54,721 results on '"uzbekistan"'
Search Results
2. Speaking Exams with Less Anxiety in Intelligent Computer-Assisted Language Assessment (ICALA): Mirroring EFL Learners' Foreign Language Anxiety, Shyness, Autonomy, and Enjoyment
- Author
-
Botir Elov, Irodakhon Abdullayeva, Laylo Raupova, Azam Kholikov, and Marguba Mirkasimova
- Abstract
A significant number of students experience anxiety when asked to speak in English. This unease, often rooted in factors such as shyness, lack of confidence, uncertainty, and a lack of motivation, can hinder their active participation during English oral exams. One of the most important goals that every English language teacher should strive to achieve is to assist pupils who are reticent in developing their self-confidence and improving their spoken English. Teachers can implement effective strategies in the classroom, particularly in online settings, to help hesitant students build confidence and speak English more comfortably. The research that is currently available on the subject of shyness and anxiety in students demonstrates that there is a significant gap in this area, and a critical examination is required. Consequently, the purpose of the current study was to investigate the impact of the implementation of Intelligent Computer-Assisted Language Assessment (ICALA) on EFL learners' shyness, foreign language anxiety, autonomy, and enjoyment. Participants in this study were 65 students attending English language institutes in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. The results of the multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) indicate that applying ICALA in performing oral tests may moderate students' shyness, foreign language anxiety, autonomy, and enjoyment in language assessment. This conclusion can be drawn from the findings of both aforementioned statistical methods. The ramifications of this investigation may be beneficial for individuals who are learning a language, those who are teaching language, and those who are making policy.
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Modeling Local Item Dependence in Cloze Tests with the Rasch Model: Applying a New Strategy
- Author
-
Barno S. Abdullaeva, Diyorjon Abdullaev, Nurislom I. Khursanov, Khurshida B. Kadirova, and Laylo Djuraeva
- Abstract
Cloze tests are commonly used in language testing as a quick measure of overall language ability or reading comprehension. A problem for the analysis of cloze tests with item response theory models is that cloze test items are locally dependent. This leads to the violation of the conditional or local independence assumption of IRT models. In this study, a new modeling strategy is suggested to circumvent the problem of local item dependence in cloze tests. This strategy involves identifying locally dependent items in the first step and combining them into polytomous items in the second step. Finally, the partial credit model is applied to the combination of dichotomous and polytomous items. Our findings showed that the new strategy results in a better model-data fit than the dichotomous model where dependence is ignored but with a lower reliability. Results also indicated that the person and item parameters from the two models highly correlate. The findings are discussed in light of the literature on managing local dependence on educational tests.
- Published
- 2024
4. Transnational Voices in Academia: Narratives of Identity and Positionality through Research and Teaching
- Author
-
Nasiba Norova and Juan David Gutiérrez
- Abstract
In this paper, we, two transnational doctoral students and language educators of color, engage in a reflexive dialogic conversation focusing on the positionality of our identities. Utilizing duoethnography research methodology, we explored our academic and professional journeys in post-secondary education in our home countries and an Anglophone context. A discussion on negotiating our positionalities in our immediate academic, professional, and sociocultural contexts is provided. We argued that unveiling one's positionality requires a prolonged reflexive engagement that assists in establishing quality in qualitative research and exploring fluidity in positionality. We closed with implications and invitations to use duoethnography as a path to self-exploration, solidarity, and allyship.
- Published
- 2024
5. Examining Local Item Dependence in a Cloze Test with the Rasch Model
- Author
-
Diyorjon Abdullaev, Djuraeva Laylo Shukhratovna, Jamoldinova Odinaxon Rasulovna, Jumanazarov Umid Umirzakovich, and Olga V. Staroverova
- Abstract
Local item dependence (LID) refers to the situation where responses to items in a test or questionnaire are influenced by responses to other items in the test. This could be due to shared prompts, item content similarity, and deficiencies in item construction. LID due to a shared prompt is highly probable in cloze tests where items are nested within a passage. The purpose of this research is to examine the occurrence and magnitude of LID in a cloze test. A cloze test was analyzed with the Rasch model and locally dependent items were identified with the residual correlations. Findings showed that three pairs of items were locally dependent. When these items were removed from the analysis, test reliability dropped but item fit and unidimensionality improved. Removing the three locally dependent items did not affect person ability mean and standard deviation, though. The findings are discussed in terms of LID detection and modeling in the context of cloze test and language testing.
