296 results
Search Results
2. The Transformative Potential of Social Innovation for, in and by Education.
- Author
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Giesecke, Susanne and Schartinger, Doris
- Subjects
SOCIAL innovation ,EDUCATION policy ,SOCIALIZATION ,EDUCATIONAL innovations - Abstract
One of the most important challenges for our society is how we view and organise learning and education. To respond to this challenge the European Commission stimulated a debate in order to generate forward-looking policy ideas. A specific topic addressed is the likely future development and importance of social innovation in education. The basis for this paper is a specific foresight study investigating future trends in education and supporting elements, especially with regard to the Europe 2020 strategy and the 'Future of Learning' agenda. Therefore, the aim of this paper is to provide a vision of the future of social innovation in education and derive implications for the education system and policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The World Bank's Education Sector Policy Paper: a summary.
- Author
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Haddad, Wadi D.
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL planning ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATIONAL equalization ,SCHOOL administration ,EDUCATIONAL finance ,EDUCATIONAL change ,EDUCATION ,BASIC needs - Abstract
The article focuses on the World Bank's Education Sector Policy Paper, which highlights issues and trends in the development of education. It examines the relationship between education and development. The significance of education can be shown in the following ways: education as a basic need; education as an instrument to support programs designed to meet other basic needs and education as an activity that sustains overall development. Meanwhile, a set of problems that affects educational development include equality in educational opportunities; internal efficiency of educational systems; management of educational systems and source of funds for education.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The role of intermediaries in US workforce and education innovation.
- Author
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Giloth, Robert P.
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL innovations ,WAGE increases ,LABOR market ,LABOR supply ,EDUCATIONAL finance ,ECONOMICS education - Abstract
Intermediaries are specialised organisations that perform bridging and integrative functions to achieve improved results of social policies. Intermediaries have been most effective in the United States (US) when aligned with education and workforce system improvements and redesign, not as parallel and separate efforts. Intermediaries operate in many US social policy domains, including workforce and education, where they contribute to overcoming fragmented institutions and solving mismatch problems that interfere with hiring, career pathways and educational achievements. Intermediary solutions are especially important for creating better outcomes for low-income students and workers and improving overall racial and ethnic equity. Five mismatches especially prevalent in the US labour market require intermediary solutions: organising business to improve human resources, creating improved pathways from school to work, integrating and focussing multiple education investments, linking workforce and economic development, and improving access and use of data for design, performance management and advocacy. This paper discusses these mismatches and related intermediary solutions in more depth, offers examples of specific intermediaries in action and identifies intermediary challenges and opportunities faced by intermediaries to function better. The paper also points out that, more broadly, intermediaries are only a part of the solution to labour market and education inequalities and that broader changes in the political economy and policies are required to effect wage growth and labour market participation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Education and social innovation: a framework based on a systematic review.
- Author
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Batista, Leonardo Ferreira and Helal, Diogo Henrique
- Subjects
- *
SCIENTOMETRICS , *SOCIAL innovation , *EDUCATIONAL innovations , *SOCIALIZATION , *EDUCATION policy , *NONFORMAL education - Abstract
This article aims to propose a framework with the relationship between education and social innovation (SI). To do this, we conducted a systematic literature review using the Web of Science database in two stages: (1) scientometric analysis, using the software CitNetExplorer and VOSViewer: a historiography analysis, co-occurrence of keywords analysis, and author co-citation analysis; (2) filtering and meta-analysis of the papers found, defined based on the number of citations of the papers, the year of their publication, and the presence of impact factors in the publication channels (method ordinatio method). Results indicate that social innovation originates in education, either as a process or as a product. And educational innovation processes are supported by co-creation and institutional articulations in different educational loci, including non-formal education. This study argues that SI can arise through education, having several purposes, and being able to become a vector of initiatives and technologies applied to the educational field, which generates a cycle between the two phenomena. This study contributes socially to the discussion on the emancipation of social actors through education. We also make a practical contribution, providing examples of the application of the theme, which can support new educational policy models and management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A bibliometric analysis of generative AI in education: current status and development.
- Author
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Liu, Jun, Wang, Cong, Liu, Zile, Gao, Minghui, Xu, Yanhua, Chen, Jiayu, and Cheng, Yichun
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL innovations ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence in education ,EDUCATION software ,EDUCATIONAL cooperation - Abstract
The rapid advancement of generative AI technology offers new opportunities for the innovation and transformation of education. However, this also brings forth risks and challenges, including the potential to exacerbate educational inequality and integrity. This study aims to address the extensive controversies surrounding the application of generative AI technology in education by providing an objective and comprehensive understanding of its current state, development in educational contexts. Using the CiteSpace and VOSviewer software, we conducted visual analyses of relevant literature from the Web of Science core collection pertaining to the application of generative AI in education.Subsequently, we identified productive journals, productive articles, collaboration patterns, article hotspots, and prevalent topics in this field.This study will facilitate the promotion of in-depth research and practical implementation of AI in education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The objects of transformation in higher education.
- Author
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Hall, Martin
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,AIMS & objectives of higher education ,EDUCATIONAL objectives ,EDUCATIONAL change ,EDUCATIONAL innovations - Abstract
This paper reviews the purposes of higher education in South Africa through to lens the 1997 Education White Paper. It is argued that, while the principles of the White Paper have shaped the development of the higher education system over the following decade the primary objectives of transformation have yet to be realized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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8. The contribution of international studies on Educational Effectiveness: Current and future directions.
