trained in this field gained importance. Currently, initiatives are being taken to integrate this field into the primary education curriculum in many countries. This study focuses on integrating NST into the curriculum as a primary education topic. In this context, meta-synthesis research was used. First, developed countries' well-known initiatives on adapting NST to the curriculum will be discussed in the paper. Then, the works on NST in the literature, especially experimental ones, will be addressed. Finally, based on the results, some suggestions will be made for creating a curriculum in this field. Although there are differences in countries' curriculums, the basic knowledge necessary for education in this field is also outlined.
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- 2024
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210. Categorising Inclusive Education and Disability Narratives, Actors and Expertise on Instagram, YouTube and Twitter
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Carlos Barroso-Moreno, Ana María de las Heras-Cuenca, Elena Bañares-Marivela, and Laura Rayón-Rumayor
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Social networks play a relevant role in the construction of narratives on disability and inclusive education. This paper categorises the themes of the most viral publications on Instagram, YouTube and Twitter X, with a twofold objective: to identify the social actors associated with them and to comparatively analyse the value of thematic use for the three digital platforms. Social listening techniques developed using the Twitter X API and web scraping techniques for Instagram and YouTube are applied to store the publications with the keywords education, inclusion and/or disability in Spanish and English. The database consists of 100,091 posts captured from October 2021 to September 2022, a full year. Subsequently, the 100 most viral publications from each social network are selected and a content analysis is applied. The results show a tendency towards thematic specialisation: Instagram defines the demand for rights and disseminates empathetic attitudes; YouTube collects experiences of good practices in informal contexts with a reflective function; Twitter X disseminates reports on the barriers and prejudices experienced by people with disabilities with a critical tone. The main social actors are diverse and varied with different profiles, therapists, politicians and parents with children with disabilities, among others. The impact of the narratives to face the new educational challenges that require an understanding of the network to establish long-term strategies for building a critical digital citizenship is discussed.
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- 2024
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211. Educational Process in E-Learning Activity for Elderly People: A Systematic Review
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Jr Emerson Rogério de Oliveira and Adriano Pasqualotti
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E-learning is the direct result of the integration between technology and education. The lifelong learning process for older people should consider employing e-learning activities. The objective of this work was to identify the pedagogical processes involved in e-learning activities in learning environments used by elderly people. The literature search resulted in 826 papers. Ten studies were selected for the qualitative synthesis. The research method used was PRISMA. The results point out that: the need to adapt e-learning content to different cognitive skills; the interface of virtual learning environments must be adaptive; the level of knowledge of older people must be considered; communication features such as forums, chats and message exchange must be considered; face-to-face meetings should be offered to remedy possible difficulties in the use of technological resources; the use of explanatory tutorials on communication tools and teacher assistance in mediations should be observed; there is a need to use interactive materials; activities that foster collaborative dynamics must be encouraged; and themes suggested by the elderly that enable self-knowledge should also be adopted. Although an article investigated indicates the opposite, it was found that e-learning is well accepted by the elderly, adding many advantages for the development of digital skills.
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- 2024
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212. Understanding Professors' and Students with Disabilities' Perceptions of Inclusive Higher Education: A Systematic Literature Review
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Andrea Osuna-Juárez and Nuria González-Castellano
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This systematic literature review explores professors' role in implementing inclusive education for students with disabilities in higher education. Findings from 22 articles reveal diverse barriers, including attitudinal challenges, physical accessibility issues, and bureaucratic hurdles. While professors express positive intentions, practical implementation often falters, hence indicating a need for comprehensive training programmes. The review highlights the transformative potential of such training programmes, fostering a shift from the medical model to a more inclusive framework. This paper underscores the need for universities to invest in faculty development and take a collective approach involving all the stakeholders in order to dismantle barriers. The call to action also includes sustained conversation and research undertakings in the Latin American context, to enhance inclusive practices and support students with disabilities in higher education.
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- 2024
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213. Valuing Teaching: Exploring How a University's Strategic Documents Reflect Institutional Teaching Culture
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Lindsay Shaw, H. MacDougall, L. Goff, D. Ellis, E. Kustra, M. P. Law, and L. Taylor
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Strategic documents are artifacts that can reveal evidence of an institution's teaching culture and, ideally, can influence how teaching is valued, rewarded, and resourced. This paper describes how an Institutional Teaching Culture framework based on six well-researched levers was applied to analyze strategic documents for indicators of teaching culture. Analyses conducted at five Canadian universities identified strengths and gaps within and across documents which, in turn, helped guide conversations about enhancing representations of institutional teaching culture. The authors share insights about our use of this analysis framework and offer recommendations to institutions invested in understanding and fostering robust teaching cultures.
