550 results
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2. Papers, documents, and the opening of an academic supervision encounter.
- Author
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Svinhufvud, Kimmo and Vehviläinen, Sanna
- Subjects
- *
DOCUMENTATION , *SUPERVISION , *EDUCATION , *TEACHING , *NEGOTIATION , *ETHNOMETHODOLOGY - Abstract
Despite a growing interest in the interaction in academic pedagogical settings, the role of texts in the actual interaction has not been systematically addressed. This article examines the practices and orientations through which written documents have a significant role in the openings of supervision encounters. We use videotaped recordings of supervision encounters and adopt conversation-analytical methodology to analyze the data. The analysis consists of two main foci: (i) the initial moments of the encounter prior to the actual supervisory activity, and (ii) the launching of the supervisory activity and the negotiation of what that activity will entail. We analyze the orientations toward the document as the necessary object of the joint activity and the prominent bodily orientation toward the papers during the initial moments of the encounter. Furthermore, when the participants move from the initial moments of the encounter toward the main activity, the paper document plays a major role in that interaction. In our conclusions, we summarize our observations as shared, implicit orientations related to the role of the document. These assumptions constitute the 'implicit pedagogy' of the supervisory encounter. We will discuss some of the consequences of this type of pedagogy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Disparities in Female Labour Force Participation in South Asia and Latin America: A Review.
- Author
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Mukhopadhyay, Ujjaini
- Subjects
PARTICIPATION ,GENDER inequality ,FEMALES ,WOMEN'S employment ,ECONOMIC expansion ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LABOR supply - Abstract
This article examines the pattern of female labour force participation since the 2000s in South Asia (SA) and the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) countries. The objectives of the paper are twofold: first, to identify the factors that have led to changes in the patterns of female labour force participation in the two fastest-growing regions of SA and LAC and compare the underlying reasons behind the disparate trends; and second, to explore the policies appropriate for the two regions that can raise female labour force participation. From descriptive statistics and a review of existing research on gender inequality in employment in the two regions, the paper finds that a plethora of factors shape the extent of gender inequality in labour force participation. However, each of the factors has different roles and importance in the two regions, debunking any particular relationship pattern between economic growth and the gender gap in labour force participation. Hence, it is imperative to formulate multipronged, country- and region-specific policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The ifo Education Survey 2014–2021: A New Dataset on Public Preferences for Education Policy in Germany.
- Author
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Freundl, Vera, Grewenig, Elisabeth, Kugler, Franziska, Lergetporer, Philipp, Schüler, Ruth, Wedel, Katharina, Werner, Katharina, Wirth, Olivia, and Woessmann, Ludger
- Abstract
The ifo Education Survey is a representative opinion survey of the German voting-age population on education topics that has been conducted annually since 2014. It covers public preferences on a wide range of education policy issues ranging from early childhood education, schools, and apprenticeships to university education and life-long learning. The dataset comprises several survey experiments that facilitate investigating the causal effects of information provision, framing, and question design on answering behavior. This paper gives an overview of the survey content and methodology, describes the data, and explains how researchers can access the dataset of over 4000 participants per wave. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Graduate Students' Perceptions of the Practice of Posting Scholarly Work to an Online Class Forum: Balancing the Rhetorical Triangle.
- Author
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Park, Caroline L.
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,COMPUTER assisted instruction ,COLLEGE teachers ,GRADUATE students ,FORUMS ,ONLINE chat ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
In both healthcare and education, basing one's practice upon research evidence, has become very important. This paper presents the findings from a descriptive analysis of graduate students' perceptions of the practice of posting their scholarly work to a class discussion forum, where it can be read by their peers. The resulting themes are described and discussed in relation to the balance of a model of rhetorical stance or a rhetorical triangle. This will be of interest to instructors facilitating courses with online capacity. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Communicating across educational boundaries: accommodation patterns in adolescents' online interactions.
- Author
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Hilte, Lisa, Daelemans, Walter, and Vandekerckhove, Reinhild
- Subjects
TEENAGERS ,SECONDARY school students ,EDUCATIONAL background ,DUTCH language ,VIRTUAL communities - Abstract
This paper studies linguistic accommodation patterns in a large corpus of private online conversations produced by Flemish secondary school students. We use Poisson models to examine whether the teenagers adjust their writing style depending on their interlocutor's educational profile, while also taking into account the extent to which these adaptation patterns are influenced by the authors' own educational background or by other aspects of their socio-demographic profiles. The corpus does reveal accommodation patterns, but the adjustments do not always mirror variation patterns related to educational profiles. While salient features like expressive markers seem to lead to pattern-matching, less salient features appear less prone to 'adequate' adjustment. Lack of familiarity with the online behavior of students from other educational tracks is a factor too, since online communication clearly proceeds primarily within 'same-education' networks. The focus on cross-educational communication is quite unique in this respect and highly relevant from a sociological perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Data literacy in genome research.
- Author
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Wolff, Katharina, Friedhoff, Ronja, Schwarzer, Friderieke, and Pucker, Boas
- Subjects
GENOMICS ,LITERACY ,COMPUTATIONAL biology - Abstract
With an ever increasing amount of research data available, it becomes constantly more important to possess data literacy skills to benefit from this valuable resource. An integrative course was developed to teach students the fundamentals of data literacy through an engaging genome sequencing project. Each cohort of students performed planning of the experiment, DNA extraction, nanopore sequencing, genome sequence assembly, prediction of genes in the assembled sequence, and assignment of functional annotation terms to predicted genes. Students learned how to communicate science through writing a protocol in the form of a scientific paper, providing comments during a peer-review process, and presenting their findings as part of an international symposium. Many students enjoyed the opportunity to own a project and to work towards a meaningful objective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Wissenschaftsorientierung in der Lehre der Landeskunde an schwedischen Universitäten.