- Author
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Sammons, Pam
- Subjects
EDUCATION research ,COMPARATIVE education ,GLOBAL studies ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATIONAL law & legislation ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,EFFECTIVE teaching ,EDUCATION ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
This paper discusses the contribution of international studies on educational effectiveness in the light of 4 papers presented at the new ICSEI Methodology of Research and Effectiveness (MORE) Network in Barcelona in January 2005 and published in this issue of the journal. A brief historical overview is used to provide a context for these papers and a number of themes are identified in relation to the secondary analysis of international datasets such as TIMSS and PISA. The value of creating a new international teacher observation and feedback instrument to facilitate collaborative international research is discussed. In addition, the paper discusses the value of comparative studies of education policy in different national systems using the example of a high profile study of successful countries (in terms of PISA 2000 results) initiated by the Deutsches Institut für Internationale Pädagogische Forschung to inform a review of the German system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Education in Developing Countries. halfway to the Styx.
- Author
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Williams, Peter
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL change ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,DEVELOPING countries ,PLANNING - Abstract
The article comments on the Educational Sector Policy paper of the World Bank. The paper explores the educational problems in developing countries. The author compares it with the 1974 paper of the Bank, claiming that the present paper is more clear in terms of recognizing the complexity of the social and political forces at work on the educational scene in developing countries. However, he criticizes the paper's view of the purposes of education. He suggests that it lacks diachronic perspective on the processes of growth and adjustment in the past.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
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10. EDITORIAL.
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,EDUCATION research ,TELEVISION in education ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATIONAL sociology - Abstract
The article presents an analysis to define the term "educational studies." Looking at a series of conferences held in the summer and autumn of 1977, that some kind of definition might result from considering such conferences. Firstly, there was the seventh world congress of the International Association for the Advancement of Educational Research at Ghent, Belgium, in July. Some fifty nationalities were present at this meeting so possibly it was not the ideal occasion for seeking an agreed definition. In fact, though the congress had a central, unifying theme, 'Self-Realization through Education', the plenary papers almost served as illustrations of the variety of approach to educational studies in different areas of the world. From Poland came emphasis on the search for quality of life and the place of art in education while from the U.S. and Canada came a complex review of aims, objectives, innovations, methods, numerous research findings. Individual papers in discussion group sessions offered equally rich variety, ranging from educational television for adults in Quebec, Canada through Yoruba myths and pupils' understanding of science concepts to school counselling in Iran.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
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11. Realizing the integrative capacity of educational mixed methods research teams: using a complexity-sensitive strategy to boost innovation.
- Author
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Poth, Cheryl
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATION research ,STRATEGIC planning ,COMPUTATIONAL complexity ,MIXED methods research - Abstract
Educational research teams are increasingly recognized as an optimal configuration for addressing more complex mixed methods research problems; however, their development is often approached as a conventional research collaboration rather than an integrative one. An approach informed by complexity theory provides the practical guidance for studying mixed methods research teams as complex adaptive systems with the capacity for generating novel educational research outcomes greater than the sum of individual contributions alone. In this paper, I advance a complexity-sensitive strategy through which to realize the integrative capacity of educational mixed methods research teams comprising of four interrelated elements: membership, contributions, interactions, and performance. These elements embody amalgamations from a decade of my readings of the literature and real-life professional experience. Each element is examined in light of the three key concepts of complex adaptive systems to describe the necessary conditions for emergence, influential challenges illustrating interdependency, and desirable individual and team adaptations. The study's theoretical and practical implications are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Contested affordances: teachers and students negotiating the classroom integration of mobile technology.
- Author
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Dinsmore, Brooke
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL innovations ,YOUTH ,CLASSROOMS ,SMARTPHONES ,ONLINE social networks - Abstract
This paper extends an emerging approach emphasizing contextual variation in the affordances of digital technologies and new media through an empirical application focused on relational dynamics of power and resistance. Specifically, I focus on the case of student and teacher negotiations over smartphones and social media in the classroom ‒ a case where actors on either side of a power relationship assign conflicting meanings to the same technology. Interviews were conducted with 37 students and 19 teachers at a public high school with a technology policy designating students' personally-owned smartphones as educational devices. As the affordance of contextual mobility allowed students to access shared online social spaces within the classroom, smartphones threatened the cultural logic of separation bounding the social from the educational. With their sense of control threatened, teachers sought to re-constitute separation through strategies of restriction and differentiation. Viewing online-offline integration as a taken-for-granted part of social life, students used strategies of adaptive resistance to combat school policies and maximize technology use. However, students also worked to re-constitute separation through peer cultural norms limiting the in-school consequences of online peer social interactions. Underneath the contestation between restriction and resistance, both teachers and students worked to set conditions on the affordance of contextual mobility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The Design, Development, and Implementation of LUDA Virtual High School.
- Author
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Vrasidas, Charalambos
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL technology ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,INTERNET in education ,COMPUTER assisted instruction ,INFORMATION technology ,INSTRUCTIONAL systems ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to present the Large Unit District Association virtual high school (LUDA-VHS) project and discuss its design, development, and implementation. A model developed at the Center for the Application of Information Technologies for designing online classes will be presented and discussed. The focus of the paper will be to present the lessons learned and provide practical recommendations on how to design successful online programs. Issues to be discussed include the following: recruiting, training, and compensating teachers; selecting and supporting students; developing instructional strategies for online learning; building a sense of community; educating the public on the benefits of online education; providing equal access; building quality assurance mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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14. Reclaiming tutorials as learning spaces in the sciences.
- Author
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Louw, Ina
- Subjects
SCIENCE education ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,ACQUISITION of data ,PROBLEM solving ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Tutorials/discussion classes
1 are seen as an essential part of the teaching mix in the natural sciences, because that is where problems can be solved and course content is applied. Learning support provided by teaching assistants may free up the lecturer to do research, but are these assistants sufficiently well trained and well informed? Do tutorials offer learning spaces or merely activities to engage the willing student? In this paper I report on a study conducted in a science faculty of a research intensive university in South Africa. I collected data using interviews and questionnaires which gave insight into the many variants of tutor/teaching assistant2 support that exist in the faculty. Practices that seem to lead to better student learning were also foregrounded. It became evident that lecturers need to plan their tutorials as an integral part of the learning space and not as an add-on activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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15. Cultivating sustained teachers’ professional learning within a centralised education system.
