7,734 results on '"Instruction"'
Search Results
2. Curriculum and Teaching of Mathematics in the Higher Secondary Schools - An Analysis of Syllabuses.
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National Council of Educational Research and Training, New Delhi (India). Dept. of Curriculum and Evaluation.
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This curriculum project in general mathematics was planned in order to study syllabuses of the elementary and high school curriculum under the following broad categories: (1) objectives of education and mathematics, (2) arrangement of the content, the duration of the course and the achievement expected in each topic, and (3) objectives of education at the primary and the middle level. One of the reports is an analysis of 43 books in elementary mathematics that are in use in various states of the country. The purpose of this study was to obtain an analytical opinion from the teachers about the textbooks in actual use for teaching elementary mathematics. This information was classified according to general information, general organization of the textbooks, subject matter, style of writing, pictorial and graphic illustrations, and objectives. The second report is an analysis of a limited survey of 30 schools selected from four states of India. The purpose of this study was to determine the current teaching-learning practices followed by teachers and students in the study of elementary mathematics. A factual account of what was observed in classes by the investigators and reported by teachers and students during interviews is reported for the following areas: (1) motivation, (2) continuity, (3) teaching new concepts, (4) problem solving, (5) individual and group work, (6) homework, and (7) teaching aids. (RP)
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- 2024
3. Linking Research to Policy to Practice: Collaborative Research for Evidence-Informed Policymaking in Education. Working Paper #187.3. SPARKS Working Paper III
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Brookings Institution, Center for Universal Education, Ghulam Omar Qargha, and Rachel Dyl
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Since the 1990s, there has been a growing demand for evidence-based education policy and practice. This demand stems from concerns that education systems are not meeting the needs of a changing world and that education research lacks rigor. While this demand aims to improve the quality of education, silos between different actors often hinder how evidence informs policymaking. We encourage researchers to use a collaborative research approach by involving multiple education actors in the research process to close the gaps between research, policy, and practice. This paper is the third in a series of three working papers meant to serve as references and conversation starters for policymakers and researchers as they navigate pedagogical reform for education system transformation in their local contexts. Together, the three working papers emphasize the need for more locally driven collaborative research on how the interaction of culture, local education ecosystems, and learning theories--collectively called Invisible Pedagogical Mindsets--influences teachers' pedagogical choices in the classroom. Primarily intended for education researchers, Working Paper III advocates the use of collaborative research approaches to actively include multiple education actors in the research process, foster complementary relationships between actors with different expertise, and make research findings more relevant and responsive to the local education ecosystem. The paper has three parts that discuss the need for flexible research approaches to inform policy given the complexities of education decision-making, the importance of communication and dissemination, and how collaborative research can bridge the gaps between research, policy, and practice. The paper concludes by looking at the ongoing work of the SPARKS project at the Center for Universal Education and how collaborative research can contribute to education systems transformation.
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- 2024
4. Invisible Pedagogical Mindsets: Developing a Contextual Understanding of Pedagogies. Working Paper #187.1. SPARKS Working Paper 1
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Brookings Institution, Center for Universal Education, Ghulam Omar Qargha, and Rachel Dyl
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Although global access to schooling has increased over the last several decades, Sustainable Development Goal 4 (SDG 4), which champions inclusive, equitable, quality education, is far from being achieved. Experts predict that if the global community continues to operate education systems in the same way, by 2030, only one in six countries will reach the universal secondary school completion targets, and approximately 300 million students in school will continue to lack basic numeracy and literacy skills. The 2022 United Nations Transforming Education Summit emphasized the urgent need for a complete overhaul of education systems to meet SDG 4 targets. One significant outcome of the summit was a call to improve student learning by transforming teacher classroom practice. This paper is the first in a series of three working papers meant to serve as references and conversation starters for policymakers and researchers as they navigate pedagogical reform for education system transformation in their local contexts. This paper explores various definitions of pedagogies, the lack of consensus on what pedagogy means in practice, and the effects of Invisible Pedagogical Mindsets on pedagogical approaches.
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- 2024
5. Moving Away from 'Best Practices': Towards Relevant Pedagogical Approaches and Reforms. Working Paper #187.2. SPARKS Working Paper II
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Brookings Institution, Center for Universal Education, Ghulam Omar Qargha, and Rachel Dyl
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In many low- and medium-income countries (LMICs), student-centered pedagogies are often implicitly or explicitly at the heart of innovative pedagogical reforms. In recent years, there has been a growing emphasis on student-centered pedagogies, which aim to shift power dynamics, increase interaction, and prioritize the needs of learners. Many international agencies, governments, and education experts view these pedagogies as "best practices" or a pedagogical "silver bullet" to improve classroom practice. This paper is the second in a series of three working papers meant to serve as references and conversation starters for policymakers and researchers as they navigate pedagogical reform for education system transformation in their local contexts. Together, the three working papers emphasize the need for more locally driven collaborative research on how the interaction of culture, local education ecosystems, and learning theories--collectively called Invisible Pedagogical Mindsets--influences teachers' pedagogical choices in the classroom. This paper details why the authors recommend policymakers examine Invisible Pedagogical Mindsets in their local context to inform pedagogical reforms. The authors discuss the reasons why generalized "best practices"--namely "student-centered pedagogies" as currently implemented--do not often successfully transfer to new cultures, countries, and contexts and argue that many pedagogical reforms do not adequately consider the Invisible Pedagogical Mindsets embedded in each local context.
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- 2024
6. Interventions to Enhance English Teachers' Participation in the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning: Kalahari Circuit English as a Second Language Teachers' Voices
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Lukas Matati Josua, Leena Kaunapawa Iitula, Hafeni Pamwenase Shikalepo Hamakali, and Justina Latenda Amakali
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The paucity of English teachers in Namibia's research output as well as practicing the scholarship of teaching and learning has been noticed and noted. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to evaluate the views of English teachers in the Kalahari Circuit in the ||Kharas Region in Namibia on the effect of an intervention to enhance their willingness to conduct research and publish. The study used a questionnaire to collect qualitative and quantitative biographical data from the participants. The quantitative data were analysed using simple description while qualitative data were analysed using Renner and Tylor-Powell's five steps for analysing narratives. The study revealed that, after participating in the research workshop, English teachers showed confidence to conduct research and publish their work. Furthermore, the participants suggested that the workshop should include all teachers, who need support from the agents in education. It was also found that the duration of the workshop should be extended and resources should be availed to teachers to conduct research for publication. The study recommended that this training should be rolled out to other regions while broadening the target scope.