- Author
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Becker, Christine and Grub, Frank Thomas
- Subjects
LANGUAGE & languages ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,CULTURAL studies ,SEMINARS ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Copyright of Info DaF: Informationen Deutsch als Fremdsprache is the property of De Gruyter and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Vom One-Stop-Shop zum Wühltisch?: Umbrüche im germanistischen Studiengang der Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona.
- Author
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Prikoszovits, Matthias and Springer, Bernd F.W.
- Subjects
UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,EDUCATION ,CURRICULUM ,GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ,CURRICULUM planning - Abstract
Copyright of Info DaF: Informationen Deutsch als Fremdsprache is the property of De Gruyter and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Education, multilingualism and bilingualism in Botswana.
- Author
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Bagwasi, Mompoloki Mmangaka
- Subjects
BILINGUALISM ,MULTILINGUALISM ,LINGUISTIC minorities ,BILINGUAL education - Abstract
Botswana is a multilingual country. It has about 28 languages (see Anderson, Lars-Gunnar & Tore Janson. 1997. Languages in Botswana. Gaborone: Longman Botswana). Although multilingualism breeds bilingualism or vice versa, bilingualism in Botswana is not as extensive and as widespread among the 28 languages. It is mostly concentrated amongst certain groups of people and a limited number of languages. This paper interrogates the pattern of bilingualism in Botswana and the role that education plays in shaping it. Further, the paper examines the extent to which the pattern of bilingualism in Botswana fits into Liddicoat, Anthony. 1991. Bilingualism and bilingual education. NLIA Occasional Paper 2. 1–21 folk and elite bilingualism categories. The paper argues that even though bilingualism in Botswana is fostered by education, it is not elite. Most bilinguals in Botswana are speakers of minority languages who feel obliged to learn English and Setswana. There are not many speakers of English who also speak Setswana and not many speakers of Setswana who also speak the minority languages. The paper heights one of the inadequacies of multilingualism, its inability to create equality and interrelationship between languages. This paper argues that the pattern of bilingualism found in Botswana is asymmetrical and is heavily influenced by the socio-economic-cultural power relations that exist in the country. Thus, the pattern of bilingualism that is found in Botswana does not support multilingualism, instead it is detrimental to it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The Evolution of the Thought of Richard Peters: Neglected Aspects.
- Author
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Winch, Christopher and Gingell, John
- Subjects
GENERAL education ,ETHICS education ,ACCOUNTING education ,EDUCATION ethics ,CHANGE theory - Abstract
Peters is best known for 'Ethics and Education', (1966) an attempt, using analytical methods, to provide a universal canonical account of the nature of education. This corresponded closely with the prevailing conception of liberal education of the time. Despite the acclaim with which this work was received, Peters became increasingly dissatisfied with his early views of education and in a series of papers written between 1973 and 1982, he retreated slowly from the view that one could construct a universal canonical account of education and even from the view that this could be possible for liberal education. As his views changed, his philosophical methods developed as well, moving from the Moorean essentialist analysis of 1966, through a more Strawsonian connective analysis in the mid 1970s to a position based on W.B. Gallie's account of essentially contested concepts in the early 1980s. Parallel to and connected with this changing philosophical methodology came a distinction between an overarching concept of education and particular conceptions of education related to different societies and their values. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Compounding forms of inequality: Cape Verdean migrants' struggles in education and beyond in Luxembourg.
- Author
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Tavares, Bernardino
- Subjects
SOCIOLINGUISTICS ,AFRICANS ,IMMIGRANTS ,STUDENT aspirations ,ECONOMIC mobility ,SOCIAL mobility ,ETHNICITY ,RACE identity - Abstract
This paper seeks to show how language, combined with other social variables, exacerbates migrants' and their descendants' struggles at school and beyond in Luxembourg. To a certain extent, the official trilingualism of Luxembourg – French, German and Luxembourgish – corresponds to an 'elite multilingualism' (Garrido 2017; Barakos and Selleck 2018) which defines who can access certain resources, e. g. education, work etc., and who can be left playing catch-up. The latter are those migrants who I here conceive as multilinguals on the margins. The elitist system is a form of domination and power over those whose language repertoire is less valued. Migrants' disadvantage is further impacted by other indicators of their identity that can go beyond their educational qualifications and language repertoire per se, such as their country of origin, ethnicity, race, gender, citizenship etc. Language intersects with other forms of disadvantage or privileges. From an ethnographic sociolinguistic perspective, drawing on interviews and participant observations, this paper will illustrate this intersection of language, race and ethnicity, and struggles from the ground-level educational realities and aspirations of Cape Verdean migrants and their descendants in Luxembourg. This helps cast light on the social organisation in Luxembourg and understand the effects of multilingualism in creating 'abyssal lines' (Santos 2007) between the nationals, certain European migrants, Lusophone and African migrants in terms of social and economic mobility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Inoculation against Populism: Media Competence Education and Political Autonomy.
- Author
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Podschwadek, Frodo
- Abstract
This paper offers an analysis of the relation between political populism and mass media, and how this relation becomes problematic for democratic societies. It focuses on the fact that mass media, due to their purpose and infrastructure, can unintentionally reinforce populist messages. Research findings from communication science and political psychology are used to illustrate how, for example, a combination of mass media agenda setting and motivated reasoning can influence citizens' political decisions and impair their political autonomy. This poses a particular normative challenge for modern democracies: how to counter these populism-supporting effects within the constraints of democratic legitimacy? After showing how severely limited legal measures to curb populist media effects would be, the paper argues in favour of media competence education as a way of providing future citizens with an epistemic toolkit to navigate the media environment and strengthen their political autonomy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Universalistic handbook discourse and the local needs of writers.
- Author
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Leppanen, Sirpa
- Subjects
ACADEMIC discourse ,DISCOURSE analysis ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Describes how two handbook series, the 'MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers' and the 'Manual for Writers of Term Papers, Theses and Dissertations,' construct academic writing and articulate their educational ideology. Cross-disciplinary framework combining discourse analysis, pragmatics, critical educational theory, cultural theory and literacy studies; Tolerance of difference and plurality.