- Author
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Shaari, Imran, Lim, Victor, Hung, David, and Kwan, Yew Meng
- Subjects
TEACHER education ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATION ,SCHOOL decentralization ,EDUCATIONAL technology ,ADULTS ,CONTINUING education - Abstract
This study investigates how sustained professional learning for teachers within a centralised system was cultivated. Specifically, the sustained professional learning was initiated by officers from the headquarters (HQ) and involved interested teachers across schools in Singapore. Qualitative instruments were used to collect and analyse the data in examining the partnerships perceived by the participants. The enablers responsible to bring about sustained professional learning are proposed. A contribution of this study is to clarify how resources in the HQ and its schools can be bridged. Deliberate bridging of resources is critical particularly at the initial stage of the partnerships. This bridging is made possible through dedicated appointed champions. The appointed champions are passionate about the educational innovations and are willing to invest their time to understand the teachers’ needs. This paper argues that the enablers can offer opportunities for lateral networks to be forged within a hierarchical system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The complexities in fostering critical thinking through school-based curriculum innovation: research evidence from Singapore.
- Author
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Tan, Liang See, Koh, Elizabeth, Lee, Shu Shing, Ponnusamy, Letchmi Devi, and Tan, Keith Chiu Kian
- Subjects
CURRICULUM ,CRITICAL thinking ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATION ,STUDENT evaluation of teachers - Abstract
Singapore’s strong performance in international benchmarking studies – Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) and Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) – poses a conundrum to researchers who view Singapore’s pedagogy as characterized by the teaching of facts and procedures, and lacking in constructivist learning principles. In this paper, we examine the impact of different curriculum innovations on critical thinking as measured by the Watson-Glaser Critical Thinking Assessment – UK (WGCTA-UK). This includes two innovations that are subject-specific and short-term, one that strongly infuses the arts into the curriculum throughout the whole course of study, and the innovation of the Integrated Programme (IP) which allows academically stronger students to skip the GCE “O” Levels and enter directly into the next level of education, with the time previously allocated to exam preparation now spent on greater breadth in the academic and non-academic curriculum. This paper takes the sociocultural approach to investigate the contexts, process, and outcomes, reports the state of critical thinking, and sheds light on how critical thinking is being promoted. Through our analysis, we find support for the claim that only curriculum that is rigorously designed to foster critical thinking competencies will reap the intended student outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Innovation becoming trajectories: leveraging lateral and vertical moves for collaborative diffusion of twenty-first century learning practices.
- Author
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Hung, David, Toh, Yancy, Jamaludin, Azilawati, and So, Hyo-Jeong
- Subjects
COLLABORATIVE learning ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATIONAL technology ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper argues for innovation diffusion as a “becoming” process in the context of lateral and vertical moves. The context of these innovations involves technology-mediated innovations and their diffusion trajectories in the Singapore education system. Embedded in a centralized-decentralized dialectics, this paper traces particular innovations from their nascent beginnings to their present state of play. We found that the cases we observed had lateral (or decentralized) moves and were subsequently supported by vertical (or centralized) ones. Characterizing these innovation diffusions was challenging as we found them to move across models according to different granularities and levels of analysis. Instead, we have chosen to characterize these diffusion patterns as “innovation becoming”. We attempt to distil some substantive generalizations from three case studies presented and how decisions can be made for future innovation diffusions. We recognize that the trajectory for innovation diffusion is inextricably linked to the identity projected by the particular innovation and the leadership supporting it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Special issue on knowledge exchange, innovation and enterprise in post-compulsory education.
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,EDUCATIONAL innovations - Abstract
The article invites papers related to knowledge exchange in post-compulsory education to be published in the coming issue of the journal.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. School-based curriculum development in Scotland: curriculum policy and enactment.
- Author
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Priestley, Mark, Minty, Sarah, and Eager, Michelle
- Subjects
TEACHER participation in curriculum planning ,CURRICULUM planning ,SCHOOL-based management ,EDUCATION ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,CURRICULUM -- Government policy ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
Recent worldwide trends in curriculum policy have re-emphasised the role of teachers in school-based curriculum development. Scotland’s Curriculum for Excellence is typical of these trends, stressing that teachers are agents of change. This paper draws upon empirical data to explore school-based curriculum development in response to Curriculum for Excellence. We focus on two case studies – secondary schools within a single Scottish local education authority. In the paper we argue that the nature and extent of innovation in schools is dependent upon teachers being able to make sense of often complex and confusing curriculum policy, including the articulation of a clear vision about what such policy means for education within each school. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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20. Imagination and creativity: wellsprings and streams of education – the Taiwan experience.
- Author
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Wu, Jing-Jyi and Albanese, Dale Leonard
- Subjects
IMAGINATION ,EDUCATION ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATION policy - Abstract
Creativity and imagination in education are increasingly emphasised around the world. However, a lack of these qualities in Chinese societies has been discussed in the academia and popular media, and attributed to various factors, standardised testing chief among them. In Taiwan, a team of scholars working with the Ministry of Education has, since the turn of the century, made special efforts to do research and promote creativity and imagination in education. This paper traces the development of policies and action plans and the implementation of creativity education and imagination in education programmes in Taiwan. Both programmes start from elementary school and go through higher education, and also include lifelong learners and administrators; they are, thus, inclusive of all levels within Taiwan’s educational system. This paper cites examples of the action plans and their effects. Finally, implications for educational policy and teaching and learning are drawn from the Taiwan experience. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Strategic agency and institutional change: investigating the role of universities in regional innovation systems (RISs).