- Published
- 2024
6. What Educators Can Borrow from a Successful Business Strategy Framework When Designing a New Course in Higher Education
- Author
-
Irina Kerimova
- Abstract
This article presents a new design and delivery strategy for teaching a course in higher education. For this purpose, I adapted a framework developed for business strategy success by Wrona and Ladwig (2015) to an educational context. To illustrate how the framework operates in the new context, I implemented video recorded interviews with industry representatives in a course with third-year students at Westminster International University in Tashkent. The attitudes of the students towards the videos were collected via electronic questionnaire with closed and open-ended questions. The students' positive attitudes towards the videos show the success of the strategy. However, the study was limited to one course within one international university in Uzbekistan, thus testing this strategy in larger courses is recommended for future research.
- Published
- 2024
7. The Use of English Medium Instruction in Multilingual Classrooms in Japanese Language Teaching
- Author
-
Olha Luchenko, Olha Doronina, and Yevhen Chervinko
- Abstract
Purpose: This article examines the use of English medium instruction (EMI) for teaching Japanese as a foreign language (JFL) by non-native speakers with a focus on multilingual classrooms. It also explores teachers' positive and negative beliefs about using EMI in classroom settings for JFL instruction. Methods and procedure: 274 non-native Japanese language teachers from around the world (57 countries) voluntarily participated in a survey, answering a questionnaire on Google Forms and Jotform. Both qualitative and quantitative methods were employed. The research instrument was piloted before the main study and was found to be effective and adequate to elicit the desired data. The research questions aimed to identify whether there were any relationships between the use of EMI and the multilingual classroom. Findings: The results showed a clear correlation between the extensive use of EMI and the multilingual character of JFL classrooms. Translanguaging turned out to be a common practice adopted by non-native Japanese teachers regardless of the primary language of instruction. The article concludes that EMI can be a valuable tool for JFL instruction in multilingual classrooms. Based on the investigation of the teachers' beliefs, the results showed a changing positive attitude towards English employed in JFL classrooms. Implications for research and practice: The findings can be used to further investigate EMI in JFL instructional practices in multilingual classrooms, improve the quality of JFL instruction and facilitate the integration of multilingual education into foreign language teaching. Future research can explore the effectiveness of EMI in different JFL contexts and investigate the impact of EMI on students' language learning outcomes.
- Published
- 2024
8. Primary School Students' Experiences of English Private Tutoring in Uzbekistan Using Participatory Methods
- Author
-
Anas Hajar and Almira Tabaeva
- Abstract
Private tutoring (PT) has significantly expanded worldwide in recent decades. Despite its popularity and implications for the operation of formal education systems and cultural and social development, research on English private tutoring (EPT) is still in its infancy. Guided by Bronfenbrenner's ecological theory (1994), this mixed-methods study is the first to explore the EPT experiences of primary school students (ages 11-12) in Uzbekistan using a closed-ended questionnaire and two qualitative participatory methods--group interviews and children's drawings. The questionnaire data suggest that out of 1024 students, 574 (56%) and 321 (32%) had received PT and EPT, respectively, to improve their examination scores in English and/or expand their knowledge. The 50 interviewees acted agentively by reflecting on the benefits of EPT and externalising their decreasing trust in school English teaching both verbally and visually. Furthermore, EPT did not seem to constitute financial pressure on most families because 62% indicated that their parents spent 50,000-100,000 Uzbek sum ($5-10) per month on EPT, which was largely conducted in groups in tutorial centres or within schools. To produce the desired policy effects, this study urges policymakers to enhance the quality of teaching in mainstream schooling and issue effective PT regulatory measures.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Overview of the Practice of Training Civil Servants in Post-Soviet Countries in the Context of Digitalization
- Author
-
Bannykh G., Kostina S., and Zaitseva E.