- Published
- 2003
15. Augmented Reality Application for Simulation of Mamma Palpation.
- Author
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Steiger, Annika, Burbach, Simon, Eiler, Tanja Joan, Schmuecker, Vanessa, and Gießer, Christian
- Subjects
AUGMENTED reality ,PALPATION ,HEAD-mounted displays ,VIRTUAL reality ,MEDICAL education - Abstract
The teaching of medicine is in a state of flux. New technologies enable students to learn faster and more efficiently than ever before. Especially the possibilities that augmented reality brings with it can be applied very well in this field. The possibility to project additional information directly into the user's field of vision allows him to perceive additional knowledge without being distracted from the actual work. In this paper, a possibility of training Mamma Palpation is presented, which teaches students the course of action and the detection of possible tumors through virtual points. Through guideline-based interviews, added value for teaching could be highlighted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Play and Moral Education in the Choruses of Plato's Laws.
- Author
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Pageau-St-Hilaire, Antoine
- Subjects
MORAL education ,ACCOUNTING education ,PROBLEM solving ,VIRTUE ,VIRTUES ,REPRODUCTIVE technology - Abstract
Among the educative games of Plato's Cretan city, choral performances have a prominent role. This paper examines the function of play (παιδιά) in the choral education in virtue in Plato's Laws. I reconstruct the notion of play as it is elaborated throughout this dialogue, and then show how it contributes to solving the problem of virtue acquisition in the Athenian's account of moral education through songs and dances. I argue that play in the Laws is best understood as an imitative activity that is intrinsically pleasurable, ordered by rules and patterns of repetition, and undertaken for its own sake by a player whose psychic condition is childish. Thus interpreted, we are in a better position to see why choruses must be engaged in playfully. Because the self-likening process (ὁμοίωσις) choral performances aim at requires pleasure and because pleasure normally obtains when there is a concordance between one's character and the imitations, virtue acquisition is best secured if the imitations of virtue in choruses are performed or spectated playfully. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Curriculare Veränderung als langwierige und gemeinsame Herausforderung: Über die Mühen bei der Umsetzung des aufgabenbasierten Unterrichts in einem Deutschprogramm an einer japanischen Universität.
- Author
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Schütterle, Holger and Hamano, Hidemi
- Subjects
CURRICULUM planning ,GERMAN language ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,CURRICULUM ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Copyright of Info DaF: Informationen Deutsch als Fremdsprache is the property of De Gruyter and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Current evaluation and recommendations for the use of artificial intelligence tools in education
- Author
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Sağın Ferhan Girgin, Özkaya Ali Burak, Tengiz Funda, Geyik Öykü Gönül, and Geyik Caner
- Subjects
artificial intelligence ,chatgpt ,academic integrity ,prompting ,education ,pedagogy ,Biochemistry ,QD415-436 - Abstract
This paper discusses the integration of artificial intelligence (AI) tools in education, delineating their potential to transform pedagogical practices alongside the challenges they present. Generative AI models like ChatGPT, had a disruptive impact on teaching and learning, due to their ability to create text, images, and sound, revolutionizing educational content creation and modification. However, nowadays the educational community is polarized, with some embracing AI for its accessibility and efficiency thus advocating it as an indispensable tool, while others cautioning against risks to academic integrity and intellectual development. This document is designed to raise awareness about AI tools and provide some examples of how they can be used to improve education and learning. From an educator’s perspective, AI is an asset for curriculum development, course material preparation, instructional design and student assessment, while reducing bias and workload. For students, AI tools offer personalized learning experiences, timely feedback, and support in various academic activities. The Turkish Biochemical Society (TBS) Academy recommends educators to embrace and utilize AI tools to enhance educational processes, and engage in peer learning for better adaptation while maintaining a critical perspective on their utility and limitations. The transfer of AI knowledge and methods to the teaching experiences should complement and not replace the educator’s creativity and critical thinking. The paper advocates for an informed embrace of AI, AI fluency among educators and students, ethical application of AI in academic settings, and continuous engagement with the evolving AI technologies, ensuring that AI tools are used to augment critical thinking and contribute positively to education and society.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The Impact of Female Education on Teenage Fertility: Evidence from Turkey.
- Author
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Güneş, Pınar Mine
- Subjects
SEX education for girls ,HUMAN fertility ,TEENAGE pregnancy ,TEENAGE girls ,CONTRACEPTIVE drugs ,CHILDREN ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper explores the causal relationship between female education and teenage fertility by exploiting a change in the compulsory schooling law (CSL) in Turkey. Using variation in the exposure to the CSL across cohorts and variation across provinces by the intensity of additional classrooms constructed in the birth provinces as an instrumental variable, the results indicate that primary school completion reduces teenage fertility by 0.37 births and the incidence of teenage childbearing by around 28 percentage points. Exploring heterogeneous effects indicates that female education reduces teenage fertility more in provinces with lower population density and higher agricultural activity. This paper also disentangles intensive- and extensive-margin effects and explores various channels, such as postponing marriage and contraceptive use, linking education and fertility. Finally, this paper demonstrates that there are additional social benefits of education in terms of child health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Consequences of the 1959–1961 Chinese Famine for Educational Attainment.
- Author
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Lay, Margaret J. and Norling, Johannes
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL attainment ,FAMINES ,SCHOOL records ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
This paper finds that the Great Chinese Famine of 1959–1961 reduced lifetime educational attainment by up to 3.8 years for people who lived in areas most severely hit by the famine. Using geographical variation in famine intensity, information about place of residence during the famine, and educational attainment recorded in the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study, the paper demonstrates that the decline in educational attainment was particularly sharp for women. This decline interrupted substantial gains in schooling achieved in China during the middle part of the twentieth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Enlightenment in the Name of Chinggis Khan: The Founding of the Eastern Mongolian Publishing House in Mukden 1926/27.