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- 2024
7. Revenues and Expenditures for Public Elementary and Secondary Education: School Year 2021-22 (Fiscal Year 2022). First Look Report. NCES 2024-301
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National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) (ED/IES), US Census Bureau, Stephen Q. Cornman, Shannon Doyle, Clara Moore, Jeremy Phillips, and Malia R. Nelson
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This First Look report introduces new data for national and state-level public elementary and secondary revenues and expenditures for fiscal year (FY) 2022. Specifically, this report includes the following school finance data: (1) revenue and expenditure totals; (2) revenues by source; (3) expenditures by function, subfunction, and object; (4) current expenditures; (5) revenues and current expenditures per pupil; (6) expenditures from Title I funds; and (7) revenues and expenditures from COVID-19 Federal Assistance Funds. The expenditure functions include instruction, support services, food services, and enterprise operations. The support services function is further broken down into seven subfunctions: instructional staff support services, pupil support services, general administration, school administration, operations and maintenance, student transportation, other support services (such as business services).1 Objects reported within a function or subfunction include salaries and wages, employee benefits, purchased services, supplies, and equipment. The finance data used in this report are from the National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS), a component of the Common Core of Data (CCD). The CCD is one of NCES's primary survey programs on public elementary and secondary education in the United States. State education agencies (SEAs) in each of the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and the five other jurisdictions of American Samoa, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands report these data annually to NCES. The NPEFS instructions ask SEAs to report revenues and expenditures covering prekindergarten through high school public education in regular, special, and vocational schools; charter schools; and state-run education programs (such as special education schools or education programs for incarcerated youth).
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- 2024
8. Pedagogical Interventions to Support Student Belonging and Employability: Four Case Studies
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Belinda Cooke, Mariana Kaiseler, Ben Robertson, Hugo Smith, Sarah Swann, Thalita Vergilio, and Susan Smith
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Employability is not just about focusing on building the students' workplace experience but about developing their social and cultural capital through learning. In higher education, the selected pedagogies are central to that development (Pegg, 2012). Thoughtful curricular design which maximises student engagement and adopts pedagogies for career and employability learning can help to prepare students for the reality of the workplace. These pedagogies with social connection at their heart can enhance student wellbeing and their perceived sense of belonging to their course and the wider world. This can thus build more confident, reflective, and collaborative graduates who should ultimately be more employable (Rowe, Jackson and Fleming, 2023). This paper uses a qualitative approach to outline four course-based case study examples of pedagogies that strengthen the behaviours and skills that enhance students' employability. The curricular and pedagogic practices of each are examined, and significant themes from each are then synthesised. Together they demonstrate how thoughtful course design and inclusive, integrated, contextualised pedagogic approaches support the development of students' employability learning and graduate skills (Healy, 2023). The common themes from the case studies focused on self-directed, student-centred, authentic learning which encouraged students to (i) work with industry and communities to build early professional networks, (ii) engage in connected learning where the curriculum and its supporting activities and pedagogy facilitate collaborative learning, and (iii) develop confidence, a sense of belonging and professional identities through using these inclusive, collaborative learning approaches. In addition, six practical pedagogic principles are identified for course teams to utilise. These include (i) focus on inclusive practice, (ii) building students' professional identity, (iii) developing students' belonging, (iv) deep critical thinking, (v) the demystification of the workplace through the activities selected, and (vi) students leading their own learning. This paper integrates a series of reflective questions (mapped to each principle) for educational developers to consider as they design future learning activities which foster graduate skills during career and employability learning.
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- 2024
9. Conceptual and Applied Changes in the Approach to Well-Being at School--Systematic Literature Review
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Katalin Borbáth and Attila Czabaji Horváth
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This paper attempted to outline the interdisciplinary and broad path of well-being until it became a goal in the Learning Compass. The work paid special attention to positive psychology because they agreed that its insights need to be translated into positive pedagogy for the well-being of learners. So, it offers a collection and comparison of the main well-being concepts from different disciplines connected to the learning environment's psychological pedagogical, social, and economic aspects, using the systematic literature review as methodology. The paper also focuses on examples of studies of the concept of well-being, narrowing step by step to the psychological, especially the social and the subjective well-being concepts. It is proven that student well-being is closely linked to the well-being of teachers, and therefore supporting the /subjective/psychological, and professional/well-being of teachers is essential for the quality learning-teaching process and for achieving the 2030 target summarized in the Learning Compass.
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- 2024
10. Scale and Scope: Building SOTL Capacity through Collaborative Library Partnerships
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Laura Cruz and Ellysa Stern Cahoy
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Centers for Teaching and Learning (CTLs) have long collaborated with academic librarians, especially around the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, but full, reciprocal partnerships are relatively rare. This exploratory, interview-based study seeks to gain insight into how participants (n=4) experienced one such partnership, focused on building institutional capacity for engagement with scoping reviews in SoTL. Our findings reveal that these types of partnerships can have distinctive influences on participating faculty members that extend beyond a single program, service, or project. These insights illuminate the challenges and opportunities long-term partnerships present to both the institutionalization of SoTL and the evolving positionality of both educational developers and librarians (and their respective units).
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- 2024
11. A Little Transparency Goes a Long Way: TILT Enhances Student Perceptions of an Interdisciplinary Research Symposium
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Joshua A. Woods, Megan E. Doran, and Jesse Wilcox
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Transparency in learning and teaching (TILT) has been a growing topic of interest in higher education. This study aimed to examine how a simple TILT manipulation could impact a well-established, popular, interdisciplinary semester-long research symposium that involves scores of undergraduates. TILTing the instructions for this symposium had a significant effect on all three TILT components (i.e., purpose, task, and criteria). Underclassmen benefited equally to upperclassmen in terms of understanding the importance and ways to be successful. Furthermore, although both majors and nonmajors benefited from the TILTed instructions, students studying a course outside their major benefited significantly more than students taking a course within their own program of study.
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- 2024
12. Signature Moves? An Environmental Scan of the Intersection between Educational Development and SoTL
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Laura Cruz, Hillary H. Steiner, and Clare Cruz
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Although the scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) has been described as the signature pedagogy of educational development (a professional field focused on support for teaching and learning in higher education), there is little systematic evidence of the scale and scope of the SoTL support practices that centers for teaching and learning (CTLs) are currently using, how they are using them, and how these practices connect across the ecosystem of higher education. To understand the evolving intersection between educational development and SoTL, we used web scraping/content analysis to explore the current state of SoTL support at U.S.-based CTLs (as reflected in their websites), with the aim of mapping the current landscape of the signature pedagogy, nearly thirty years after Boyer first challenged us to rethink the relationships between scholarship, teaching, and learning.
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- 2024
13. Principles of Educational Programming Language Design
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Michael Kolling
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The principles of programming language design for learning and teaching have been described and discussed for several decades. Most influential was the work of Niklaus Wirth, describing principles such as simplicity, modularity, orthogonality, and readability. So why is this still an area of fundamental disagreement among educators? Why can teachers still not agree on suitable languages for novice programming? Why do we not have a programming language that is designed for education and in widespread use across the world? This paper enumerates and describes educational language design principles in the context of current systems and technologies and discusses why interpretation of these principles shifts as our discipline progresses. We evaluate what these principles mean in our current world, and why a common agreement has not developed. We discuss the relative benefits of pedagogical languages vs. industry languages and articulate why every generation of learners needs their own language.