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- 2024
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214. Active Learning Spaces Design and Assessment: A Qualitative Systematic Literature Review
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Vânia Carlos, Gabriela Reses, and Sandra C. Soares
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As spaces, physical or virtual, are change agents and can have an impact on learning, the power of built pedagogy is being acknowledged in Higher Education. Emphasis is being placed on the design of Active Learning Spaces (ALS) and its impact on pedagogy, by fostering active learning. However, the field is fragmented, due to a profusion of terms for ALS, lacking systematization. This paper presents a systematic literature review on ALS with a focus on the concepts, design principles, teaching and learning strategies, educational resources, assessment criteria and spaces typologies. It aims to map the state of the art and identify common orientations to inform the design and assessment of ALS. The results show that studies in ALS emphasize the centrality of students' learning through collaborative work and supported by technology-enhanced environments. Despite the profusion of designations, its definitions generally focus on pedagogical strategies, technology-enhanced learning principles, collaborative aspects and interdisciplinarity and transferable skills, albeit with different importance levels. It also shows that research in this area is small-scale and empirically weak. Considering the assessment of ALS usage, future research on the impact of different layouts (pedagogy, furniture, and technology) both on teachers' practices and on students' learning is highly recommended.
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- 2024
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215. A Methodology for Surveying Indigenous Collections at an Australian Academic Library
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Antonia Mocatta, Ryan Stoker, and Lisa McIntosh
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This paper examines the University of Sydney Library's development and piloting of a methodology to survey its Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultural collections, to enhance catalogue metadata and allow culturally sensitive material to be identified and protected. The research falls broadly within the interpretivist epistemology and draws methodologically on Participative Action Research. The pilot survey was conducted using a qualitative, collection-based approach, more specifically Direct Collection Analysis. A broad syntax was used to identify cultural content within the catalogue metadata, and items individually examined to determine the nature of their contents. The findings surface the benefits and shortcomings of the initial methodology. It is recommended future surveys be conducted using more specific terminology checklists and undertaken by a dedicated team that has received care and handling training for cultural materials and is led by an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander expert in cultural collections.
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- 2024
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216. Estimating Returns to Schooling and Experience: A History of Thought
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Barry R. Chiswick
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This paper is a review of the literature in economics on the effect on earnings of human capital investment from Adam Smith to the early 1980s. It discusses the use of the net present value (NPV) technique by Walsh and Friedman and Kuznets, and Becker's use of the NPV to estimate the internal rate of return to schooling. The first regression-based approach was the Becker and Chiswick 'schooling-earnings function', which was expanded by Mincer to the 'human capital earnings function' (HCEF) by incorporating on-the-job training. Extensions of the HCEF in the 1970s and early 1980s are discussed.
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- 2024
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217. Towards a Conceptual Systematic Review: Proposing a Methodological Framework
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Felix Schreiber and Colin Cramer
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This paper proposes a novel framework for systematic reviews, the "conceptual systematic review" (CSR), incorporating elements of content analysis that often implicitly precede synthesising research but are rarely made explicit. We argue that a CSR has the possibility to conceptually map a "tangled term," to prepare systematic reviews, to advance interdisciplinary communication, and to offer guidance in tangled fields of scientific discourse. The proposed methodological framework involves a six-stage procedure aimed at systematically unravelling tangled terms through the deductive--inductive coding of a systematically retrieved literature corpus, thereby going beyond the quantitative synthesis of research findings. We call the elements of such a framework "heuristics," "classifications," and "systematics"; they provide insight into the quality of term disentanglement and can be viewed hierarchically: heuristics do not (necessarily) satisfy any quality criteria, classifications adhere to "analytical quality criteria," and systematics also meet "empirical quality criteria." The six quality criteria through which the quality of a CSR can be made explicit are introduced to allow for professional scrutiny and critique. It is argued that making conceptual elements of systematic reviews explicit is especially relevant in the field of educational research. Finally, we discuss the relation of the CSR to similar methods and address weaknesses in the proposed framework.