- Author
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Heuschert-Laage, Dorothea
- Abstract
This paper is devoted to one of the first commercial Mongolian publishing houses in Republican China, which was founded in Mukden in 1926/27 and existed until the Japanese invasion of Manchuria in 1931. With its broad spectrum of publications, which included a textbook for primary education, translations and advices for self-improvement, its educational approach differed from earlier Mongolian publishing activities. Its founders saw themselves on a mission for education and aimed to spread knowledge relevant for Mongols in a globally connected world by making Mongolian language print material easier accessible to a wider public. The paper argues that the founders of the publishing house were fueled by ideas of social Darwinism and saw competition not only on a global scale but also within the Chinese Republic. For this reason, their publishing project was meant to strengthen Mongols as a distinct, unitary group within the multinational Chinese Republic. At the same time, they raised their own profile as cultural translators and presented themselves as a scholarly elite. The Mukden publishers tried to set themselves apart from the institutions, which had dominated the field of Mongolian book production so far, but made reference to familiar concepts of sponsoring in order to strengthen their arguments for commercial publishing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Recommendations Pertaining to the Education of Library and Archives Conservators.
- Author
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Baker, Cathleen A.
- Subjects
LIBRARY education ,ARCHIVAL materials ,ARCHIVES ,LIBRARY materials ,GRADUATE education - Abstract
Copyright of Restaurator is the property of De Gruyter and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. General theorizing on language, society, and education: Basil Bernstein, Goldilocks, and/or the Energizer bunny.
- Author
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ERICKSON, FREDERICK
- Subjects
LANGUAGE & languages ,CIVIL society ,EDUCATION ,SOCIALIZATION ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
After briefly outlining Bernstein's personal and educational history, the paper goes on to review the scope of his work over the past 30 years, his theoretical contribution and his position among colleagues in the post-WWII era of British sociology. There follows a more detailed examination of the main tenets of his theory, pointing out that Bernstein's strategy was to present his ideas in the form of dichotomies, such as that between modes of socialization as personal or positional, and of linguistic codes as elaborated or restricted. The paper suggests that while critical issues in educational thinking and in sociology varied through the course of Bernstein's career, such as the study of socialization and its consequences for social reproduction, his dichotomizing remained a constant strategy throughout his writings. I end by briefly referring to my own work that offers some possible alternatives to Bernstein's dichotomies, concluding, however, that the enduring quality of Bernstein owes not a little to the appeal of his overly sharp theoretical distinctions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Human Capital and Welfare Dynamics in Canada.
- Author
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Hansen, Jorgen
- Subjects
HUMAN capital ,PUBLIC welfare ,LABOR supply ,EMPLOYMENT ,EDUCATIONAL background - Abstract
This paper analyzes the effects of human capital on welfare dynamics in Canada using data from the Self-Sufficiency Project (SSP). SSP offered a time-limited earnings supplement to a randomly assigned group of new welfare applicants who remained on welfare for one year and, in the subsequent year, left welfare for full-time employment. The results suggest that high school completion has no significant impact on the exit rate from welfare or on the re-entry rate. Moreover, full-time work experience is found to reduce the risk of returning to welfare but not for respondents who were assigned to the treatment group. This finding suggests that the provision of an earnings subsidy encourages welfare recipients to accept low-wage jobs with little gains from work experience. Thus, the rationale for such a policy that work today will raise experience and consequently future wages is not supported by the results in this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
25. Effectiveness versus Efficiency: Growth-Accelerating Policies in a Model of Growth without Scale Effects.
- Author
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Büttner, Bettina
- Subjects
SAVINGS ,GROWTH rate ,EDUCATION ,MATHEMATICAL models ,EQUILIBRIUM - Abstract
Recent R&D growth models without strong scale effects imply that long-run growth rates depend only on parameters that are usually taken to be exogenous. However, integrating human capital accumulation into models of this type, Arnold (2002) demonstrates that subsidizing education accelerates growth. The present paper addresses welfare issues in Arnold's model. The main theoretical finding of the paper is that a system of subsidies that implements the optimal balanced growth path as a decentralized equilibrium includes zero subsidies to education, while R&D activity should be either subsidized or taxed. To shed further light on the latter result, the model is calibrated and it turns out that along the balanced growth path, the decentralized economy underinvests in R&D, i.e. R&D activities should be subsidized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Special Issue on the Economics of Education – Policies and Empirical Evidence: Editorial.
- Author
-
Machin, Stephen and Puhani, Patrick A.
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,EDUCATION & economics ,EDUCATIONAL law & legislation ,TRAINING ,EDUCATION policy ,OCCUPATIONAL training - Abstract
Editorial. Introduces the articles published in the periodical concerning the economics of education. Existing policies on education; Acquisition of education and the impact of education on economic outcomes; Analysis of education choices and training programs.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Learning Why More Learning Takes Place in Some Classrooms Than Others.
- Author
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Murnane, Richard J., Willett, John B., Somers, Marie-Andrée, and Uribe, Claudia
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,LEARNING ,CLASSROOMS ,MATHEMATICAL ability ,ACADEMIC achievement - Abstract
The relatively poor average performance of German students on the recent PISA international evaluations of 15- and 16-year-olds' literary skills (2000) and mathematical skills (2003) and the wide variation in performance, with low-income students scoring particularly poorly, have led to calls for reforms of the German educational system. Understanding why students in some classrooms learn more than do those in other classrooms is an important first step in considering alternative reform strategies. Possible explanations include differences in teacher quality, class sizes and peer groups, and also differences among the types of secondary schools that parents select for their children. This paper illustrates a set of techniques that are useful in examining the roles these factors play in predicting why, net of family background and prior achievement, the average achievement of children in some classrooms is much higher than that of children in other classrooms. We illustrate the use of these techniques with a dataset from Bogotá, Colombia, that has two attractive properties. First, some teachers teach multiple classes of students. Second, students are enrolled in schools in two sectors (public and private). Application of the techniques described in this paper could shed light on the reasons why the average academic achievement of German students attending some schools is much higher than that of German students attending other schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Education in developing countries and reducing maternal mortality: a forgotten piece of the puzzle?