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- 2024
14. Empowering Teachers' Learning into Action to Enhance Active Learning in the Classroom
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Chalermchai Pondongnok and Phrakhrusutheejariyawattana
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This research is a Research and Development (R&D) study aimed at developing educational innovation entitled "Online Self-Training Program to Empower Teachers' Learning into Action to Enhance Active Learning in the Classroom", and implemented in schools. The online self-training program consists of 2 projects (1) a Development project for teacher learning which includes 7 self-training modules, and (2) the implementation of an online self-training program project which includes 1 self-training module to be used as a teaching guideline. The research consists of 4 steps. The final step was an experimental study. The results of the first project found that 12 participating teachers achieved post-test scores that met the standard of 90/90. The average post-test score was statistically significantly higher than the average pre-test score. Additionally, results from the second project found that, according to students' perception scores, the average post-test score was statistically significantly higher than the average pre-test score among 500 students. The results confirm that the "Online Self-Training Program to Empower Teachers' Learning into Action to Enhance Active Learning in the Classroom," is an effective educational innovation for teachers. Therefore, it can be disseminated for the benefit of teachers in schools on a broader scale in the future. Additionally, results from the second project found that, according to students' perception scores, the average post-test score was statistically significantly higher than the average pre-test score among 500 students. The results confirm that the "Online Self-Training Program to Empower Teachers' Learning into Action to Enhance Active Learning in the Classroom" is an effective education innovation for teachers. Therefore, it can be disseminated for the benefit of teachers in schools on a broader scale in the future.
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- 2024
15. Moving from 'Good' to 'Great' SoTL: The Importance of Describing Your Research Epistemological and Ontological Traditions in Your SoTL Scholarship
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Melanie Hamilton and Brett McCollum
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This paper explores the metaphor of the "Big Tent" in the context of the scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL), highlighting the metaphor's limitations in capturing the complexities and tensions within the scholarly community. This paper delves into the conflicts arising from differing methodologies, epistemological stances, and disciplinary boundaries, viewing them as manifestations of intellectual vigor rather than weaknesses. The paper emphasizes the role of academic training in shaping our perceptions and biases towards educational research and underscores the need for acknowledging these biases in order to foster meaningful dialogue and bridge the diversity in SoTL. We revisit past research on the principles of good practice in SoTL and the shifted focus from "students" to "learners," acknowledging faculty as perpetual learners in improving teaching practices. The paper proposes an additional principle to elevate SoTL from "good" to "great": the explicit identification of our SoTL lens. This involves acknowledging our biases, disciplinary perspectives, and methodological preferences in order to enhance the transparency and richness of scholarly conversations. The paper concludes with a call to embrace selfawareness and invites others to do the same, aiming to refine our collective vision and make SoTL endeavors not just inclusive but truly transformative.
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- 2024
16. Metaphors in Teaching Dilemmas Conveyed by First-Year Science Teachers in Online Mentoring Dialogues
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E. J. Bahng, Julie A. Luft, and Jonah Firestone
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This study explored online mentoring dialogues of first-year science teachers (FYSTs) to construct a model that was informed by metaphors in teaching dilemmas. Nine teachers' yearlong threaded dialogues were archived and first analyzed by Windschitl's (2002) four dilemma categories, and later by Lakoff and Johnson's (2003) conceptual metaphor theory. Particularly, we charted conceptual metaphor systems and schematic elements of FYSTs' teaching practices in conceptual, pedagogical, cultural, and political dilemma categories using computer-mediated discourse analysis. Findings indicated that the FYSTs' mentoring dialogues were predominantly pedagogical dilemmas (64.34%), mostly related to mastering the art of facilitation. The conceptual metaphors and schematic elements include (a) "Teaching is a trip" within a path schema, (b) "Teaching is a race" within an up-down and more-less visual field schema, (c) "Teaching is policing" within a sanctioned land schema, and (d) "Teaching is building a house" within a construction site schema. This study contributes to the understanding of challenging factors that FYSTs encounter and also illustrates the functionality of the conceptual metaphors for teacher effectiveness.
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- 2024
17. ALL In: Accelerated Language Learning as a Practical Methodology for Today's ESL Classroom
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Guillermo Colls and Melissa Reeve
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The past 10 years have seen a major shift in English and English as a Second Language (ESL) placement and pedagogy in California's Community Colleges (CCC), driven by a developmental education reform movement known as acceleration. Popularized by the faculty-led California Acceleration Project (CAP), the acceleration movement focused on reducing or eliminating prerequisite pathways in English and math due to a decade's worth of state-wide data showing that each level of remediation statistically reduced a student's chances of ever reaching or completing the first transfer-level course in the respective discipline (Hern & Snell, 2010). Faculty from many of the state's 117 community colleges participated in CAP's communities of practice, starting with the first cohort in the academic year 2011-2012, and returned to develop accelerated pathways at their own colleges. As these models proved successful and the data supporting acceleration mounted, CAP leaders joined forces with the College Futures Foundation and other partners to lobby for legislative action to compel a system-wide change. The resulting legislation, Assembly Bill 705 (Cal. Assemb., 2017), was signed into law in October 2017 and implemented as of January 1, 2018. This law required that all state community college districts maximize the probability that incoming students would access and complete their first transfer-level English and math class within a year of first enrolling and that students who enrolled in ESL courses would access and complete their first transfer-level English class within three years of first enrollment (Rodriguez et al., 2022).
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- 2024
18. Teaching as Learning: Etymological Investigation, Canonical Analysis, and Experiential Reflection in the Chinese Cultural Context
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Lin Li
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Purpose: This study re-examines the relationship between "jiao" (lit. teaching) and "xue" (lit. learning)-- the foundational education concepts in the traditional Chinese cultural context--to enlighten our contemporary understandings of education and educational research. Design/Approach/Methods: This study first lays its foundation on an etymological investigation. It then integrates two mutually connected approaches--"the classics" and "the self" as method--to present a comprehensive analysis. Finally, it critically reviews the methodology used in this study. Findings: The interdependency of "xue" and "jiao" has an etymological foundation, supported by canonical doctrines and verified by individualized experiences. The interpretation of "xue" as "xiao" (to imitate) describes the origin and process of education in which the junior imitated and followed the elder, while the extended interpretation of "xue" as "jue" (to awaken) stresses the effects and functions of education. In the classical Chinese context, greater significance was placed on "xue"--the keyword concurrently connoting the meaning of "teaching" and "learning" in the modern sense. It is misleading to narrowly render the originally meaningful word group "xuexi" as "learning" in modern English. Originality/Value: This study consults sources in multiple languages and integrates both "the classics" and "the self" as method. Based on this, the etymological investigation, canonical analysis, and experiential reflection are collated to provide a rich and deep discussion. By focusing on the core characteristics and the concepts they imply, this study also touches on the key characteristics of the hieroglyphic system and the unique way of thinking it represents.
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- 2024
19. Empowering Student Learning: Examining the Significance of Student Pedagogy Advocacy in a Large University Context
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Kelsey Smart, Julia A. Chester, and Daniel Guberman
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This case study explores the impact of a student partnership in an undergraduate psychology course focused on alcohol use and disorders at a large public university in the United States. It shares insights into the process of creating a student partnership program, pairing a student with an instructor, and sharing feedback via observation notes from the student perspective. This case study highlights the value of this student partnership by detailing the course implementations inspired by observation notes and conversations about pedagogical goals. The three pedagogical goals of the partnership were to foster an accessible learning environment, increase student engagement, and structure the course based on learning outcomes. The partners share their final thoughts on the process through a discussion of the strengths of and future opportunities from this experience.