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- 2024
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218. Challenges and Opportunities for the Web 3.0 Metaverse Turn in Education
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Shujia Fan, Brian Yecies, Zeyang Ivy Zhou, and Jun Shen
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The metaverse, along with its various Web 3.0 subdomains, represents a ground-breaking extension of both the physical and digital worlds. In this emerging landscape, the real and virtual worlds are integrating in a way that allows for seamless interactions, creating an immersive experience. This integration has significant implications for diverse fields, particularly in reshaping both online and traditional education methods. By analyzing 417 comprehensive white papers released in 2022 and 2023 from leading consulting firms and think tanks, and incorporating insights from academic articles, we have extracted key information about how metaverse technologies are influencing education over time. Our investigation unveils the key impacts of metaverse technologies on the educational landscape, contributing to a more profound understanding of the transformative effects of the metaverse on the educational terrain in flux. Moreover, our study provides a holistic perspective on the advantages and disadvantages associated with metaverse education, offering in-depth insights into the challenges involved in seamlessly integrating the metaverse into educational practices. Furthermore, our research also highlights the challenges and opportunities presented by the metaverse and its impact on new educational paradigms.
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- 2024
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219. Teaching as Poetry: Outlaw Emotions and Embodied Knowledge of Injustice
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Rachel Snyder Bhansari
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This paper explores the emotional experiences of three first-year Latinx teachers in Dual Language Bilingual Education (DLBE) programs. Drawing on interviews completed over the course of a year-long critical ethnography with collaborative elements, I created a series of transcription poems highlighting salient emotions. Applying feminist theories of emotion as knowledge to the teachers' expressions in the poems, I argue that the poems indicate the teachers' embodied awareness of (in)justice and creative means of resistance. Through the presentation of the poems and the invitation to 'critically listen,' this article offers an opportunity for readers to feel the impact of Latinx teachers' voices and experiences in white supremacist systems.
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- 2024
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220. Data as the New Panacea: Trends in Global Education Reforms, 1970-2018
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Patricia Bromley, Tom Nachtigal, and Rie Kijima
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This paper investigates changes in the promissory visions articulated in education reforms around the world. We use structural topic modeling to inductively analyze the content of 9,268 reforms from 215 countries and territories during the period 1970-2018 using the World Education Reform Database. Our findings reveal a decline in traditional management-focused reforms and a rise in reforms related to data and information. We also find an expanding commitment to educational access and inclusion, but reforms framed explicitly in 'rights' language diminish. We argue that the rise of data-centric reforms and the retreat from rights-based approaches may both reflect and contribute to a broader erosion of the liberal world order.
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- 2024
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221. Value Co-Creation and Co-Destruction of the Student Experience on Online Education in E-Commerce Mode of Business to Business to Consumer
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Wenfeng Si, Guangwei Hu, and Juan Long
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Due to the digital revolution, online education based on the B2B2C (Business to Business to Consumer) model is growing Understanding students' expectations, concerns, and experiences of these courses are crucial to the successful of education. Based on the research framework of value co-creation and value co-destruction and the theory of social practice, this paper adopts online content analysis to study the comment data of Tencent Classroom to establish a theoretical framework of practical value for students' experience in B2B2C online education. Six categories of value experience are identified, namely, technical effect, online teaching, learning interaction, course support, recommendation, and thanking. Then, based on the practice types of co-creation, co-destruction, co-recovery, and co-reduction, the research reveals value formation in the online teaching experience. Subsequently, the formation of experiential value in the response situation is discussed, and the practice experience of value co-creation and value co-destruction is recognized. This study explores the online education experience of B2B2C mode, which helps to deepen the management of B2B2C mode education. At the same time, this study establishes a thematic framework of value co-creation and co-destruction for online education experience research and provides a new theoretical perspective of management science for related research.
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- 2024
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222. Lessons from Dragons: Teaching Political Science with HBO's House of the Dragon
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Zach Lang and Ronnie Olesker
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Since first airing on HBO in 2011, "Game of Thrones" (GOT) has proven to be a fruitful text for teaching and studying politics. In 2022 the prequal to GOT-House of The Dragon (HOTD) debuted on HBO. This paper conducts discourse analysis on the entire first season with two goals in mind. First, we demonstrate how pop culture is impacted by real world politics by examining the change in gender and racial representation in HOTD compared to GOT and argue that this change was a product of cultural backlash that GOT received and a result of changing political attitudes over the time of both shows airing. Second, we use the show's content as text to teach American and Comparative politics concepts. In the appendix we provide three examples of low, mid, and high-stake assignments that use show content in teaching political science courses.