- Author
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Stefanovic, Vedran
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,MATERNAL mortality ,WOMEN'S health - Abstract
Despite substantial improvement in reducing maternal mortality during the recent decades, we constantly face tragic fact that maternal mortality (especially preventable deaths) is still unacceptably too high, particularly in the developing countries, where 99% of all maternal deaths worldwide occur. Poverty, lack of proper statistics, gender inequality, beliefs and corruption-associated poor governmental policies are just few of the reasons why decline in maternal mortality has not been as sharp as it was wished and expected. Education has not yet been fully recognized as the way out of poverty, improvement of women's role in the society and consequent better perinatal care and consequent lower maternal mortality. Education should be improved on all levels including girls, women and their partners, medical providers, religious and governmental authorities. Teaching the teachers should be also an essential part of global strategy to lower maternal mortality. This paper is mostly a commentary, not a systematic review nor a meta-analysis with the aim to rise attention (again) to the role of different aspects of education in lowering maternal mortality. The International Academy of Perinatal Medicine should play a crucial role in pushing the efforts on this issue as the influential instance that promotes reflection and dialog in perinatal medicine, especially in aspects such as bioethics, the appropriate use of technological advances, and the sociological and humanistic dimensions of this specific problem of huge magnitude. The five concrete steps to achieve these goals are listed and discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Organic and Geographical Indication Certifications' Contributions to Employment and Education.
- Author
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Hilal, Mohamed, Leedon, Guy, Duboys de Labarre, Matthieu, Antonioli, Federico, Boehm, Michael, Péter, Csillag, Donati, Michele, Drut, Marion, Ferrer-Pérez, Hugo, Gauvrit, Lisa, Gil, José Maria, Gkatsikos, Alexandros, Gołaś, Marlena, Hoang, Viet, Steinnes, Kamilla Knutsen, Lilavanichakul, Apichaya, Malak-Rawlikowska, Agata, Mattas, Konstadinos, Napasintuwong, Orachos, and Nguyen, An
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT ,HUMAN migration patterns ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ORGANIC products ,SOCIAL sustainability ,LABOR productivity ,LABOR mobility - Abstract
In this paper, we test to what extent Food Quality Schemes (FQS, including Geographical Indications and organic products) contribute to the social and economic sustainability of farmers and regions through employment and education. Through employment, FQS may counter the urban migration trend affecting rural regions, and help retain economic and social capital in the local region. Indeed, as FQS are often small and specialised sectors, the economic inefficiency of such businesses may translated into greater employment and social sustainability. Separately, by requiring a higher-level of quality and hence skills, FQS may encourage greater local educational attainment or skilled immigration. To test these propositions, we analyse the employment and educational outcomes of 25 FQS. Our results show that the FQS products examined have a 13% higher labour usage (labour-to-production ratio) compared to reference products, indicating that they provide greater employment. Additionally, wage levels are 32% higher in FQS compared to references. Despite providing greater employment and higher wages, profitability of FQS (i.e. how much turnover/profit is generated per employee) is nevertheless 32% higher for FQS compared to reference products, due to the ability to attract higher product prices. Finally, there is no clear link between FQS and greater (or lower) education attainment in the supply chain. Overall, our results suggest that FQS can provide a strong contribution to local employment, employee income and business profits, strengthening the social and economic sustainability of producers and regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Resisting linguistic marginalization in professional spaces: Constructing multi-layered oppositional stances.
- Author
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Sandhu, Priti
- Subjects
PREJUDICES ,EMPLOYEE selection ,ENGLISH language ability testing ,SEX discrimination ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper analyzes the resistant stances enacted by six recently-graduated, Hindi medium educated (HME) Indian women against the primacy accorded to English medium educated (EME) individuals in urban professional hiring practices. The data were collected in face-to-face, audio-recorded interviews by the researcher in the summer of 2013 from New Delhi. Aligning with Jaffe's () argument that a salient role of stance-based research is to theorize the relationship between stancetaking and sociocultural conditions and adopting a critical constructivist perspective (while withholding claims about participants' inner psychological states), this paper shows that within the postcolonial context of urban India, the liminal, hybrid, third spaces of participants' locations are discursively connected to the exigencies and inequalities characteristic of their local social structures. Analysis of participants' resistant stances demonstrates their complex, multi-layered, and context-specific characteristics elucidating the ways in which these stance performances are achieved by variously intertwining discourses about linguistic prejudices, nationalism, colonialism, gender and socioeconomic conditions. Specifically, these sociopolitical issues are related to (i) gender-based personal safety anxieties, (ii) neoliberal discourses about India's demographic dividend (i.e. the public celebration of the increase in the country's 'young' population), (iii) arguments about justice, citizenship and national language, (iv) discourses of colonialism and government apathy, (v) group rights, ethics and responsibilities, and (vi) an unvarnished shaming of the ubiquity of EME preference in local hiring practices. The paper argues that HME-associated linguistic exclusionary practices, whether driven by economic necessities or by biased linguistic ideologies, perpetuate and deepen existing class-based divides, fail the aspirational needs of a growing urban, youthful, and vernacular medium educated population while further complicating the challenges faced by women in a historically patriarchal society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Languages of Schooling: language competence and educational success.
- Author
-
Lorenzo, Francisco and Meyer, Oliver
- Subjects
LANGUAGE & languages ,EDUCATION - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which the editor discusses articles in the issue on topics including language competence development; pedagogy; and cross-curricular language programmes.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Instructing embodied knowledge: multimodal approaches to interactive practices for knowledge constitution.