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- 2024
20. Conceptualizing SoTL: Situating One Research-Intensive University into a Broader 4M Framework
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Kelsey Harvey, Celeste Suart, Martha Cassidy-Neumiller, Fairuz Karim, Alyssa Minhas, Jacob Krone, and Julia Evanovitc
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The conceptualization of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning [SoTL] has evolved over its 30-year history. This study sought to understand how faculty, staff, and students at a research-intensive institution in Ontario, Canada label and describe SoTL. We performed an environmental scan that consisted of: 1) mining academic journal titles to identify names commonly used to describe systematic inquiry into teaching and learning; 2) a campus-wide survey of faculty, staff, and students; and 3) interviews with select faculty members who perform SoTL work. We identified several dichotomies between the findings from these three methods and discuss the meanings of these findings in relation to the 4M, micro-meso-macro-mega levels, framework.
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- 2024
21. Mathematics Teachers' Perceptions on General Pedagogical Knowledge for Teaching Pre-Engineering Students
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Yosef Kasa, Solomon Areaya, and Mulugeta Woldemichael
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This study sought to investigate university mathematics teachers' perceptions on their general pedagogical knowledge (GPK) while teaching an applied mathematics course tailored for pre-engineering students at a public university in Ethiopia. Using a case study approach, data were collected through a Likert-scale questionnaire and semi-structured interviews. Five mathematics teachers were selected using purposive sampling to investigate into their perceptions about their capabilities and the teaching methodologies they used. Quantitative data were analyzed using SPSS statistics 22, while qualitative data were analyzed thematically. Teachers exhibited diverse levels of GPK. On average, the study revealed that the teachers held a positive self-assessment of their GPK. While some teachers were assured of their skills, others feltthey needed more professional development in this domain. The findings of the study suggest that teachers' perceptions on GPK are pivotal for understanding the professional development requirements of mathematics teachers, thereby guiding endeavors to enhance undergraduate mathematics instruction.
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- 2024
22. Using Infographics to Go Public with SoTL
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Bryn Keogh, Lorelli Nowell, Eleftheria Laios, Lisa Mckendrick-Calder, Whitney Lucas Molitor, and Kerry Wilbur
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There has been a call to amplify the scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) and expand its reach by engaging with audiences outside the academy. In this paper, we share our journey in crossing disciplinary boundaries and creating a SoTL-informed infographic for public consumption. As the field of SoTL continues to evolve, infographics hold tremendous potential to communicate SoTL to various stakeholders, including educators, students, administrators, policymakers, and the public. We outline best practices in infographic development and the potential of infographics as a tool for taking SoTL public, emphasizing their visual appeal and effectiveness in conveying complex information. We conclude by discussing the implications of using infographics to advance SoTL communication. The efforts of our group serve as a valuable example of how infographics can be used to bring SoTL knowledge out of academia and into the public domain.
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- 2024
23. Starting and Sustaining an International Teacher Collaboration: Insights and Recommendations from a SoTL Project
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Lindsay J. Neill, Heather Brilla-Swenson, and Neil Haigh
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During the COVID-19 pandemic, two higher education teachers, located respectively in the United States and Aotearoa New Zealand, collaborated in the design of curricula on the relationship between identity and food for their students. Intended to help their students develop cross-cultural knowledge and relationships, they hoped that their collaboration would also benefit their professional relationship and learning at a time when these aspects of their teaching lives were negatively impacted by COVID-19. As a contribution to the scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL), they undertook, with the help of a researcher colleague, an investigation of (a) factors that influenced their ability to start and sustain a successful international collaboration, and (b) its subsequent impact on their on-going relationship and learning. In this article, the rationale, purpose, and design of the study are outlined, and findings and associated theory presented and discussed. A key conclusion reflects the relationship between the hospitality 'mindset' of the teachers and their ability to conceptualize, enact and benefit from their collaboration in meaningful ways. Insights into the way SoTL can enhance teachers' ability to navigate such periods of deep uncertainty are also presented and discussed.
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- 2024
24. Practice What We Preach?: A Review of Journal Publishing Practices Related to Reflective Writing in SoTL
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Laura Cruz, Eileen Grodziak, and Hillary H. Steiner
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Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL) scholars have long advocated for the inclusion of reflective writing as a legitimate form of scholarship. That said, for those instructors seeking to publish their reflective work, especially scholarly personal narratives (SPNs), there are persistent gaps between the aspirations of the field and the realities of scholarly publishing. The present study seeks to illuminate that gap through a systematic analysis of the policies and practices of academic journals as they pertain to the publication of reflective writing in SoTL. The ultimate aim of the study is to enable editors to close the gap between belief and practice and empower potential authors to share their reflective teaching and learning practices with others.
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- 2024
25. Blended Learning and Lab Reform: Self-Paced SoTL and Reflecting on Student Learning
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Cari Din and Martin MacInnis
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As part of a large exercise physiology laboratory (lab) reform project, we used blended learning to support graduate teaching assistants and lab technicians in developing their pedagogical knowledge and create an entry point to reflective conversations about teaching and learning. Because self-paced asynchronous online modules can enable reflective and self-determined learning, this asynchronous professional development course is punctuated with reflective questions for the instructional team preparing to teach reformed exercise physiology labs. Asynchronous course content was shared via short videos, podcasts, and readings. We debriefed this self-paced, SoTL-informed course together, in-person. This social debriefing kicked off our weekly synchronous reflective conversations about teaching and learning in a community of practice. Developing a shared language for talking about teaching, enabling student learning, practicing effective teaching, and beginning to contemplate teaching philosophies were described by graduate teaching assistants as notable aspects of this blended learning journey. Lab technicians described discovering SoTL and discussing learning challenges as helpful to their teaching. [Articles in this journal were presented at the University of Calgary Conference on Postsecondary Learning and Teaching.]
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- 2024
26. Artificial Intelligence Software in the Context of Educational Process
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Orhun Türker and Ayse Derya Kahraman
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Artificial intelligence is a popular technology that affects many fields today. Its impact is noticeable daily, especially in education, design, and other essential areas. This technology, which stands out with the convenience it creates for users and its help in organizing the workflow, will play a critical role in our lives in the future. This study is aimed to touch upon the innovations provided by artificial intelligence in the field of education and some of its basic features. Some software, especially ChatGPT, is included based on the potential of language models and their essential usage areas. In addition, in the study, it is mentioned how artificial intelligence can be evaluated as a material in text and visual form, the essential functions of artificial intelligence technologies, which are rapidly changing today, are explained in this article, and stimulating points about the current situation are mentioned for those who will work in the field.