- Abstract
Modern conditions of public administration are formed in the BANI world (Grabmeier, 2020), unstable, disturbing, uniquely technological and digital. How many of today's civil servants are capable of functioning in such a world through current training and professional development systems? This issue is particularly relevant for post-Soviet countries, as most of them belong to emerging economies that are still shaping their own unique public administration system. The article is aimed at studying the practice of professional development of civil servants within the framework of additional education in post-Soviet countries in the context of digitalisation. According to the study, it is clear that the Soviet model of supplementary education for civil servants is still valid, with minor differences in the countries studied. This model is characterised by a centralised organisation of training of civil servants within the framework of specially created structures (public service academies). With the transition to digital learning, countries are differentiated by the pace and level of transition to distance and e-learning for public servants.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Gender and Socioeconomic Perspectives on Students' Emotional Well-Being during the COVID-19 Pandemic
- Author
-
Jacob Højgaard Christensen
- Abstract
This study examines emotional well-being variations among students (n = 13,398) across 5 countries during the COVID-19 pandemic. Secondary analysis is conducted using data from the "Responses to Educational Disruption Survey" (REDS), which focused on the pandemic experiences, including well-being, of 8th-grade students. The study constructs an emotional well-being scale employing bi-factor models and multidimensional item response theory, encompassing students' concerns, loneliness, social isolation, and negative emotions. Cross-analyses with gender and socioeconomic status (SES) reveal significant between-group disparities, measured by Cohen's d effect sizes. It uncovers gender gaps in emotional well-being, with girls consistently scoring lower in most countries. SES effects on emotional well-being vary among countries, with SES group distinctions generally smaller than gender disparities. Thus, gender appears to have played a more significant role than SES in relation to 8th-grade students' emotional well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Virtual Reality in Cultural Education: Cultural Integration and Academic Performance of Migrant Students in the Context of Cultural Capital
- Author
-
Zhiyang Lin, Gurgen Gukasyan, and Liliya Nasyrova
- Abstract
This research aims to investigate the correlation between the academic performance of migrant students and their cultural integration within the context of international education. Additionally, it seeks to identify an optimal acculturation strategy that enhances the academic outcomes of migrant students and explores the influence of VR technology-based learning on acculturation and academic performance. The study conducted an online survey among 1032 participants from China, Vietnam, Mongolia, Turkmenistan (studying at RUDN University in Moscow, Russian Federation), and Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan (studying at Kazan (Volga Region) Federal University in Yelabuga, Russian Federation), forming the primary sample (N = 400). The research utilized Berry's 2D acculturation model (2005) and Schwartz's questionnaire (1992) to assess acculturation strategies. A virtual reality experiment involved 100 students using Oculus Rift and Rhino-Unity technology. Academic performance, acculturation, and stress levels were measured post-virtual excursions. The SL-ASIA (26-item) and ILS (31-item) surveys assessed acculturation levels and stress. The research identified integration as the most effective acculturation strategy (35%), fostering improved academic performance, expanded cultural boundaries, and the development of global cultural capital. Analyzing the relationship between academic performance and acculturation tendencies revealed that the majority of students with "Excellent" (49%) and "Good" (59%) grades exhibited a high level of integration. Those with "Satisfactory" grades showed a tendency towards marginalization (32%). In the realm of cultural education through virtual reality technology, the study demonstrated that immersive VR learning environments can enhance academic performance, reduce psychological and acculturation stress, and multiply adaptive resources essential for acculturation in a new culture. Although the abstract highlights the research objectives, it requires modification for grammatical correctness. Additionally, the methodology for data collection and analysis needs to be explicitly mentioned for clarity.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. COVID Carving New Lenses: Transformation in Global Educators
- Author
-
Kirshner, Jean
- Abstract
This article examines how the crisis of COVID-19 became a crucible, or a means of transformation, for global educators. How teachers leverage their lived experience of teaching through the implications of COVID-19 to transform identity and practice is a new phenomenon, a merits examination. Through a collection of interviews, the ways in which the life experiences of teaching through COVID-19 worked to create new identities in teachers and new practices within the classroom is examined. Data was gathered through informal interviews from eleven educators teaching through the crisis of COVID-19 across the world, including four continents and six countries. Drawing on simple thematic analysis, a narrative approach was utilized to examine the process of transformation in teachers across the globe. The findings and analysis of this research will help those working with teachers better understand how teachers leverage a crisis be it COVID-19, or another disruptive force, as a crucible for transformation.