- Author
-
Benneworth, Paul, Pinheiro, Rómulo, and Karlsen, James
- Subjects
PLACE-based education ,LEADERSHIP ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,INNOVATION management ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Copyright of Regional Studies is the property of Routledge 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
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Researching emotion and affect in the history of education.
- Author
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Sobe, NoahW.
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,HISTORIANS ,GOVERNMENTALITY ,EMOTIONS ,HISTORIOGRAPHY - Abstract
This exploratory paper was prepared for a symposium held at the 2011 ISCHE conference in which participants were asked to envision future challenges in the historiography of education, to predict where the field was moving, and to imagine what innovations and new interests would arise in the subsequent 30 years. While the paper is playfully written from the vantage point of 30 years in the future and pretends to offer a retrospective review of what happened in the field over that period, its primary purpose is to seriously suggest a number of ways that historians of education might engage with the history of emotion and affect in their work. The first section of the paper describes the consolidation of the history of emotions as a field of historical study and discusses the importance of a ‘governmentality' approach. It is then suggested in the second section that historians of education increasingly drew on the concept of ‘affect' and developed ‘affective histories' of education that both built upon and departed from earlier histories of emotions. The third section of the paper discusses some of the ways in which historians of education incorporated into their work insights from neuroscience into consciousness and choice-making as well as an increased awareness of the object-mediated body. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Innovative power of Dutch secondary education.
- Author
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Haelermans, Carla
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL innovations ,SECONDARY education ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,EDUCATION policy ,TEACHING methods ,PUBLIC schools - Abstract
This paper analyzes the diffusion and determinants of innovations in secondary education. First, the diffusion path of five clusters of innovations in secondary schools is described. Second, the determinants of the adoption of these innovations are analyzed. The findings show that size is one of the main determinants of share of innovations in a school. Other determinants are competition, school type, and teaching method. These should be factored in innovation in public sector education. This paper explains why. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Small NGO schools in India: implications for access and innovation.
- Author
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Blum, Nicole
- Subjects
NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,RIGHT to education ,HUMAN services ,PRIMARY school teaching ,GOVERNMENT aid to education ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATION policy ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
In addition to the proliferation of private, fee-paying schools in India, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) play an important role in providing educational services, especially in un-served and under-served communities. This paper uses qualitative research to critically examine the nature and potential of NGO provision of primary schooling in India. In particular, it explores the contributions of one NGO programme which has sought to increase access for socially and economically marginalised children by establishing and providing support for small, rural, multigrade schools. The paper argues that NGO programmes like these have had positive impacts in terms of both access and quality because, firstly, the programmes are small-scale and locally rooted, and secondly, their organisation allows for greater flexibility and room for innovation in areas such as curriculum design, teacher education, and school networking than is commonly possible within government schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Educational development in the UK: a complex and contradictory reality.
- Author
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Gosling, David
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL planning ,UNIVERSITY & college administration ,ACADEMIC programs ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATION - Abstract
At a time when questions are being asked about the identity and purpose of academic development, this paper seeks to address these questions within the context of one country in which educational development has been actively supported. This study considers a narrative of the complex and contradictory reality of educational development in the United Kingdom based on the perceptions of heads of educational development. Based on a survey of over 40 institutions, the paper highlights the growth of educational development centres and considers their staffing, institutional location, role and responsibilities. It also seeks to explore some points of similarity and difference with trends in other countries. A l'heure ou des questions sont posees au sujet de l'identite et des visees du developpement pedagogique, cet article cible ces questions du point de vue d'un pays au sein duquel le developpement pedagogique a ete soutenu activement. Cette recherche examine l'historique de la “realite complexe et contradictoire” du developpement pedagogique au Royaume-Uni a partir des perceptions de directeurs de centres de developpement pedagogique. Se basant sur un sondage de plus de 40 institutions, l'article met en lumiere la croissance des centres de developpement pedagogique et examine leur localisation institutionnelle, leur role et leurs responsabilites. L'article cherche aussi a explorer les similitudes et les differences avec des tendances observees dans d'autres pays. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Confucian revival and the hybrid educational narratives in contemporary China: a critical rethinking of scale in globalisation and education.
- Author
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Wu, Jinting
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,CONFUCIAN education ,GLOBALIZATION ,CLASSICAL education ,CULTURAL property ,EDUCATIONAL innovations - Abstract
Today China witnesses a renaissance of classical studies and Confucian Academies across the nation. With an estimated 10 million children attending Confucian kindergartens, classes, and schools, cultural heritage has increasingly become a new marker of social distinction. At the same time, Confucian tradition is often associated with excessive testing, competition, and academic burdens that continue to hinder China's educational innovation. Disenchanted with state-run schools, many urban middle-class families turn to alternative schools that use imported pedagogies such as the Waldorf, Montessori, and Reggio to cultivate a better future for their children. In reform-era China, Westernisation coexists with a return to tradition to produce a fascinatingly complex cultural-pedagogical terrain. This paper examines such curiously hybrid educational narratives to understand the idiosyncratic features of Chinese educational globalisation and offer a critical perspective to rethink the concept of scale in comparative education research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Integrating the development of continuous improvement and innovation capabilities into engineering education.
- Author
-
Jørgensen, Frances and Busk Kofoed, Lise
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL innovations ,ENGINEERING ,EDUCATION ,ENGINEERING students ,ACTION research ,TEACHING methods ,ACTIVE learning ,TECHNOLOGY ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
In this paper, a study is presented in which engineering students at a Danish university developed Continuous Improvement (CI) and innovation capabilities through action research and experiential learning methods. The paper begins with a brief overview of the literature on CI and innovation, followed by an account of how the students designed and implemented solutions to self-identified problems within their educational program using the principles of CI, and how these learning activities facilitated the development of basic innovation capabilities. The paper concludes with insights regarding how such an innovative design of teaching methods based on learning-by-doing may not only support the development of CI and innovation in engineering students, which is increasingly demanded by industry, but also represent a way in which to enhance sustainability and innovation of the education itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. From 'deep knowledge' to 'the light of reason': sources for philosophy of education in Ethiopia.