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- 2024
27. Effects of Age on Teachers' Self-Efficacy: Evidence from Secondary Schools
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Sylvester J. O. Odanga and Peter J. O. Aloka
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The study investigated the effects of age on self-efficacy among teachers in secondary schools in Kenya. The concurrent triangulation design was adopted. A sample size of 327 teacher participants was obtained using both stratified and simple random sampling techniques. The Teacher Self-Efficacy Scale (TSES) was used to collect quantitative data. In addition, semi-structured interview was used to collect qualitative data. The reliability coefficient for the TSES was [alpha] = 0.996. The Multivariate Analysis of Variance (MANOVA) was used to test the hypothesis. Qualitative data was analyzed using thematic analysis. The MANOVA results indicate that the effect of age on teachers' self-efficacy was not significant, Wilk's [lambda] (6, 320) = 0.947, p = 0.498. Qualitative results reported a significant effect of age on teachers' self-efficacy in classroom management. The Kenyan Teachers' Service Commission should carry out periodical assessment of teachers' self-efficacy to identify teachers that are vulnerable to low self-efficacy. [Note: The page range (301-314) shown on the PDF is incorrect. The correct page range is 301-313.]
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- 2024
28. Digital Learning in Childhood: Possibilities for Pedagogical Transformation in South Africa
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Donna Hannaway
- Abstract
Background: Digital technology (DT) has already changed history, and it is transforming childhood as more and more children go online around the world. Aim: The aim of this article was to critically explore the potential of young children's digital learning (DL), while concurrently assessing the constraints. Setting: Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE) stakeholders' environments formed the setting for this study. Methods: The critical theory of technology emphasizes the need for increased democratic involvement in technical decisions. It also explores the impact of theories on technology users, affecting design, usage, and, consequently, outcomes. This study adopted an interpretative phenomenological approach to discover 10 South African ECCE stakeholders' experiences of DL with young children. Results: Firstly, findings presented the affordances of DT. Secondly, the threats of connectivity, socio-economic factors, and the availability of inappropriate content were emphasised. Thirdly, there are risks and fears associated with DL, especially with young children. Lastly, the possibilities of DL, where pedagogical transformation can take place, were interrogated. Conclusion: In the ever-evolving world of DT, the pursuit of improved educational outcomes for young children remains a paramount concern. Proven practices that improve children's learning through DT and effect change at a systemic level should be further interrogated. Contribution: This research contributes to the ongoing discourse surrounding DT in early childhood education by offering a critical examination of its challenges and opportunities. It provides insights for educators, policymakers and researchers on enhancing DL experiences for young children while considering the associated risks and benefits.
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- 2024
29. Neuropedagogy and Neuroimaging of Artificial Intelligence and Deep Learning
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Claudia De Barros Camargo and Antonio Hernández Fernández
- Abstract
Background/Purpose: This study investigates the integration of neuropedagogy, neuroimaging, artificial intelligence (AI), and deep learning in educational systems. The research aims to elucidate how these technologies can be synergistically applied to optimize learning processes based on individual neurocognitive profiles, thereby enhancing educational effectiveness. Materials/Methods: A mixed-methods approach was employed, incorporating both quantitative and qualitative analyses. The study involved 297 students and 59 teachers. Quantitative methods included exploratory factor analysis (EFA) to validate the Neuropedagogy, Neuroimaging, Artificial Intelligence, and Deep Learning Scale, and Spearman correlations to examine inter-variable relationships. Qualitative data were collected through focus groups and analyzed using selective coding. Additionally, a comparative case study using portable electroencephalography (EEG) was conducted to observe direct neurological effects of different learning approaches. Results: EFA confirmed the construct validity of the scale (KMO = 0.89, p < 0.001). Spearman correlations revealed significant positive relationships between all dimensions (0.65-0.72, p < 0.01). Multiple regression analysis indicated that AI was the strongest predictor of deep learning ([beta] = 0.39, p < 0.001). The neuroimaging case study demonstrated increased frontal and prefrontal lobe activation and enhanced theta-gamma wave synchronization in AI-supported learning tasks, suggesting more integrated information processing. Conclusion: The findings provide empirical evidence for the transformative potential of integrating neuropedagogy, neuroimaging, AI, and deep learning in education. The strong predictive relationship between AI and deep learning, coupled with the neuroimaging results, suggests that this technological convergence can significantly enhance learning processes. However, the study also highlighted the need for careful ethical considerations in its implementation. These results contribute to the growing body of knowledge on technology-enhanced learning and offer a foundation for developing more personalized and effective educational strategies.
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- 2024
30. A Systematic Literature Review of Synchronous E-Learning Challenges in Higher Education Institutions in Developing Nations during the COVID-19 Pandemic
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Tichaona Buzy Musikavanhu and Elizabeth Isabel Scheepers
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Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the transition to online learning, with synchronous e-learning becoming a critical modality in higher education institutions (HEIs) worldwide. This shift, while ensuring educational continuity, has unveiled numerous challenges, especially in developing nations where resources and infrastructure may not adequately support such a rapid transition. Purpose: This study aims to provide a systematic literature review of the challenges encountered by students in developing nations during the implementation of synchronous e-learning amid the COVID-19 pandemic. It focuses on identifying and analysing technological, pedagogical, infrastructural, socioeconomic, and health-related challenges that have impacted the efficacy of online learning. Methods: Through a systematic literature review of 43 peer-reviewed studies conducted in developing nations, dated between 2020 and 2022 sourced from the SCOPUS database, this article synthesises findings on the multifaceted challenges faced by HEIs students during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study employs a thematic analysis approach to categorise these challenges and discuss their implications for educational equity, student well-being, and the resilience of higher education systems in developing countries. Conclusions: The study underscores the need for comprehensive strategies to address the identified challenges, emphasising the importance of infrastructural improvements, pedagogical support, socioeconomic interventions, and health-focused measures. It calls for a collaborative effort among educational institutions, governments, and international organisations to enhance the resilience and inclusivity of e-learning environments, ensuring equitable access to quality education in developing nations during and beyond the pandemic.
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- 2024
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31. Latent Classes of Teacher Working Conditions in Virginia: Description, Teacher Preferences, and Contextual Factors. EdWorkingPaper No. 23-890
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Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, Luke C. Miller, James Soland, Daniel Lipscomb, Daniel W. Player, and Rachel S. White
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Many dimensions of teacher working conditions influence both teacher and student outcomes; yet, analyses of schools' overall working conditions are challenged by high correlations among the dimensions. Our study overcame this challenge by applying latent profile analysis of Virginia teachers' perceptions of school leadership, instructional agency, professional growth opportunities, rigorous instruction, managing student behavior, family engagement, physical environment, and safety. We identified four classes of schools: Supportive (61%), Unsupportive (7%), Unstructured (22%), and Structured (11%). The patterns of these classes suggest schools may face tradeoffs between factors such as more teacher autonomy for less instructional rigor or discipline. Teacher satisfaction and their stated retention intentions were correlated with their school's working conditions classes, and school contextual factors predicted class membership. By identifying formerly unseen profiles of teacher working conditions and considering the implications of being a teacher in each, decisionmakers can provide schools with targeted supports and investments.