- Published
- 2023
13. Challenges and Constraints of Implementing Communicative Language Teaching: Teacher-Related vs. Non-Teacher-Related Factors
- Author
-
Nam, Hyunjeong
- Abstract
Concerns have long been raised regarding the constraints of CLT. The study aims to discern the exact as opposed to the supposed problems that are taken for granted as obstacles. A total of 95 in-service Korean, North American, Chinese, Uzbek English teachers participated in the study. The results reveal that none of the non-teacher-related external factors such as educational policy, class size, classroom layout, learners' English proficiency, and learners' motivation, was found to be significant for CLT. Amongst teacher-related internal factors such as teachers' language proficiency, teacher's motivation to teach, years in service, teacher competence, and training in instructional methodology, teacher competence was found to be significant. In addition to the influence of the constraints on the teaching methods, the study further investigated teachers' perception of their teaching. The results that teaching methods were selected for 'convenience' and external teaching environments as the No.1 precondition for their change to CLT suggest a need for a shift in teacher perception.
- Published
- 2023
14. Investigating the Opportunities for Digitalization in Academic Writing and Information Literacy Course
- Author
-
Tamilla Mammadova
- Abstract
The paper examines the degree of digitalization of Academic Writing and Information Literacy (hereafter AW & IL) course in the countries of the post-Soviet era. Numerous research demonstrated that digital transformation has taken place toward the teaching of AW & IL in most of the developed countries and beyond, yet little is studied about the digitalization in countries of the former Soviet Union that have passed a long way to align their education with the globe. Keeping up with the four main categories of digitalization, the paper will look at its application as a part of curriculum development, assessment, students' competency, and university maintenance. The paper employs a phenomenological approach confirmed through the qualitative analysis of 18 in-depth interviews conducted with AW & IL instructors from nine countries. The study revealed that recently AW & IL course has moved through partial digitalization, providing that the university stakeholders do not exert any necessary support.
- Published
- 2023
15. Ethical Human Participant Research in Central Asia: A Quantitative Analysis of Attitudes and Practices among Social Science Researchers Based in the Region
- Author
-
Aipara Berekeyeva, Elaine Sharplin, Matthew Courtney, and Roza Sagitova
- Abstract
Central Asian researchers are underrepresented in the global research production in social sciences, resulting in a limited Central Asian perspective on many social issues. To stimulate the production of local knowledge, it is important to develop strong research cultures, including knowledge of ethical practices in research with human participants. There is currently scarce evidence about research ethics regulations used by social science researchers working in the Central Asian region. This article reports findings from an online survey conducted in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan (n = 296) from October 2021 to January 2022. Focusing on three Central Asian countries, this article addresses the following research questions: What are the attitudes and practices of social science researchers based in Central Asia toward research ethics regulations and research ethics committees (RECs)? Is research ethics training associated with improved attitudes and practices in relation to research ethics among social scientists based in Central Asia? Is research experience associated with improved attitudes and practices in relation to research ethics among social scientists based in Central Asia? Regression analyses results demonstrate that locally based social scientists with prior research ethics training implement ethical procedures in their empirical research practice more often compared to researchers without any prior research ethics training. The preliminary findings indicate that research ethics training is positively associated with Central Asia-based social science researchers' engagement in ethical research, thus potentially increasing the amount and quality of empirical social science research produced in the region.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The Impediments to the Process of Implementing Robotics in the School Education System in Uzbekistan
- Author
-
Indira Abdullaeva Yuldashevna and Karan Khurana
- Abstract