- Author
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Bridge, David, Asgedom, Amare, and Kenaw, Setargew
- Subjects
PHILOSOPHY of education ,ETHIOPIAN philosophy ,NONFORMAL education ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper explores some of the indigenous sources available in Ethiopia as a resource for philosophy and philosophy of education. In the process it makes a small contribution to the ongoing debate among philosophers as to whether there is a distinctive African philosophy. The paper illustrates, first, what is sometimes referred to as the ‘deep knowledge’ underlying more day-to-day beliefs in Ethiopia (or more specifically in this case those of the Amhara-Tigre cultural complex) and their application in ‘educational magic’ and, secondly, the 17th century philosophical writing of Zara Ya'eqob and Walda Heywat, which is remarkable for its Enlightenment-style attachment to reason and argumentation. Two more directly educational indigenous sources are then explored: the educational thought and practice of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and non-formal education in villages. Finally, the paper considers the relevance of these sources to contemporary educational development and suggests that they merit continuing attention and reference both from the point of view of preserving cultural identity and continuity and also, more pragmatically, because there are ideas, values and practices in the tradition which have continuing relevance for Ethiopians grappling with educational development issues today. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Teaching-learning sequences: aims and tools for science education research.
- Author
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Méheut, Martine
- Subjects
TEACHING ,LEARNING ,EDUCATION ,STUDENTS ,EDUCATION research ,EDUCATIONAL innovations - Abstract
One notable line of inquiry, aspects of which date back to the early 1980s, involves the design and implementation not of long-term curricula, but of topic-oriented sequences for teaching science. One distinguishing characteristic of a teaching-learning sequence (TLS) is its inclusion in a gradual research-based evolutionary process aiming at interlacing the scientific and the student perspective. In the present paper, which is introductory to the special issue, we attempt to serve a double purpose: on the one hand, we provide an overview of developments and trends with regard to TLSs and their classroom validation, discussing empirical studies, theoretical proposals, methodological tools and approaches to describing the design of these sequences in ordinary language, while on the other the paper serves as an introduction to this volume, making it easier for the reader to apprehend the processes of development and validation of research on TLSs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Challenging Students in Further Education: themes arising from a study of innovative FE provision for excluded and disaffected young people.
- Author
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Attwood, Gaynor, Croll, Paul, and Hamilton, Jane
- Subjects
CONTINUING education ,PSYCHOLOGY of college students ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,SOCIAL marginality ,STUDENT attitudes ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The paper draws on a research project on innovative provision in an FE college for excluded and disaffected young people. The college offers places on vocational courses to students who are still of compulsory school age who have been excluded by or have persistently failed to attend or achieve in school. One set of themes to emerge relates to the experiences of the students: the role of personal relationships and, especially, relationships with teachers, in the breakdown of school placements; the importance both of good relationships with tutors, often expressed as 'being treated like an adult' and of a vocational and practical curriculum in successful re-engagement at college; and positive but highly instrumental and employment related attitudes to education. Another set of themes relates to the practical and organisational difficulties and the way that a lack of flexibility in 14-19 provision, especially while students are still of compulsory school age, creates difficulties for programmes of this kind. Finally the paper considers the tensions between pressures for accountability and outcome-driven measures and the aims of increasing participation and using education to address issues of social inclusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Criteria and Methods of Generating Education Cooperation Projects for External Funding.
- Author
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Phillips, H. M.
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,EDUCATIONAL finance ,FINANCE ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATIONAL change ,INTERNATIONAL economic assistance - Abstract
The article presents the author's commentary on the Educational Sector Policy paper of the World Bank regarding the criteria and methods of generating education cooperation projects for external funding. It refers to the World Bank's Education Policy Summary which states "A review of Bank experience suggests that methods of generating educational projects have not been adequate." The author claims that the paper fails to consider a number of special features of foreign assistance which apply to all sectors including education. Meanwhile, some of the criteria of generating education cooperation projects are as follows: it should be clearly requested by the recipient country and it should be carefully related to the recipient country's resources as well as to it needs.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The World Bank on Language and Education: a lot more could be done.
- Author
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Treffgame, Carew
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,LANGUAGE & education ,LANGUAGE & languages ,LANGUAGE policy ,COMMUNICATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATIONAL change - Abstract
The article presents the author's commentary on the World Bank Educational Sector Policy Paper regarding the role of language in education. He claims that the issues surrounding language policy and the problems raised in implementation of this policy are discussed in the paper in a confusing manner. Instead of focusing on the more complex dimensions of both language policy formulation and implementation, the Paper refers to many isolated aspects of the policy. The author also argues that the paper fails to connect the role of language to issues of educational planning and development.
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Evaluating the liberal arts model in the context of the Dutch University College.
- Author
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Cooper, Nathan
- Subjects
GENERAL education ,UNDERGRADUATES ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,EDUCATION ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,INFORMATION economy - Abstract
The Liberal Arts model of undergraduate education within small, internationally- focused University Colleges is becoming increasingly popular in Europe. This trend is most notable in the Netherlands, where the liberal arts model is acclaimed as filling a gap in Dutch undergraduate education at conventional research universities. This paper explores the status of the Dutch University College as simultaneously continuing the liberal arts tradition of the US, with its civic and pedagogic values, and providing a truly modern education preparing students to find innovative and inter-disciplinary solutions to the complex problems which define contemporary society. It concludes that the traditional role of a liberal arts education in cultivating intellectual rather than vocation skills does not have to exclude its appeal as providing the skills necessary for professional success in global sectors of the 21 st century knowledge economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Editorial.