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- 2024
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223. Analysis of the Current State of Evidence Regarding the Relationship between Reading, Writing, and Digital Literacy Skills in K-12 Education: A Systematic Review
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Mazhar Bal, Ayse Gül Kara Aydemir, and Görkem Kibaroglu
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This paper aims to conduct an in-depth analysis of studies on the relationship between reading and writing skills and digital literacy at the K-12 level, following the PRISMA statement. The analysis included examining subjects, aims, digital materials, methodologies, and learning outcomes of relevant studies. Data were collected from the Web of Science database based on specified inclusion criteria. In total, 23 empirical studies were analyzed: 6 articles exploring the relationship between writing and digital literacy skills, and 17 articles examining the relationship between reading and digital literacy skills. The relationship between reading skills and digital literacy was explored in several contexts: the impact of digital texts on reading processes, comprehension and interpretation skills, effects of digital technologies on traditional reading methods, the influence of digital graphic novels on reading processes, and early literacy education. Findings indicated a relationship between writing skills and digital literacy, covering topics such as digital technologies in traditional writing, critical discourse analysis, writing skills in new media, and writing practices. Various digital tools were employed to enhance reading, writing, and digital literacy skills, including digital tablets, computer software, comics, educational videos, e-books, picture books, digital novels, voice recorders, and mobile devices. The majority of studies utilized qualitative and mixed methods; no studies employed quantitative methods. Overall, these findings highlight the interplay between reading, writing, and digital literacy skills at the K-12 level, providing a foundation for future research.
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- 2024
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224. A Scoping Review of the Literature on Teacher Leadership in Spain
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Mireia Tintoré, Gloria Gratacós, and Begoña Ladrón de Guevara
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Research on topics related to educational leadership is evolving rapidly. A scoping review was conducted to investigate research on teacher leadership in Spain searching online databases (WoS, ÍnDICEs-CSIC, SCOPUS, Google Scholar) to identify papers published between 1990 and 2022, of which 39 were included. Through a thematic and contextual analysis, the review concludes that teacher leadership is an emerging topic in Spain; it has a much stronger empirical position and has expanded related to distributed leadership and leadership for social justice. Nevertheless, further research is needed to develop this area and make it more useful for academics, practitioners, and policymakers.
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- 2024
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225. Cultural-Linguistic Diversity in Italy and Sweden? A Sociomaterial Analysis of Policies for Heritage Language Education
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Giulia Messina Dahlberg and Barbara Gross
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In this paper, we critically discuss the impact of policy documents on the construction of national narratives on the provision of support for cultural-linguistic diversity in education systems in two European countries. The analysis focuses upon a selection of national policy documents that deal with the planning and provision of HLE since the 1990s. We take critical pedagogy and sociomateriality as theoretical lenses to investigate educational policies on HLE. Thus, this study critically traces the ways in which language ideologies are enmeshed with legislative, political and educational discourses by following an inductive and retroductive process, wherein key-concepts, themes and critical configurations of HLE are mapped, compared, re-assembled and discussed in terms of a complex system. The analysis shows that the (non-)provision of HLE shapes the educational space and the value references and world views that prevail and are (re)produced in it. Emerging deficit perspectives, linguistic assimilation and marginalisation processes limit the path towards more inclusive and equitable educational institutions and practices.
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- 2024
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226. Using Design-Based Research to Adjust Lesson Study with Pre-Service Teacher Candidates
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Kelly Chandler-Olcott, Sharon Dotger, Heather E. Waymouth, Keith Newvine, Kathleen A. Hinchman, Molly C. Lahr, Michael T. Crosby, and Janine Nieroda
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Purpose: This study reports on changes made within the study, plan, teach and reflect steps of lesson study with pre-service teachers who were learning to teach within a disciplinary literacy course. Design/methodology/approach: Using methods associated with formative experiments and design-based research, this study gathered data over four iterations of the disciplinary literacy course. Data included the course materials, pre-service teachers' written work, observational notes from research lessons, transcripts of post-lesson discussions and teacher-educators' analysis sessions and pre-service teachers' post-program interviews. Data were analyzed within and across iterations. Findings: Initial adjustments to the lesson study process focused on the reflect step, as we learned to better scaffold pre-service teachers sharing of observational data from research lessons. Later adjustments occurred in the study and plan steps, as we refined the design of four-day lesson sequences that better supported pre-service teachers' attention to disciplinary literacy while providing room for their instructional mentors to provide specific team-based feedback. Adjustments to the teach step included reteaching and more explicit attention to literacy objectives. Originality/value: This paper contributes to the literature by explicitly applying formative experiment and design-based research methods to the implementation of lesson study with pre-service teachers. Furthermore, it contributes examples of lesson study within a disciplinary literacy context, expanding the examples of lesson study's applicability across content areas.