- Author
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Ehmer, Oliver and Brône, Geert
- Subjects
THEORY of knowledge ,SOCIAL interaction ,PERFORMANCES ,LEARNING ,EDUCATION - Abstract
In the introduction to the special issue on 'Instructing embodied knowledge', we present a general orientation into this growing field of research, providing the relevant background for the individual contributions. The starting point for the endeavor is the basic observation that practical knowledge or 'knowing-how' is typically of a procedural, implicit and embodied nature rather than explicit-conceptual. Given this specific nature, we highlight the fact that for transmitting this type of knowledge, instructors make use of specific multimodal practices that are adjusted to these characteristics. The notion of instructional practice furthermore emphasizes that instructing embodied knowledge is a highly collaborative process between learners and their instructors. In order to provide a broad take on the phenomenon, we review both social-interactional as well as cognitive approaches to embodied knowledge and discuss how the procedural and intercorporeal nature of this knowledge may challenge different views. Independent of the specific approach that is chosen, any account of the construction/instruction of embodied knowledge should emphasize that it is essentially (i) a social activity, (ii) involving the deployment of different semiotic resources, and (iii) using different techniques and devices, such as descriptions, directives and demonstrations. Based on a review of the literature and on the papers in the special issue, we identify a set of key questions that may help to shape the agenda for future studies in the field. The questions relate to the temporal-sequential organization of instructions, the continuum between demonstrations and performances, and the relationship between perceptual access, sensation and the acquisition of embodied knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Dates on Literary Ostraca: A Case Study.
- Author
-
Jurjens, Judith
- Abstract
Copyright of Zeitschrift für Ägyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde is the property of De Gruyter and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. 'New speakers' of Irish in the United States: practices and motivations.
- Author
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Walsh, John and Ní Dhúda, Laoise
- Subjects
MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,SOCIOLINGUISTICS ,IRISH Gaelic language ,LINGUISTIC minorities ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper examines the experiences and motivations of 'new speakers' of Irish in the United States. 'New speakers' of Irish refer to those whose first language is not Irish but who use the language regularly and fluently. Based on ethnographic fieldwork carried out among Irish speakers in five locations across the United States, the paper begins by describing the language backgrounds of participants. It goes on to analyse their use of Irish and their motivations for learning it and considers the links between practice and ideology. Although Irish heritage and culture are often strong motivating factors for Americans to learn Irish, not all learners are Irish American and only some advance to a level of competence high enough to adopt Irish as family or home language and/or attempt to influence the language ideologies of others. High and active competence is linked to deep personal dedication and is achieved despite significant obstacles facing those who wish to become new speakers of Irish in the United States. This research is part of a broader European project about the practices and ideologies of 'new speakers' from a range of languages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Light Weight Tabletop Exercise for Cybersecurity Education.
- Author
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Ottis, Rain
- Subjects
INTERNET security ,COMPUTER security ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,ACTIVITY programs in higher education ,HIGHER education ,EDUCATION - Abstract
It is often difficult to meaningfully convey concepts like security incident management cycle, information sharing, cooperation, as well as the roles of people, processes and technology in cybersecurity courses. Serious gaming can help solve this problem, since it can provide a more immersive and interactive learning experience than traditional methods. This paper presents a light weight tabletop exercise format that has been successfully used in cybersecurity education to demonstrate these and many other concepts to Master level students in two European universities over the past 5 years. The term light weight is chosen to indicate the low work load and resource requirements for the instructor. The paper provides practical guidance on how to develop and execute such exercises. In addition, it lists observations of concepts and recommended discussion points that have been successfully demonstrated in class using this exercise format. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Child School Enrollment Decisions, Perceptions and Experiences of Conflict in the Chittagong Hill Tracts of Bangladesh.
- Author
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Badiuzzaman, Muhammad and Murshed, Syed Mansoob
- Subjects
SCHOOL enrollment management ,EDUCATION ,HOUSEHOLDS ,DECISION making ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
We analyze rural household children's school enrollment decisions in a post-conflict setting in the Chittagong Hill Tracts region of Bangladesh. The innovation of the paper lies in the fact that we employ information about current subjective perceptions regarding the possibility of violence in the future and past actual experiences of violence to explain household economic decision-making. Preferences are endogenous in line with behavioral economics. Regression results show that heightened subjective perceptions of future violence and past actual experiences of conflict can increase child enrollment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. English Summaries.
- Author
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Leuschner, Hannes and Selmani, Lirim
- Subjects
RELIGIONS ,SPIRITUALITY ,EDUCATION - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Educating Democratic Character.
- Author
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Alexander, Natalia Rogach and Kitcher, Philip
- Abstract
Many recent writers on democracy have lamented its decay and warned of its imminent death. We argue that the concerns are focused at three different levels of democracy. The most fundamental of these, celebrated by Tocqueville and by Dewey, recognizes the interactions and joint deliberations among citizens who seek sympathetic mutual engagement. Such engagement is increasingly rare in large-scale political life. In diagnosing and treating the problems, we recommend returning to the debate between Lippmann and Dewey, in which many of the concerns now prominent were already voiced. This inspires the main work of the paper – the reconstruction of Dewey's conception of democracy as a 'mode of associated living'. We focus on the thesis that democracy is educative and explicate Dewey's notion of growth, showing how democratic education contributes to three important functions: the capacity for sustaining oneself, the enrichment of individual experience, and the ability to enter into cooperative discussions with fellow citizens. Dewey's conception of democratic education is directed at fostering particular virtues and, if citizens come to possess them, the need for Lippmann's 'omnicompetent individual' vanishes. We conclude by suggesting that Dewey's project of educating democratic character is pertinent for addressing the disaffection of our times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. How Education Empowers Women in Developing Countries.