Uzbekistan has not adopted robotics education as the school curriculum yet. However, several robotics learning centers have introduced robotics education in an informal setting. This research paper aims to highlight the essence of robotics education in Uzbekistan investigating the perception of parents and children to their full potential and identifying impediments to the process of implementing robotics in Uzbekistan. This research study involves primary and secondary research methods. A systematic literature review was conducted to examine the reflection of robotics education among primary and secondary school children. Official statistical data was gathered to prove the scope of demographics. Primary data was collected through the survey among parents whose children attended robotics classes. Ultimately, the authors have used empirical evidence to provide recommendations and solutions on how to implement robotics education effectively in Uzbekistan. Much emphasis has not been put on robotics education in Uzbekistan, despite reforms in the field of STEM education. Moreover, the condition (including teachers, lesson materials, classrooms, computers, and robotics kits) to implement robotics classes as more developed countries are doing has not been created properly, which hampers the introduction of robotics at schools. In addition, the majority of parents are not fully aware of the authentic value of robotics education in children's lives. Hence, Uzbek schools are lagging in the field of robotics.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Translanguaging as an Agentive Action: A Longitudinal Case Study of Uzbek EFL Learners in South Korea
- Author
-
Jang, Jinsil
- Abstract
With the increase in linguistic and cultural diversity in South Korea, the landscape of English education in Korean classrooms has been changing. This has led to an increased need to explore the language and literacy practices of the emergent multilingual youth in Korea where one (official) language (Korean) has been predominantly used as the medium of instruction for English teaching and learning. Addressing this need for more research on how emerging multilingual children learn English in the diverse Korean classrooms of today, this four-year longitudinal case study explored out-of-classroom English language learning experiences of three Uzbek students in South Korea. Drawing upon the conceptual framework of "translanguaging" and "agency," data were collected from various sources. I found that the actions taken by these students to learn English depended on their interlocutors, practical and academic purposes, and language ideologies embedded in contexts, which in turn influenced learners' agency and translanguaging practices. More specifically, the findings show the students exercised agency over their choice of linguistic and non-linguistic resources in order to expand their linguistic repertoires on their own accord. These findings provide implications for EFL research and pedagogy, particularly within the context of the transition from monolingual to multilingual.
- Published
- 2022
18. Deepening Education Impact: Emerging Lessons from 14 Teams Scaling Innovations in Low- and Middle-Income Countries. Ongoing Analysis from the ROSIE Project
- Author
-
Brookings Institution, Center for Universal Education, Olsen, Brad, Rodríguez, Mónica, and Elliott, Maya
- Abstract
Education is crucial for the cultivation of successful individuals, healthy communities, robust societies, strong economies, and a healing planet. Yet, while most available education measures show impressive improvement in access in low- and middle-income countries over recent decades, there remains a heartbreaking gap in educational outcomes between and within countries. While there are many attempts to address low learning outcomes around the world, many efforts abide by a short-term project mindset, limited funding, and a focus on proof-of-concept pilots. However, small-scale efforts cannot solve the challenges within education systems today. Addressing contemporary educational challenges requires coordinated action among stakeholders, ongoing evidence of impact, and an emphasis on expanding and deepening the impact of any single intervention so it reaches more learners and changes whole systems. In a word, it requires "scaling." The term "scaling" represents a range of approaches--from deliberate replication to organic diffusion to integration into national systems--that expand and deepen impact, leading to lasting improvements in people's lives. This report examines the scaling journeys of 14 regional and global education initiatives that are attempting to scale within 30 low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). The report presents empirical reflections and offers relevant guidance. [This project is supported by the Global Partnership for Education Knowledge and Innovation Exchange (KIX), a joint partnership between the Global Partnership for Education (GPE) and the International Development Research Centre (IDRC).]