- Author
-
Wisker, Gina and Barker, Philip
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATION ,TEACHER training ,LEARNING ,TEACHING ,GLOBAL studies - Abstract
Introduces articles featured in the February 2004 issue of "Innovations in Education and Teaching International." Essays on educational development; Article on collaborative, reflective learning among peers which provides most stimulating ideas and models for teachers; Issues involved in the complex task of training teachers in peer-assessment skills.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Evaluating innovation and navigating unseen boundaries: systems, processes and people.
- Author
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Fleet, Alma, De Gioia, Katey, Madden, Lorraine, and Semann, Anthony
- Subjects
SOCIAL learning ,EDUCATIONAL change ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATION & society ,PROFESSIONAL education ,EARLY childhood education ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper illustrates an evaluation model emerging from Australian research. With reference to a range of contexts, its usefulness is demonstrated through application to two professional development initiatives designed to improve continuity of learning in the context of the transition to school. The model reconceptualises approaches to considering and reporting educational change. Responding to an Australian state government’s recognition that aspects of the transition to school process necessitated changed dialogue between teachers and educators in prior to school and the formal school sector, the research team facilitated two eight-month multi-site explorations of core concepts, philosophies and practices. Ethics protocols were followed throughout the collaborative project. While this research acknowledges Wenger’s (2009. ‘Social learning capability: Four essays on innovation and learning in social systems.’Social Innovation, Sociedade e Trabalho. Booklets 12 – separate supplement, MTSS/GEP & EQUAL Portugal, Lisbon.) claim that ‘social learning capability’ is ‘the most fundamental aspect of the communities of practice approach’ [Omidvar, O., and R. Kislov. 2014. ‘The evolution of the communities of practice approach: Toward knowledgeability in a landscape of practice- An interview with Etienne Wenger-Trayner.’Journal of Management Inquiry23: 266–275., p.268], experience in this cross-sector initiative suggests that the intersections of relationship, facilitative infrastructure and ‘spirals of engagement’ [Fleet, A., and C. Patterson. 2001. ‘Professional growth reconceptualised: Early childhood staff searching for meaning.’Early Childhood Research and Practice3 (2), ERIC Number: ED458042.] are also key in educational change, and should thus be visible in an evaluation model. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Comparative education and development: reflections from Nepal.
- Author
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Parajuli, Mahesh Nath and Wagley, Mana Prasad
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE education ,DEVELOPMENTAL psychology ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,MODERNIZATION theory ,GLOBALIZATION & ethics - Abstract
Relation between education and development has been recognized in Nepal since the beginning of planned development efforts and the modern schooling at mass level. Both were initiated during 1950s. Beginning of Development Studies in MPhil and PhD in Education in School of Education, Kathmandu University focused exploring such relationships in a systematic manner. This reflective paper shares some of the ideas and experiences on comparative education and development while working and developing the program Development Studies. It has been realized that comparative education can provide an important frame to explore such relationships. Accordingly, attempts were made to develop the program Development Studies that derive from understanding and exploring the pattern of the everyday life of the people, their knowledge base and the meaning they give to aspects like education and development. The purpose was also to consider how state interventions a modernization/globalization interplay with local values and meanings. The paper discusses challenges and strengths achieved while working with Development Studies. Finally, some key points are drawn to establish the international and comparative perspective of Nepali practices and experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Dual identities: the in-service teacher trainee experience in the English further education sector.
- Author
-
Orr, Kevin and Simmons, Robin
- Subjects
ADULT education ,TRAINING of adult educators ,ADULT learning ,NONFORMAL education ,TEACHER training ,EDUCATION ,OCCUPATIONAL training ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,TRAINING - Abstract
Since 2001 there has been a statutory requirement for teachers in English further education (FE) colleges to gain teaching qualifications. However, in marked distinction from other sectors of education, around 90% of FE teachers are employed untrained, and complete their initial teacher training on a part-time in-service basis. Traditionally, this route has been necessary to attract established vocational practitioners into FE and to enable them to continue earning whilst undertaking their teacher-training. Consequently, staff sustain the dual role of teacher and trainee teacher. This paper explores the dual identities of trainees on in-service FE teacher training courses. It argues that how their two roles interact may cause tensions in their development, shaping and reinforcing a conservative understanding of further education and the role of the FE teacher. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. TEACHING PARTNERING STRATEGIES THROUGH THE CLIENT-BASED PROJECT APPROACH.
- Author
-
Harman, Les
- Subjects
STRATEGIC alliances (Business) ,EFFECTIVE teaching ,ACTIVITY programs in education ,MARKETING strategy ,BUSINESS students ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATIONAL technology ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This article provides specific recommendations to help faculty members teach the role of "partnering" in marketing project classes. Based on a ten-year research study, the paper explores a major shift in the pedagogy that occurred in which five new teaching strategies were implemented to assist marketing students in focusing on partnering strategies to build equity in the client relationship. The results have been superior marketing plans, highly satisfied students, and a significantly greater percentage of the plan being implemented by the clients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A renaissance in engineering PhD education.
- Author
-
Akay, Adnan
- Subjects
ENGINEERING education ,LEARNING ,DOCTOR of philosophy degree ,EDUCATIONAL technology ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper addresses the role of engineering PhD education and its relationship to innovation and technology, and the need to reconsider how we educate PhD engineers. Much of the effort on engineering education in the last two decades focused on undergraduate education with a few exceptions that relate to masterdegree programs. Doctoral education in engineering prepares the next generation faculty, researchers, and technology leaders and warrants our attention. Whilst current education has been largely responsible for technological advances, there is a need for a new model of engineering PhD education that prepares renaissance engineers. This paper focuses on the doctoral education and its role in the USA; however, the issues addressed are universal among the countries that offer PhD degrees in engineering. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Going round in circles: temporal discontinuity as a gross impediment to effective innovation in education and training.