- Author
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Le, Kien and Nguyen, My
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,WOMEN'S education ,WOMEN in education ,PSYCHOLOGICAL abuse ,DECISION making ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
This paper evaluates the impacts of education on women's relational empowerment, within a context of 70 developing countries across the world. Exploiting the variation in educational attainment between biological sisters, we find that education is positively associated with women's intra-household decision making authority in both financial and non-financial domains. Moreover, education reduces relational friction, especially women's exposure to psychological abuse. Our mechanism analyses provide suggestive evidence that these improvements could be attributed to increased access to information, assortative matching, and better labor market outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Structural Holes and Entrepreneurial Decision Making.
- Author
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Aarstad, Jarle
- Subjects
ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,DECISION making ,INVESTMENTS ,EDUCATION research ,NEW business enterprises - Abstract
Actors in a position to broker and connect otherwise disconnected parts of a social network are spanning structural holes. The spanning of structural holes can leverage performance, but in this paper I study if it can also influence entrepreneurial decision making. Studying a network of entrepreneurs - mostly farmers - who have built their own hydroelectric micro-power plants in rural Nozrway, I find that actors spanning structural holes tend to build relatively large plants. The use of instrumental variables indicates that the spanning of structural holes is a cause, and not an effect, of entrepreneurs' decisions about plant size. The paper discusses how the finding can have implications for our understanding of decision making and entrepreneurial risk taking beyond the studied context. I also find that the entrepreneurs' formal level of education is positively associated with the size of the plants being built. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. English-medium education in a multilingual setting: A case in South Africa.
- Author
-
van Wyk, Arlys
- Subjects
LANGUAGE policy ,EDUCATIONAL change ,EDUCATION ,ENGLISH as a foreign language ,ENGLISH language education ,LANGUAGE research ,LANGUAGE ability ,LITERACY programs ,COLLEGE students ,ACADEMIC language ,HIGHER education ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
After achieving democracy in 1994, South Africa experienced major socio-political reforms in a number of areas, including a new constitution, language policy reforms, and new national curricula for schools. Due to the perceived instrumental value of English, many local schools rejected indigenous languages as medium of instruction in favour of English. This shift toward English-medium education has resulted in the limited development of students' academic language proficiency and hampered their access to higher education. At the University of the Free State, 65% of students struggle to understand academic content in English. This paper describes the national curricular reforms; the language-in-education policy and the intervention designed to meet this challenge at the university. The paper reports the implementation process of the academic literacy program and preliminary findings on the effectiveness of this intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Diagnostic conversations: Clinical Decision Making in surgery - Part 2.
- Author
-
Watters, David Allan, Beasley, Spencer Wynyard, and Crebbin, Wendy
- Subjects
MEDICAL decision making ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,DECISION making ,TRAINING of surgeons ,POSTOPERATIVE care ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Proceduralists who fail to review their decision making are unlikely to learn from their experiences, irrespective of whether the operative outcome is successful or not. Teaching junior surgeons to develop 'insight' into their own decision making has long been a challenge. Surgeons and staff of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons worked together to develop a model to help explain the processes around clinical decision making and incorporated this model into a Clinical Decision Making (CDM) training course. In this course, faculty apply the model to specific surgical cases, within the model's framework of how clinical decisions are made; thus providing an opportunity to identify specific decision making processes as they occur and to highlight some of the learning opportunities they provide. The conversation in this paper illustrates the kinds of case-based interactions which typically occur in the development and teaching of the CDM course.The focus in this, the second of two papers, is on reviewing post-operative clinical decisions made in relation to one case, to improve the quality of subsequent decision making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Does Higher Education Decrease Support for Terrorism?
- Author
-
Malečková, Jitka and Stanišić, Dragana
- Subjects
HIGHER education & society ,TERRORISM ,EDUCATION & society ,PUBLIC opinion ,POLITICAL crimes & offenses - Abstract
The paper examines the educational level of the part of the public in 16 Middle Eastern, Asian and African countries who justify suicide bombing and dislike regional/world powers, and its relationship with the occurrence of terrorism originating from the former countries and directed against the powers. We find that the share of highly educated people in this critical support group (regardless of gender and age) in a country is significantly correlated with the number of international terrorist acts carried out by individuals or groups from that country. The paper confirms that public opinion has an impact on terrorism and suggests that increasing education is not by itself a sufficient means of counter-terrorist policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Time and Change in the Book of Ben Sira.
- Author
-
Bussino, Severino
- Subjects
- *
SHORT selling (Securities) , *SAGE - Abstract
This paper is devoted to a survey of the concept of time in the Book of Ben Sira. In addition to a short review of the position of different scholars on this subject, this paper will examine the occurrences of the term “time” in Ben Sira. What situational changes does Ben Sira indicate when he uses the word “time?” The paper will focus on the function of this term in the thought of the sage Ben Sira. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Demystifying Deep Learning: Developing and Evaluating a User-Centered Learning App for Beginners to Gain Practical Experience.
- Author
-
Schultze, Sven, Gruenefeld, Uwe, and Boll, Susanne
- Subjects
SPEECH perception ,MACHINE learning ,LEARNING problems ,USER experience ,DEEP learning - Abstract
Deep Learning has revolutionized Machine Learning, enhancing our ability to solve complex computational problems. From image classification to speech recognition, the technology can be beneficial in a broad range of scenarios. However, the barrier to entry is quite high, especially when programming skills are missing. In this paper, we present the development of a learning application that is easy to use, yet powerful enough to solve practical Deep Learning problems. We followed the human-centered design approach and conducted a technical evaluation to identify solvable classification problems. Afterwards, we conducted an online user evaluation to gain insights on users' experience with the app, and to understand positive as well as negative aspects of our implemented concept. Our results show that participants liked using the app and found it useful, especially for beginners. Nonetheless, future iterations of the learning app should step-wise include more features to support advancing users. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Learning for Adaptation: An edusemiotic perspective on intercultural communication competence.