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- 2023
32. Improving Elementary School Students' Reading Comprehension through Content-Rich Literacy Curriculum: The Effect of Structured Read-Aloud Supplements on Measures of Reading Comprehension Transfer. EdWorkingPaper No. 23-847
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Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, Douglas M. Mosher, and James S. Kim
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This study contributes to the science of teaching reading by illustrating how a ubiquitous classroom practice -- read alouds -- can be enhanced by fostering teacher language practices that support students' ability to read for understanding. This experimental study examines whether and to what extent providing "structured teacher read aloud" supplements in a social studies read aloud can allow students to leverage a familiar science schema and thereby positively impact reading comprehension outcomes. Treatment students received a single social studies read-aloud on the story of Apollo 11 with structured teacher read aloud supplements while control students received the same read-aloud story but without structured supplements. Effect sizes from hierarchical linear models indicated that students in the treatment condition significantly outperformed students in the control condition on four measures of domain-specific reading comprehension. Further exploratory analyses using structural equation modeling examined the extent that teacher language mediated the treatment effect. Results indicated that teachers going above and beyond the intervention script explained 67 percent of the treatment effect. Structured supplements for read alouds can help students see important connections between schemas, which ultimately aids in reading comprehension.
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- 2023
33. Building Relationships and Student Engagement: Increasing Social Studies Teachers' Racial Literacy and Self-Efficacy for Culturally Responsive Teaching Practices through Peer Coaching and Instructional Rounds
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Nagourney, Jessica Corinne
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Prior research indicates a connection between culturally responsive teaching practices and student engagement in the classroom. Color-evasive pedagogy, which can negatively impact students' understandings of content and course success, is also common in secondary social studies classrooms across the U.S. Factors contributing to color-evasive social studies pedagogy and the impact on student engagement were examined using Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems theory. A mixed-methods needs assessment (N = 11) explored how high school social studies teachers understand culturally responsive pedagogy and what strategies they use to create safe classroom spaces, a strategy identified as culturally responsive and capable of increasing student engagement. Findings indicated that, although social studies teachers in this context understood the importance of incorporating culturally responsive teaching practices, there was a need for comprehensive professional development to identify specific strategies to incorporate culturally responsive practices specifically. A 5-week professional learning program utilizing peer coaching sessions and instructional round observations was designed to increase self- efficacy for culturally responsive teaching practices. The program was evaluated through the collection of qualitative data, including pre- and post-interviews, audio-recordings of peer coaching sessions, and a self-report survey. Findings indicate that the professional learning program had a high-level of participant engagement and was associated with increased self- efficacy for culturally responsive teaching practices in social studies classrooms. The purely qualitative data allowed for a thorough analysis and understanding of participants' experiences. Limitations and implications for future research are discussed, acknowledging a need to connect teachers' self-efficacy for culturally responsive teaching practices with increased student engagement and learning.
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- 2023
34. STEM Integrated Curriculums in Early Childhood Education: An Exploration of Teachers' Pedagogical Beliefs and Practices
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Movahedazarhouligh, Sara, Kermani, Hengameh, and Aldemir, Jale
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Young children are perfectly adapted to learning STEM concepts. A growing body of research indicates that experiences with science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) are critical in preparing young children to think critically and creatively and solve problems. These are valuable skills young children need to succeed in school, work, and life. This raising awareness of STEM education needs has pushed for STEM integration in early childhood (EC) settings while giving limited attention to the teaching of STEM in the EC field and targeted STEM professional development programs. This qualitative study aimed to explore the EC teachers' pedagogical beliefs and practices about STEM-integrated curriculums and STEM teaching in pre-K settings after attending a series of STEM integration teacher professional development programs in an eastern state in the United States. Five EC teachers participated in in-person interviews after attending a series of professional development sessions designed to help teachers develop both content knowledge and pedagogical knowledge related to the STEM curriculum. A qualitative inductive approach was used for the data analysis. The analysis of data collected from interviews with EC teachers revealed that they were positively impacted by the STEM-integrated professional development, resources, and materials available to implement the STEM units. According to the teachers' beliefs, children were also positively impacted by their teacher's professional learning and high confidence in teaching STEM-related topics and activities. A discussion of the findings and implications for future research and practice is presented. Recommendations are also discussed for how teachers can effectively teach integrated STEM education.
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- 2023
35. Teaching or Testing, Which Matters More? The Transition among Education Levels in Turkey
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Aksoy, Erdem
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This study analyzes the alignment between the educational policy of Turkey and high-stakes tests administered for students transitioning from secondary to high school. Research questions focus on the opinions of secondary school teachers about the alignment between transit exam questions and curricula, course books and materials, and their views on high-stakes testing. The research used a survey study model utilizing the triangulation design. A total of 109 teachers from six different majors working in Ankara participated in the study. An online survey consisting of eight questions was used to get teachers' opinions. The research question was analyzed using quantitative (percentages) and qualitative (content analysis) methods. Results showed that education serves dominantly for tests emphasizing a testing-oriented education system in the current Turkish learning and teaching process, which contrasts with education policy documents targeting 2023.
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- 2023
36. How Are California School Districts Planning for Universal Prekindergarten? Results from a 2022 Survey
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Learning Policy Institute, Leung-Gagné, Melanie, Wang, Victoria, Melnick, Hanna, and Mauerman, Chris
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In 2021, California committed to providing universal prekindergarten (UPK) for all 4-year-olds and income-eligible 3-year-olds by 2025-26. UPK includes several early learning programs, including transitional kindergarten (TK), the California State Preschool Program (CSPP), Head Start, and expanded learning opportunities to provide full-day early learning and care. TK is the only UPK program that is free and universally available as part of California's public education system. Offered by local education agencies (LEAs), TK currently serves all 4-year-olds who turn 5 between September 2 and December 2 and will expand to all 4-year-olds by 2025-26. The legislature also made new investments in CSPP, a program for income-eligible 3- and 4-year-old children. Funding for CSPP is provided by the state through grants to both LEAs and community-based organizations. This report provides a snapshot of 1,108 LEAs' initial plans for UPK expansion through the analysis of a survey administered by the California Department of Education in August 2022. Key findings provide insights into LEA plans for service delivery models, facilities and transportation, instruction and assessment, workforce development, school leader development, and technical assistance needs. Notably: (1) Universal prekindergarten delivery models; (2) Facilities and transportation; (3) Instruction and assessment; (4) Workforce development; (5) Supporting school leaders; (6) Technical assistance needs; and (7) Large district approaches to UPK. These findings may help policymakers and practitioners identify areas for additional investments and supports during UPK implementation, although the authors note several data limitations and caution that initial UPK plans may have shifted over the course of the 2022-23 school year. As California moves forward with the expansion of universal prekindergarten, more research and data collection will be needed.
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- 2023
37. Through-Year Assessment: Ten Key Considerations
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National Center for the Improvement of Educational Assessment, Inc. (NCIEA), Dadey, Nathan, Evans, Carla M., and Lorié, Will
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Through-year assessment is enjoying a surge of attention. A through-year assessment program is: (1) Administered in multiple distinct sessions during a school year; and (2) Intended to support (a) the production and use of a summative determination, and (b) one additional aim. More than a dozen states are designing, piloting, or implementing versions of this assessment model to replace their current end-of-year summative test for accountability. As an organization that advises states on assessment and accountability, we understand the complexities of these kinds of assessment models. Through-year programs may provide a number of benefits, but these potential benefits must be clearly articulated and evaluated in light of their required trade-offs. The authors urge states to proceed with caution. This paper outlines ten interrelated considerations for states exploring through-year designs for their federally mandated state assessment program.