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- 2024
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227. Religion in South African Education: A Divisive or Unifying Force?
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Maitumeleng Albertina Nthontho
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Religion not only promotes tolerance among societies with different backgrounds, but also serves to enhance human society. In contrast, however, religion is seen to be the cause of conflict and division around the world. Hence, it is crucial that schools handle the teaching of religion with greater care. This paper aims to share schools' experiences of religion-in-education policy change in South Africa -- whether it unifies or divides them. It concludes that religion in education is neither a divider nor a unifier. Nonetheless, the approach that schools adopt toward the teaching of religion to learners remains a concern.
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- 2024
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228. Serious Games Research Streams for Social Change: Critical Review and Framing
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Marcel Fernandes Dallaqua, Breno Nunes, and Marly M. Carvalho
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The number of scientific publications about serious games has exponentially increased, often surpassing human limitations in processing such a large volume of information. Consequently, the importance of frameworks for summarising such fast-expanding literature has also grown. This paper draws a panorama of serious game research streams, focusing on higher education in engineering and management. The research design involves a systematic review using PRISMA guidelines, along with bibliometric and content analyses. The sample comprises 701 documents collected from both Scopus and Web of Science databases. For supporting bibliometric analyses, "Bibliometrix" and "Biblioshiny" tools are employed. In addition, a coding schema is developed for in-depth analysis of 701 documents selected according to the inclusion criteria. In short, the literature on serious games for engineering and management education grows more rapidly than modern science, following a globalised, collaborative and context-based trajectory. The results reveal five main research streams: "game design guidelines," "game design cases," "game experiment guidelines," "game experiment cases" and "generalists." These streams are summarised in a proposed framework. Cross-tabulation and statistical analyses conducted in "SPSS Statistics" identify the key relationships amongst the research streams. Finally, opportunities to investigate serious games for sustainable development education arise, and there is a need for future efforts to formalise the framework classification algorithm.
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- 2024
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229. What Elements in the Web Page Will Influence the Course Participation? Empirical Evidence from China
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Shang Shanshan and Lyv Wenfei
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Considering the ubiquity, large volume of similar courses, and the huge cost of a course, it becomes imperative to understand factors affecting MOOCs course enrolments. This paper aims to investigate how the home page elements of a MOOC influence students' enrolments. The elements in the home page include course category, course description, team teaching, university, National Superior Course title, video introduction, course times, and user ratings. Information of these web elements from 673 course web pages was garnered from Chinese university MOOC (a government-backed MOOC platform) and Ordinary Least Squares is employed to testify their influencing effects. In descending order, the results demonstrate that the National Superior Course title, university reputation, and team teaching positively affect course enrolments significantly. Course times show the U-shape effect and user ratings show inverted U-shape effect. Course description and video introduction have no significant effects on enrolments, while the course category shows a significant moderating impact on the relationship between course description and enrolments. The result of this study extends the understanding of the e-learning course enrolments through the lens of a more detailed and nuanced scope on web elements, which have received little attention in education research, and is helpful for assisting courses and platform designers in attracting more learners.
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- 2024
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230. Utilising the Potential of Job Postings for Auditing Learning Outcomes and Improving Graduates' Chances on the Labour Market
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Danuta Piróg and Adam Hibszer
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The objective of the paper was to outline the possibility of utilising information from online job postings and text-mining analyses to identify mismatches and gaps between learning outcomes prepared by universities, and the knowledge and skills that employers need. The study uses job advertisement contents and learning outcomes documents from universities. We analysed both data sets using word importance classification, cluster analysis and hierarchical clustering. Word importance classification presented the mismatches in a quantitative and diagram format. Cluster analysis and hierarchical clustering provided information on how to correct the detected gaps and mismatches. The study empirically corroborates that the method we put forward for analysing both sources (LOs and job ads) helps identify and assess the significance of gaps and mismatches in the approaches to knowledge and skills adopted by universities and employers. Consequently, the method can be helpful during the auditing process and while implementing market-oriented curriculum changes.