- Author
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Oates, Tim
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL innovations ,ASSESSMENT of education ,CURRICULUM evaluation ,EDUCATION ,PRIMARY school teaching ,POLICY sciences - Abstract
The analysis presented in this paper offers different examples of how timing issues have adversely affected a series of innovations in education and training. The term 'temporal discontinuity' is used since the problems cannot simply be characterised as 'undue rushing' or 'impatience on the part of policy makers'. Whilst over-hasty scheduling of innovation and a general shortage of time plays a part in the problems on which the paper focuses, it is suggested that the sequencing of design, piloting, evaluation and implementation can break down, falling out of adequate synchronisation. This is more complex than simple shortage of time; remedying this requires more than just an (often-called-for) slower pace in evaluating and implementing innovations. The paper uses three carefully-selected case studies from the English education system to illustrate significant variants of temporal discontinuity: the history of the Assessment of Performance Unit; the implementation of system-level reforms in academic and vocational qualifications for 18 year olds in 2000; and the history of General National Vocational Qualifications. The paper suggests that genuine reform and innovation are seriously impeded by problems resulting from temporal discontinuity. It also suggests that the problems are in part rooted in the timing of political cycles, and calls for a radical examination of the management of large-scale innovation in education and training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. What is literacy? Thirty years of Australian literacy debates (1975-2005).
- Author
-
Edwards, Debra and Potts, Anthony
- Subjects
LITERACY ,EDUCATION ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATIONAL change ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,SOCIAL policy ,EDUCATIONAL technology - Abstract
Australia is a federation of six states and two territories. Each state and territory has its own legislature, which may not be of the same political persuasion as the Commonwealth (Federal) Government. Under the Australian Constitution primary control of school education is with the State and Territory Governments, with the Australian Commonwealth Government having no specific constitutional responsibility for school education. However, this is complicated by a dual-tiered funding system, whereby the Australian Commonwealth Government has responsibility for some funding of government schools and majority funding for non-government schools. Since 1975 there have been moves by the Commonwealth Ministers for Education to acquire a significant role in identifying national priorities for education and constructing policies and assessment tools to achieve such goals. Financial provision and national policy formation have increasingly become the means by which Australian Commonwealth Ministers for Education have "shaped" educational debates and policies. In November 2004 the then Australian Commonwealth Minister for Education, Science and Training announced the details of the Australian Government National Inquiry into the Teaching of Literacy. The focus of the Inquiry was examination of research into reading, preparation of schoolteachers and literacy teaching practices, especially reading. The Inquiry may be seen as the latest move by the Commonwealth Government to influence the teaching of literacy in Australia. In this paper official notions of literacy, as outlined through the various Australian Commonwealth Government's inquiries into literacy and national policy documents for the period 1975-2005, are examined using metaphor analysis. Metaphor analysis provides a means of analysing discourses about literacy in each of the reports and policies in order to interpret the underlying ideology. These official constructs of literacy are briefly considered within the competing and wider notions of literacy in Australia academic debates and the tensions that exist in defining literacy. Why did the Australian Commonwealth Government become involved in the literacy debates during this time? In particular, how has the Australian Commonwealth Government defined literacy and why did it take a more controlling role in both the definition of literacy and the shaping of education for literacy? The reasons for the Australian Commonwealth Government becoming involved in the literacy debates remain largely unresolved. In this paper it is proposed that involvement in the literacy debates constituted a way for the Commonwealth Government, in a time of economic rationalisation, to change their role in educational reform from one of financial assistance to one of leadership in curriculum. It is also proposed that a metaphor analysis of the policy documents and associated reports indicates a move from a wide definition of literacy to an increasingly narrow and utilitarian definition of literacy, reflecting the predominantly economic focus of the Australian Commonwealth Government. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Use of Technological Resources by Social Education Students in Spain.
- Author
-
Ricoy, Carmen and Pino, Margarita
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL technology ,TEACHERS ,SOCIAL skills education ,EDUCATORS ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,INSTRUCTIONAL systems ,SOCIALIZATION ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The objective of this paper is to study the use and educational application of technical resources by students of Social Education (SE) in Spain. The reasons for this research were based on the importance of gaining a deep command of the various skills associated with information and communication technologies in the acquisition of generic competencies. The research we conducted was a descriptive and interpretative study designed from a quantitative-qualitative perspective. The questionnaire was selected as the main data collection tool. Among its most important findings, the research has revealed that SE students are not frequent users of most new technologies, and that they usually copy the behaviours of their teachers in their educational application of technologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. PLANNING YOUR OWN FUNERAL: A HELPFUL PEDAGOGICAL TOOL.
- Author
-
Butler, Daniel D.
- Subjects
EXPERIENTIAL learning ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,BUSINESS logistics ,MARKETING research ,MARKETING management ,MARKETING in service industries ,FUNERAL industry ,DECISION making ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper highlights an experiential class activity wherein students must plan their own funeral. The instructor uses the funeral industry as the context in which to apply consumer and marketing management concepts. Morbid you may say. Valuable and highly recommended say students who have gone through the activity. Students demonstrate their understanding of consumer decision models, services marketing management, applied regulatory, budgeting, and cultural issues. Instructors benefit from an on going project on which to base discussion in and out of class for a highly relevant topic, yet one rarely discussed academically or at home. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Self‐development in Support of Innovative Pedagogies: Peer support using email.