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- 2023
38. An Introduction to Considerations for Through-Year Assessment Programs: Purposes, Design, Development, Evaluation
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Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium, Dadey, Nathan, and Gong, Brian
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This document is written primarily for policy makers and state department of education staff who are considering through-year assessments, as well as consultants and contractors state departments rely on. The document identifies essential things to consider when designing or evaluating a through-year assessment program. The paper is organized into five sections. The first section provides a definition of through-year assessment, the main motivations and purposes for through-year assessments, and the tools for specifying an assessment design, including theories of action, claims, and validity arguments. The second section describes key design aspects that every through-year assessment program must address, and some options for those design aspects that distinguish through-year models. The third section discusses emerging examples of specific through-year assessment designs in terms of their design choices, challenges, and trade-offs. The fourth section provides suggestions for evaluating through-year assessment programs that go beyond current evaluation requirements for state summative assessments, such as federal Peer Review. The fifth and final section provides conclusions and a view to the future.
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- 2023
39. Quality and Inequality in Pre-Primary and Home Environment Inputs to Early Childhood Development in Egypt. Policy Research Working Paper 10317
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World Bank, Krafft, Caroline, Raikes, Abbie, Towfighian, Samira Nikaein, and Mojgani, Rebecca Sayre
- Abstract
By the time children in low- and middle-income countries start primary school, large socioeconomic disparities are evident in children's learning and development. Both pre-primary and home environments can play important roles in influencing school readiness and can contribute to disparities in early childhood development, but there is limited evidence on their relative roles in low- and middle-income countries. This paper examines how pre-primary quality, stimulation at home, and early childhood development vary by socioeconomic status for pre-primary students in the Arab Republic of Egypt. The results demonstrate substantial socioeconomic inequality in stimulation at home, more so than in pre-primary quality and inputs, although there is variation in the degree of inequality across different dimensions of pre-primary quality. "Double inequality" is observed, where students with less stimulating home environments experience slightly lower quality pre-primary inputs. There are particularly large pre-primary inequities in structural quality (physical environment) and less inequity in process quality (pedagogy). These results suggest that targeted investments in pre-primary education in Egypt are necessary to reduce inequality in school readiness but are likely insufficient to close the socioeconomic status gap in children's development. Investing in interventions to improve vulnerable children's home learning environments, as well as investing in quality pre-primary, is critical to address disparities in children's development. [This paper is a product of the World Bank's Education Global Practice. The study is the result of a collaboration between the World Bank and the Ministry of Education and Technical Education of Egypt (MOETE). It was funded by the UK Strategic Partnership for Egypt's Inclusive Growth Trust Fund and the World Bank.]
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- 2023
40. State-Led Education Reform in Delhi, India: A Case Study of the Happiness Curriculum. Case Study
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Brookings Institution, Center for Universal Education, Khanna, Devi, and Peterson, Amelia
- Abstract
The Happiness Curriculum is made up of compulsory 45-minute daily lessons with the aim of developing mindfulness, critical thinking, reflection, and social-emotional skills among students in more than 1,000 government-run schools in Delhi, India. Three units--Exploring Happiness through Learning and Awareness; Experiencing Happiness in Relationships through Feelings; and Happiness through Active Participation--based on a "triad of happiness" and the philosophy of coexistence are taught from nursery to grade 8. This case study outlines the inception, implementation, and impact of the Happiness Curriculum in the context of broader education reforms in Delhi. [For the full report, "Transforming Education for Holistic Student Development: Learning from Education System (Re)Building around the World," see ED626329. For the technical report, see ED626330. For the other case reports in this series, see British Columbia (ED626332), Iowa (ED626337), Ireland (ED626338), and International Baccalaureate (ED626342).]
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- 2023
41. Assessment of an Online Learning Module to Promote Fieldwork Educator Preparedness: A Pilot Study
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Breanna J. Chycinski, Casey E. Humphrey, and Camille Skubik-Peplaski
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Fieldwork education is a vital component of occupational therapy education. Academic fieldwork coordinators face a shortage of qualified occupational therapists who are prepared to be fieldwork educators. This pilot study aimed to evaluate the effects of an online learning module developed to prepare occupational therapists to become fieldwork educators. A pre- and post-survey were used to measure changes in perceived preparedness following completion of an online learning module. A 39-item electronic survey measured perceived preparedness of the following fieldwork educator competencies: education, supervision, evaluation, and administration. Sixteen participants completed all three components of the study: pre-survey, the learning module, and post-survey. Significant findings indicate completion of the online learning module led to participants feeling more prepared to: (a) implement a professional development plan; (b) use a variety of instructional strategies; (c) use current supervision models and theories; (d) initiate interaction to resolve conflict; (e) communicate and collaborate with academic programs to integrate the academic curriculum; (f) complete and provide the academic program with required paperwork; (g) use fieldwork evaluation tools to accurately measure student performance and provide feedback; (h) design and implement a fieldwork program in collaboration with the academic fieldwork coordinator in accordance with Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE) Standards; (i) document an organized, systematic, fieldwork program; (j) identify the legal and health care policies that directly influence fieldwork; and (k) complete an orientation for the student. Implementing an online fieldwork educator learning module had a positive impact on occupational therapists preparing for the role of Level II fieldwork educator.
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- 2023
42. The Integration of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning into the Discipline of Communication Sciences and Disorders
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Friberg, Jennifer, Hoepner, Jerry K., Sauerwein, Allison M., and Mandulak, Kerry
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McKinney (2018) has argued that for the scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) to advance within a discipline, the integration of SoTL must be closely examined and opportunities for growth in SoTL must be recognized and discussed. To that end, this paper reflects on the degree to which SoTL is integrated into communication sciences and disorders (CSD) by examining a variety of topics: perspectives and theories historically valued by our discipline, existing supports for SoTL at various levels (i.e., individual teacher-scholars, departments, institutions, and the CSD discipline as a whole), the application of SoTL findings in teaching and learning. Four specific recommendations are made because of this examination and reflection.
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- 2023
43. Effect of Semantic Encoding Strategy Instruction on Transfer of Learning in E-Learning Environments
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Telli, Esra and Altun, Arif
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This research aims to examine the effect of semantic encoding strategy instruction on students' near and far transfer performances in e-learning environments. The research was performed by experimental design. Dependent variables of the research were near and far transfer performances. Independent variable was strategy instruction on encoding. Also recalling performance was included in the research as a control variable. Research data were gathered with a transfer test containing 18 multiple-choice items. The experimental study was performed with 67 students with a medium level of recalling performance. The students were randomly assigned to experimental group I (strategy instruction+integrated content), experimental group II (strategy intruction+non-integrated content), and control group (non-integrated content). The results of this research indicated that encoding strategy instruction is essential for the transfer of learning in e-learning environments. However, it is more effective when e-learning design is integrated with encoding strategies. Therefore, it is suggested that semantic encoding strategies should be integrated into the content when designing elearning environments.