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- 2024
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231. Digital Competence in Early Childhood Education: A Systematic Review
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Jiahong Su and Weipeng Yang
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Digital competence is a vital combination of knowledge, abilities, and attitudes required for effective and responsible use of digital tools and technologies in the modern world. This article presents a review of 23 academic papers that investigate digital competence in early childhood education (ECE) settings from 2012 to 2022. The purpose of this systematic literature review is to provide a thorough understanding of the definition of digital competence, how it is evaluated, research aims, methodologies, outcomes, limitations, and recommendations. The review revealed that the definitions of digital competence used in the included studies were drawn from three sources: research, policy document, and both policy and research. The majority of participants in the studies were pre-service teachers, and the primary research goals were to evaluate children's or teachers' achievements and participants' views on digital competence. Most studies adopted quantitative methods, and their findings were linked to achievements in digital competence, positive and negative perceptions, the effectiveness of teaching strategies, and factors contributing to the development of digital competence. The two main limitations identified in the research were small sample sizes and limited assessment methods. This review highlights gaps in the current research on digital competence in ECE and suggests recommendations for future research and practice.
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- 2024
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232. 'Sex Is So Much More than Penis in Vagina': Sex Education, Pleasure and Ethical Erotics on Instagram
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Ruby Sciberras and Claire Tanner
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Novel forms of social media created 'by-and-for' women offer potentially new ways of communicating and constructing sex education. In this paper, we consider how Instagram is being used by sex educators to deploy discourses of resistance and erotics to educate about sex. Our method consisted of a combined critical discourse (CDA) and content analysis of Instagram posts (n = 200) from a small sample of influential feminist/queer sex education accounts that use informative text and illustration-based posts. Framed by Carmody's concept of ethical erotics, we identify four discursive categories in such Instagram content: pleasure positivity; communication and dynamic consent; sex as an experience not a performance; and challenging heteronormative constructions of sex. We argue that the affordances of Instagram provide a platform for the promotion of sex education that centres pleasure and ethical erotics to rectify limited and harmful heteronormative representations of sexuality.
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- 2024
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233. Subverting the Selective Tradition? A Self-Exploration of Text Selection in Pre-Service Teacher Education
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Joanne Quick
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Children's literature can be both a reflective mirror to readers' lives and a window to new worlds, making teachers' selection of texts for students an important professional activity. Researchers have consistently found that teachers' choices of literature contain limited representations of ethnicities, cultures, and disabilities, and reinforce gender stereotypes. Teacher educators, when working with pre-service teachers in university settings, utilize children's literature for literary, critical, and cultural pedagogical purposes. However, teacher educators rarely interrogate their text selections to explore patterns of representation, identity, and power. This paper describes and discusses a self-study into five children's picture books selected for modeling aspects of early literacy teaching in a pre-service teacher education unit. Critical content analysis was used to explore representation, identity, and power in the texts. The analysis showed some connections with trends found in research into early years and school teachers' selective traditions in the use of an older text and two texts without human characters. Other findings differed; agentive female characters, together with some variation of social, cultural, and ethnic groups and lives, were depicted in the three texts with human characters, likely because of the author's own bias towards expanding representation in texts. This article reports on an example of one teacher educator's selective literary tradition and shows how the texts used in education settings represent windows to specific worlds rather than standing in for "diversity." It makes suggestions for other educators interested in interrogating their text selections and invites dialog with other educators about representation, identity, and power in the texts they teach with.
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- 2024
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234. On Why 'Trust' Constitutes an Appropriate Synonym for 'Certainty' in Wittgenstein's Sense: What Pupils Can Learn from Its Staging
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José María Ariso
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In this paper I outline the most relevant traits of the term "trust" understood as one of the synonyms for "certainty" that Ludwig Wittgenstein used in his posthumous work "On Certainty." To this end, I analyze the paragraphs of "On Certainty" in which reference is made to pupils who are expected to trust what is taught by their teacher: in addition, I note that such a process is largely based on the attitude of rejection and bewilderment that teachers promote towards people who call into doubt those certainties that pupils are expected to assimilate. Subsequently, after emphasizing the importance that Wittgenstein attached to the ineffability of certainties, I explain how such certainty or trust can be staged. Lastly, I clarify why an appropriate contemplation of this staging can be of great help for pupils to achieve at least four goals of educational interest: thus, children can not only strengthen their capacity for wonder, but also experience what things are ineffable, glimpse the limits of rationality, and become more tolerant of people who are partakers of a different world-picture.