- Author
-
Clegg, Sue, McManus, Mike, Smith, Karen, and Todd, Malcolm J.
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,LEARNING ,SOCIAL sciences education ,SOCIAL science students ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,EDUCATIONAL innovations - Abstract
Copyright of International Journal for Academic Development is the property of Routledge 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
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. An evolving methodology for managing multimedia courseware production.
- Author
-
Giller, Susan and Barker, Philip
- Subjects
MULTIMEDIA communications ,TEACHING aids ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,LEARNING ,COURSEWARE ,EDUCATIONAL technology ,DIGITAL communications ,EDUCATION ,COMPUTER software - Abstract
It is often claimed that techniques such as 'multimedia' and the use of blended learning environments can be used to achieve powerful interactive pedagogies. Indeed, the advent of easy-to-use multimedia technologies has meant that a plethora of digital learning products is now becoming available. Despite the relative ease-of-use of these new technologies, managing large-scale multimedia courseware development projects is still very problematic. This paper discusses some of the issues involved and outlines an emerging methodology for managing such projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Inclusion and the standards agenda: negotiating policy pressures in England.
- Author
-
Ainscow, Mel, Booth, Tony, and Dyson, Alan
- Subjects
INCLUSIVE education ,SCHOOLS ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,EDUCATIONAL change ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,PLANNING ,ACTION research ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This paper reports on some aspects of a collaborative action research project involving teams from 25 schools in England working with researchers from three universities in an attempt to understand how schools can develop more inclusive cultures, policies and practices. Unusually in this field, the schools were not selected because of any exceptional and explicit commitment to ‘inclusion’. A common process of development emerged across the schools, which started with the disturbance of existing practices and was nurtured by a range of institutional and external factors that included ideas about inclusion. The national ‘standards agenda’ was a major force shaping the directions taken by schools. Whilst it constrained inclusive development it also provided that development with a particular focus and led schools to consider issues that might otherwise have been overlooked. The paper concludes that inclusive developments — albeit of a highly ambiguous nature — are possible even in apparently unpromising circumstances and that there may be specific ways in which these developments can be supported. Encouraging such developments may be a necessary complement to the continued radical critique of current educational polices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Transforming Chinese teachers' thinking, learning and understanding via e‐learning.
- Author
-
Forrester, Gillian, Motteram, Gary, and Liu Bangxiang
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL innovations ,DISTANCE education ,INTERNET in education ,EDUCATIONAL technology ,EDUCATION ,CONTINUING education ,COMPUTER assisted instruction - Abstract
The Developing E‐learning for Teachers (DEfT) project, a collaborative venture between UK and Chinese universities, has produced e‐learning modules for master's level programmes for in‐service high school teachers in China. E‐learning offers Chinese teachers new and innovative forms of professional development and provides for transformative learning. The paper investigates teachers' online learning experiences and how e‐learning facilitates teacher transformation from three perspectives: the ‘learner‐centred perspective’, the ‘knowledge‐centred perspective’ and the ‘community‐centred perspective’. The paper concludes that e‐learning, while not without some caveats, is a feasible solution for the training needs of serving Chinese teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Digital Portfolios: Software Selection for Student Manipulation.
- Author
-
Hunt, Andrew L., Wood, Betty K., Terrell, Mary Kate, and Isom, Jim
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL standards ,OUTCOME-based education ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATION ,PERFORMANCE standards ,INTELLECTUAL development ,ALTERNATIVE assessment (Education) ,ELECTRONIC portfolios in education ,COMPUTERS in education - Abstract
Educators are faced with developing performance indicators for reporting to state and national agencies on pre-service teacher candidates' ability to teach using innovative pedagogy as well as content-specific standards. Portfolio assessment has gained momentum as a standard in assessing student-learning outcomes. This paper is a discussion of digital portfolio development as a stimulus to the intellectual involvement of the learner (a Type II application). Digital portfolio development is an activity that naturally involves intellectual involvement as the learner identifies the problem (developing the digital portfolio) and then problem solves as he or she creates the digital portfolio. Each student is in control of portfolio development and manipulates the Web-based software to create the professional portfolio. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Cocreation of Knowledge: Roles of Coresearchers in Research Teams.
- Author
-
Erwee, Ronel and Conway, Joan
- Subjects
EDUCATION research ,TEACHERS ,RESEARCH teams ,EDUCATION ,EDUCATORS ,SCHOLARS ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,SCHOOLS ,CONCEPTS - Abstract
This paper provides insight into how school-based research teams and external researchers conceptualize and act in their roles as coresearchers. The observations and experiences of school-based and external research team members and lead researchers provided the data for this paper. All were Queensland-based educators involved in researching the effect of a three-year school revitalization process on improved school practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. New directions in the moral education curriculum in Chinese primary schools.
- Author
-
Jie, Lu and Desheng *, Gao
- Subjects
MORAL education ,RELIGIOUS education ,EDUCATIONAL sociology ,CHILD development ,EDUCATIONAL innovations ,EDUCATION - Abstract
An analysis is presented of the problems that have existed for over 20 years in the moral education curriculum in primary schools of China. These include the separation of moral education from children's lives, the moralizing and memorization used as the basic methods of teaching and learning, and the overlaps between courses on society and ideological moral character. The paper then introduces the main innovations in the contemporary reform of the primary moral education curriculum, including lifelong moral education as its theoretical foundation and making the development of children's morality relate to life, with 'real' everyday life events as source materials for textbooks. Embodied in the textbooks are some new ideas behind the revised educational objectives, such as putting oneself in another's position, ecological interdependence, 'win-win', dialogue, sharing and diversity. As the curriculum is child centred so the textbooks use a dialogical pedagogy. In conclusion the paper considers ongoing and new challenges for moral education in primary schools to be faced by the curriculum reform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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