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- 2023
44. The Perceived Impact of Faculty-in-Residence Programs on Faculty Development
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Arabit, Luis, Lira, Leonard L., Johnston, Jennifer, Anastasovitou, Lina, Ma-Kellams, Christine, Hambrook, Kyle, Tiwana, Ravneet K., and Tsau, Theodore T.
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Faculty-in-Residence (FIR) programs, where students interact with faculty outside of the classroom, have shown positive effects on student success. However, most research does not look at FIR programs from a holistic perspective that examines the impact on faculty. This study investigates the perceived impact on faculty participating in FIR programs. The results add to current literature that faculty-student interactions outside of the classroom are significant for students and faculty, specifically faculty perceptions of performance in teaching and service. The results also indicate positive perceptions by faculty in research performance due to participation in the FIR program. This finding is surprising given previous research, which shows faculty who participate in FIR programs feel disadvantaged in terms of their research agenda. Furthermore, the investigation uncovers how the organizational design of the institution implementing the FIR program impacts the perceptions of program purpose and efficacy.
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- 2023
45. Practicing Teachers' Perspectives on the Purposes of Mathematics Lesson Study
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Druken, Bridget Kinsella
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Although lesson study has been shown to improve the teaching and learning of mathematics, little research has focused on reasons for engaging in it from a teacher's perspective, particularly after sustained engagement with lesson study. This qualitative study reports on thirty-three teachers from the United States who were involved in twelve lesson study cycles during a three-year partnership aimed at improving algebraic instruction for students aged 8-14 years during a period of educational reform. It used grounded theory techniques to analyse interview data to determine the purposes of lesson study from teachers' perspectives. Results highlight six purposes for engaging in a mathematics lesson study: understand reform standards, focus on student thinking, develop pedagogy, support collaboration, develop curricular materials, and learn mathematics. Particularly noticeable was its use for focusing on student mathematical thinking and understanding of reform initiatives and requirements. Research implications suggest positioning lesson study as a useful, teacher-vetted tool for unpacking educational reforms.
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- 2023
46. Metaphoric Perceptions of Anatolian High School and Vocational High School Students towards School
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Kantos, Züleyha Ertan
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This study aims to reveal the perceptions of Anatolian High School and Vocational High School students towards their schools using metaphors. For this purpose, the following questions were sought. What are the metaphoric perceptions of Anatolian High School and Vocational High School students towards their schools? How are metaphorical perceptions of Anatolian high school and Vocational High School students' schools conceptualized? What are the likes and dislikes of Anatolian and Vocational High School students about their schools? In this research, maximum diversity sampling was employed to reflect the views of students from different sampling areas and purposeful sampling methods. The study group consisted of students from an Anatolian High School and a Vocational High School in Ankara in the 2016-2017 academic year. The research was conducted with a total of two hundred students, one hundred from each high school. It was found that the students in both groups perceived the school with supervision and rules. [This study was presented as a paper at the 8th International Forum of Educational Administration.]
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- 2023
47. The Use of Mentored Inquiry Communities to Foster the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL): Outcomes of the American Occupational Therapy Association SoTL Program (2007-2017)
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Pitonyak, Jennifer S., Giles, Amanda K., George-Paschal, Lorrie A., Piernik-Yoder, Bridgett, and Taff, Steven D.
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Scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) is recognized in Boyer's model, along with discovery, integration, and application, as one of four essential scholarships and is the systematic study of teaching and learning. As such, in 2007, the American Occupational Therapy Foundation (AOTF), and later the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA), supported the development of a SoTL mentorship program in an effort to foster SoTL within the discipline of occupational therapy. This mixed-methods study describes AOTA SoTL Program outcomes across ten years, 2007-2017, gathered via survey of past program mentee (n = 50) and mentor (n = 12) participants. Results suggest that mentored inquiry communities are a useful approach to fostering SoTL collaborations. In the future, the AOTA SoTL Program and similar disciplinary-specific SoTL programs should consider additional strategies for supporting mentee participants to completion with their projects.
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- 2023
48. Can SoTL Generate High Quality Research While Maintaining Its Commitment to Inclusivity?
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McSweeney, Jill and Schnurr, Matthew
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The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL) faces an emerging challenge as it seeks to balance commitments to disciplinary inclusivity and scholarly quality. We undertake a scoping review of 64 articles across three leading SoTL journals to investigate how the literature balances these twin commitments by exploring what questions are being asked, what methods are being used, and how these may be impacting the inferences that are being made within that scholarship. We advocate for a more focused definition of SoTL that can help reinforce its legitimacy within institutional power structures of scholarship, and for partnerships across disciplinary boundaries to be a central pillar of SoTL that is both high quality and disciplinarily inclusive.
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- 2023
49. Education [Bildung]-Literality-Competence: On Competing Tasks of Public Schools and the Need for New Links between Teaching and Educational Research
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Benner, Dietrich
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Purpose: The article distinguishes between the three concepts of standardization of the tasks of pedagogical action in modern educational systems: the traditional concept of standardizing educational goals through curricula, the literacy concept of psychometric standardization, and the concept of competence, which can be developed in different ways. Design/Approach/Methods: I examine these concepts and show that traditional curricular orientations suffer from the fact that they have not developed controls over the achievement of objectives, that literacy concept allows for psychometric measurement, but this is not coordinated with the actual teaching and its goals, and that competence models only offer further possibilities if their subject-specific requirements are aligned with the educational theoretical and didactic teaching objectives. Findings: Instead of replacing traditional input control with output measurements, it is important to link teaching and educational research in such a way that competence measurements not only measure the levels of demands achieved by learners but also the quality and effectiveness of teaching. Originality/Value: The train of thought overcomes the juxtaposition of philosophy of education and empirical research and shows how the two can cooperate theoretically and empirically.
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- 2023
50. 'Flexibility, Compassion, and Support' -- A Study on Multilayer Mitigation Effects on Pedagogy and Resilience in Thai Classroom, June-September 2022
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Loima, Jyrki
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This qualitative study analyzed pedagogical effects of multilayer mitigation in a Thai classroom. The triangulated data set were confidential, comprising teachers' voluntary anonymous information, pedagogical views and opinions, respectively. First, pupils' low absence rates enabled pedagogical focus on learning losses, which were mainly skills. The second effect was related to assessment. None of the teachers mentioned test results as learning loss indicators but regarded learning and qualified assessment as dynamic processes. An interesting dilemma was the learning loss measurements by non-pedagogical experts. Mostly those were presented as test scores, working hour counts, or annual formalities. However, optimized learning strategies' research had existed for decades, being responded better by these pupils. The third effect was the improved resilience of pupils and caretakers. Initially worried parents turned relieved. Resilience fostered the intrinsic motivation of all. When compared to some countries, firmer resilience made the difference in learning loss endurance for this group. "All-inclusive" mitigation had given families meaningful support. They shared visions of community roles, mediated by teachers and school management. The latter were backed by epidemiologists and medical experts. Further studies should discuss schools in a longer timeframe. External, quantified test scores without in-depth pedagogical analyses seem outdated by the early fourth pandemic year.
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- 2023
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