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- 2024
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235. MxML (Exploring the Relationship between Measurement and Machine Learning): Current State of the Field
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Yi Zheng, Steven Nydick, Sijia Huang, and Susu Zhang
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The recent surge of machine learning (ML) has impacted many disciplines, including educational and psychological measurement (hereafter shortened as "measurement"). The measurement literature has seen rapid growth in applications of ML to solve measurement problems. However, as we emphasize in this article, it is imperative to critically examine the potential risks associated with involving ML in measurement. The MxML project aims to explore the relationship between measurement and ML, so as to identify and address the risks and better harness the power of ML to serve measurement missions. This paper describes the first study of the MxML project, in which we summarize the state of the field of applications, extensions, and discussions about ML in measurement contexts with a systematic review of the recent 10 years' literature. We provide a snapshot of the literature in (1) areas of measurement where ML is discussed, (2) types of articles (e.g., applications, conceptual, etc.), (3) ML methods discussed, and (4) potential risks associated with involving ML in measurement, which result from the differences between what measurement tasks need versus what ML techniques can provide.
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- 2024
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236. Development of Online Education Satisfaction Research in 2011-2022: A Systemic Review Based on Bibliometric and Content Analysis
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Xingrong Guo and Xiang Li
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This study presents a knowledge map of online education satisfaction research. To conduct bibliometric analysis, VOSviewer and Biblioshiny were utilized to analyze the co-authorship, co-citation, and co-occurrence network analysis of articles published on online education satisfaction between 2011 and 2022. The analysis aimed to show the research status, topics, and future research trends in the field. This paper reports the following findings: (1) There is a booming interest in research on online education in various countries and fields. (2) The most frequently studied target sample is undergraduate students' online education satisfaction; the most commonly used method is structural equation model combined with questionnaire survey; the most studied factors include students' individual factors, information technology tools, and their interaction with others; and the most studied variables include self-efficacy, motivation, perceived ease of use, perceived usefulness, expectation, and social existence. (3) Many fields, such as teacher satisfaction and the construction of new models and tools, remain underexplored. Future research should strengthen international cooperation, promote interdisciplinary research, and explore additional related fields.
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- 2024
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237. Evaluating an Established Team-Teaching Artefact: An Innovative Self-Study Methodology
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Rachael Hains-Wesson
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In this study, I explore my lived experience to evaluate an established team-teaching artefact. I achieve this by implementing an adapted meta-synthesis of retrospective, published individualised and co-authored autoethnography (MICA) methodology. The MICA framework was first penned by Hughes and Pennington (2021), which I adapt to determine the efficacy of a teacher-scholarship artefact, which was created to advance team-teaching practice. In this paper, I display how I evaluated the artefact's usefulness, highlighting particular areas for improvement. While MICA is known as an innovative research methodology, applying it to inform teacher-scholarship artefact making remains modest. The study's findings expand innovative methodological approaches in the scholarship of teaching and learning through autoethnography.
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- 2024
238. Religion, Church, National Identity, and the Solidarity Movement in School History Textbooks in Poland
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Daria Hejwosz-Gromkowska and Dobrochna Hildebrandt-Wypych
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This paper analyses the Solidarity movement narratives, focusing on church representatives, religious issues, and symbols in the Polish history textbooks for upper secondary schools between 1991 and 2018. The analysed textbooks prove to reinforce Poland's national and religious identities, with John Paul II and the priest Popieluszko being the primary national heroes of the Solidarity movement. The Catholic Church is presented as a protector of national values during the Solidarity period. The study also reveals the gradual reduction and simplification of the textbooks' content. This tendency is a trigger for the polarisation of the historical discourse, posing a weapon for secular policies to misuse the ideological and symbolic roles of the Church in reproducing the Pole-Catholic pattern in history textbooks.
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- 2024
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239. Lights and Shadows in the Operationalization of Sustainability through the 2030 Agenda in Spanish Universities
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Jose Manuel Diaz-Sarachaga and Joana Longo Sarachaga
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Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyze how sustainability was operationalized in the Spanish universities through plans and actions that contribute actively to the achievement of the sustainable development goals (SDGs). Design/methodology/approach: A systematic search and content analysis served to examine information available on websites belonging to the 76 universities listed in the Conference of Rectors of the Spanish Universities (CRUE). Findings: The participation of Spanish universities on initiatives focused on sustainability is very limited, highlighting the negligible role of private institutions in which topics like sustainability and the 2030 Agenda/SDGs were scarcely addressed. Originality/value: The study outlines the actual extent of the inclusion of sustainability in particular co-curricular actions toward the SDGs in the CRUE. The findings enable to define a long-term sustainability road map for the Spanish university system.