- Author
-
Shen, Juming, Sheng, Yu, and Zhou, Ying
- Subjects
CROSS-cultural communication ,SEMIOTICS ,ADAPTABILITY (Personality) ,CONSCIOUSNESS ,COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
The conceptualization of intercultural communication competence (ICC) has been updated tentatively since it was formulated in the 1970s. A common recognition is that development of ICC can only be realized through an individual's adaptation, which results from the integration of the multiple forces within the individuals themselves. However, most of the existing research on ICC has focused on the conscious aspects of competence like abilities or skills that are distinguishable, that is, what to adapt, rather than the less conscious aspect, or its correlation with the unconscious part, that is, the how to adapt, or what the process of adaptation is. The absence of investigation into the adaptation process may have been a consequence of the educational context of studies on ICC, which depends much on, or is heavily affected by, the Cartesian dualistic viewpoints that emphasize the dichotomy of mind–body while ignoring the "middle" in between. Based on our previous semiotic analysis that explained the process of intercultural communication as a form of semiosis, this paper adopts more perspectives from edusemiotics to conceptualize learning following a triadic framework with emphasis on the process as the "middle," which renders it possible to reflect on the process of individuals' adaptation in contexts of intercultural communication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. A review of research with co-design methods in health education
- Author
-
Iniesto Francisco, Charitonos Koula, and Littlejohn Allison
- Subjects
rapid evidence assessment ,co-design ,health education ,methods ,Education - Abstract
Studies using co-design methods require the meaningful involvement of stakeholders in creating new knowledge and harnessing, mobilising, and transferring existing knowledge to support comprehensive and long-term solutions. In the health sector, co-design methodology is seen as a way of supporting and engaging local communities in critical decision-making about their health. However, little is known about which specific co-design methods have been adopted, used, and implemented within health education contexts. To address this gap, this paper presents a literature review of co-design methods used to design and implement health education interventions. This rapid evidence assessment (REA) was carried out by identifying 53 papers categorised into four themes: methods, stages, stakeholders, and outcomes. We examined specific co-design methods used in health education stages to support the involvement of stakeholders, second, we reviewed the outcomes of the application of these methods. Based on the review findings, the paper reflects two areas: first, the review shows that there are a wide number of co-design methods being used to support stakeholder collaboration to design health care services as products and processes. Second, there is no clear way co-design methods are evaluated for their outcomes. This review of literature contributes an evidence base to support the future development and use of co-design in health contexts by organising relevant literature into coherent themes in ways that can inform future research.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Mainstreaming multiple uses of chemicals in chemistry teacher education programs of Africa.
- Author
-
Engida, Temechegn
- Subjects
CHEMISTRY education ,TRAINING of chemistry teachers ,CHEMICALS ,TEACHER education ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Many compounds can be used for or manipulated to serve a variety of purposes. Chemistry teachers and the chemistry curricula they use, however, do not directly deal with the idea of the use, misuse, and abuse of multi-use chemicals. This paper therefore attempts to explore strategies in mainstreaming the concepts of multi-use chemicals in Chemistry teacher education programs. It is believed that teacher education programs have multiplier effects since they are intended to cover both pre- and in-service chemistry teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Troubling translanguaging: language ideologies, superdiversity and interethnic conflict.
- Author
-
Charalambous, Panayiota, Charalambous, Constadina, and Zembylas, Michalinos
- Subjects
ETHNIC conflict ,GREEK language ,TURKISH language ,MULTILINGUALISM ,LINGUISTIC identity - Abstract
This paper looks at how histories of conflict and ideologies of language as a bounded entity mapped onto a homogeneous nation impact on attempts of translanguaging in the classroom in the conflict-affected context of Greek-Cypriot education. Drawing on ethnographic data from a highly diverse primary school, this study examines how nationalist understandings of language and belonging affect the ways in which a group of Turkish-speaking students of Pontian and Turkish-Bulgarian backgrounds relate to their Turkish-speakerness in classroom interaction. The findings show that, despite the multilingual and hybrid realities of this particular school, in formal educational practices Turkish-speaking students kept a low profile as to their Turkish-speakerness. Even when the teacher encouraged translanguaging practices and a public display of students' competence in the Turkish language, this was met with inarticulateness and emotional troubles, fuelled by a fear that 'speaking Turkish' could be taken as 'being Turkish'. In discussing these findings, the paper points to the impact that different overlapping histories of ethnonationalist conflict have on translanguaging practices in education; in our case by associating Turkishness with the 'enemy group' and socializing children within essentialist assumptions about language and national belonging. The paper argues that in this case the discourses of conflict create unfavourable ecologies for hybrid linguistic practices, which ultimately suppress creative polylingual performances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Values, edusemiotics, and intercultural dialogue: From Russia with questions.
- Author
-
Semetsky, Inna and Gavrov, Sergey
- Subjects
SEMIOTICS ,COMMUNICATION ,SOCIALIZATION ,SOCIAL media ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Even after the 'perestroika' and 'glasnostj' in Russia, and increased communication in the interconnected world, the state of contemporary education there remains relatively unknown to Western scholars. This paper aims to ameliorate this problem by examining some of the signs comprising the system of education in Russia against the problematic of the historically American pursuit of happiness. While formal education in the West explicitly focuses on academic disciplines, in Russia there always existed an element of 'bringing up' as a sign of the value-dimension infusing, sometimes implicitly, both formal and informal (or cultural) education. The paper intends to demonstrate the ubiquity and the importance of the edusemiotic conception of values-education irreducible to inculcation but oriented to self-formation embedded in human experience. An edusemiotic perspective problematizes the aims of education and emphasizes learning from experience, dialogue, coordination, meaning, and values. Values 'reside' in lived experience, and edusemiotics surpasses education reduced to teaching of brute facts. The paper also critically examines education as socialization via social media and affirms spiritual education in contrast to persistent secularization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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