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- 2024
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240. Making for Science: A Framework for the Design of Physical Materials for Science Learning
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Cassia Fernandez, Tatiana Hochgreb-Haegele, Adelmo Eloy, and Paulo Blikstein
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Recent work in science education has emphasized the importance of the conceptual, social, and epistemic dimensions in science learning. But what about the material dimension--the actual physical materials that students use? The way their characteristics and affordances limit or determine instruction has thus far not been as thoroughly explored. Despite the vast body of work that exists on science and engineering practices, there are relatively few examples of how physical science materials are linked to and can support engagement with such practices for sensemaking. In this paper, we propose a framework for analyzing the design of these physical materials and the activities associated with them that can serve as lenses for educators and researchers to consider when planning and reflecting on classroom instruction. To validate our framework, we apply it to analyze activities developed and implemented by teachers during a four-year research-practice partnership project conducted in a city in Brazil, and investigate potential connections between the design of physical materials and students' epistemic agency. We conclude with recommendations for the development of physical resources in labs and makerspaces for science learning.
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- 2024
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241. Understanding Talent Management as a Theory-Driven Field: A Scoping Review
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Kiran Marlapudi and Usha Lenka
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Purpose: Emphasizing the increasing role of talent management (TM) as a global phenomenon and a source of sustainable competitive advantage for organizations, this study aims to present a scoping review of empirical literature on TM, examining the transition of TM from a phenomenon-driven to a theory-driven field. Design/methodology/approach: Using a scoping review, this study analyzed 200 empirical studies published between 2010 and 2023 on TM. Findings: The results indicate that TM is extensively studied in nationally operated, large, private, engineering-led organizations in Anglo-Saxon countries. The study highlights the necessity for more empirical studies and statistically robust evidence to establish the effectiveness of TM. Research limitations/implications: This review intends to provide a vision and direction for future researchers, guiding TM towards becoming a theory-driven field characterized by widely accepted theoretical frameworks and research designs. Practical implications: The findings of this study may not be generalizable to other types of organizations or cultural contexts, as it primarily focused on large private engineering-led organizations in Anglo-Saxon countries. Originality/value: This paper offers a comprehensive view of the definitions, contextualization, conceptualization, frameworks, practices, processes and under-explored areas of TM, which are essential for its development as a discipline.
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- 2024
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242. The Discursive Construction of International Students on Texas Community College Websites: An Academic Capitalism Analysis
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Cristina Rangel
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The purpose of this content analysis study was to describe the way international student populations were conceptualized on the websites of 2-year public colleges in Texas. This inquiry replicated the Ford and Cate (2020) study, "The Discursive Construction of International Students in the USA: Prestige, Diversity, and Economic Gain." The websites of 47 community colleges listed on the Comptroller.Texas.Gov website were examined for explicit forms or representations of international students using specific web scraping steps. The three themes of globalization, racial diversity, and monetary gain from the Ford and Cate (2020) investigation informed the study. The study explored student support services provided to international students. It was determined the community college websites studied were not discursively framing their international students as diversity assets and non-domestic learners were provided the same services as their domestic peers. The paper includes a discussion of the implications for practice and concludes with a section on future research needs. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
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- 2024
243. Strategic measurement and evaluation of municipal social media: insight from front-line personnel in the United States
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Stone, Jeffrey A., Flanders, Kimberly J., Robles, Pedro, and Can, Salih Hakan
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- 2024
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244. Marks of usage: discerning information literacy practices from medieval European manuscripts
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Whitworth, Andrew
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- 2024
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245. Indigenous knowledge, traditional knowledge and local knowledge: what is the difference? An informetrics perspective
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Onyancha, Omwoyo Bosire
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- 2024
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246. The quality assessment of stakeholder engagement disclosure in the EU mandatory non-financial reporting framework
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Petruzzelli, Saverio and Badia, Francesco
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- 2024
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247. Transparency reports as CSR reports: motives, stakeholders, and strategies
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Reid, Amanda, Ringel, Evan, and Pendleton, Shanetta M.
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- 2024
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248. The role of local news in constructing media legitimacy: how news media frames the sociopolitical efforts of multinational corporations in host countries
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Marschlich, Sarah and Ingenhoff, Diana
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- 2023
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249. Innovation in business model as a response to the sharing economy
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Espinosa Sáez, Daniel, Delgado-Ballester, Elena, and Munuera-Alemán, José Luis
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- 2023
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250. CSR communication and international marketing: Insights from the COVID-19 pandemic
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Farmaki, Anna, Hadjielias, Elias, Olya, Hossein, Taheri, Babak, and Hadjielia Drotarova, Maria
- Published
- 2023
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