- Published
- 2022
19. Exploring Audiovisual Speech Perception and Literacy Skills in Monolingual and Bilingual Children in Uzbekistan
- Author
-
Shakhlo Nematova
- Abstract
Prior research has extensively explored audiovisual speech perception and literacy skills in various linguistic contexts. Studies have shown that children's ability to integrate auditory and visual speech cues plays a crucial role in language acquisition and development (Erdener & Burnham, 2013; Lalonde & Werner, 2021). Furthermore, research highlights the importance of visual speech cues for phonological awareness and reading skills (Erdener & Burnham, 2013; Burnham, 2003). However, much of this research has been conducted within English and Indo-European language contexts (Kidd & Gracia, 2022; Share 2008), potentially limiting the generalizability of current language and literacy theories to a broader range of languages and linguistic contexts. Hence, this study aims to advance our comprehension of language and literacy development by investigating the connections between bilingualism, multimodal speech perception, and reading proficiency in the context of Uzbekistan. This research focuses on Uzbek and Russian languages, which have received comparatively less scholarly attention, thus offering a unique opportunity to enrich existing knowledge on language acquisition and literacy in diverse linguistic settings. The first study focusing on audiovisual speech perception skills in monolingual and bilinguals found that bilingualism did not significantly impact audiovisual speech perception and that the degree of cross-linguistic similarity between languages might influence the extent of reliance on visual speech cues in bilingual children, highlighting the importance of considering language-specific factors in audiovisual speech perception. The second study delved into how reading skills predict sensitivity to audiovisual and auditory speech cues, showing that reading skills predict heightened sensitivity to both audiovisual and auditory speech cues in the context of languages with transparent orthographies. The third study revealed that bilingual individuals demonstrate a reading advantage when tested in instructional languages but not in noninstructional languages; this study also showed the bidirectional cross-linguistic transfer of literacy skills across languages is possible, regardless of writing script differences. Overall, these studies collectively broaden our understanding of language acquisition and literacy development, emphasizing the significance of linguistic diversity, crosslinguistic similarities, and contextual factors in shaping children's language and literacy development. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
- Published
- 2024
20. Uncovering the Impacts of Technology Literacies and Acceptance on Emotion Regulation, Resilience, Willingness to Communicate, and Enjoyment in Intelligent Computer-Assisted Language Assessment (ICALA): An Experimental Study
- Author
-
Barno Sayfutdinovna Abdullaeva, Diyorjon Abdullaev, Feruza Abulkosimovna Rakhmatova, Laylo Djuraeva, Nigora Asqaraliyevna Sulaymonova, Zebo Fazliddinovna Shamsiddinova, and Oynisa Khamraeva
- Abstract
Acquiring technological literacy and acceptance has a significant influence on academic emotion regulation (AER), academic resilience (AR), willingness to communicate (WTC), and academic enjoyment (AE), which are crucial for the success of university students. However, this area has not been adequately explored in research, particularly in the context of Intelligent Computer-Assisted Language Assessment (ICALA). This study aimed to bridge the existing information gap by examining the impact of technology literacies and acceptance on the AER, AR, WTC, and AE levels among Uzbek university students enrolled in virtual English as a foreign language (EFL) programs with online evaluation. Quasi-experimental research was carried out with 67 university students pursuing a degree in Applied linguistics to assess the potential underlying connections. Throughout the semester, students in the experimental group were provided with instructional feedback to foster technology literacies and acceptance through a private group on Telegram. This feedback assisted them in acquiring pertinent information to improve the application of technology in language learning and assessment. Based on the results, students in EG fared better than their counterparts in the control group in terms of AER, AR, WTC, and AE in ICALA. The data indicates that in the ICALA setting, EFL learners experience unpleasant emotions, a lack of resilience, unenjoyment, and an unwillingness to communicate due to a lack of knowledge in the application of technology. The implications of the study are examined in further detail.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Development of Uzbekistan as a Transnational Higher Education Hub: Government and Institution Rationales, and Early Outcomes
- Author
-
Bobir Muratov and Stephen Wilkins
- Abstract
Between 2018 and 2022, 23 foreign higher education institutions established a campus in Uzbekistan, resulting in it becoming the nation with the third largest number of international branch campuses globally, behind China and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The purpose of this research is to understand the Uzbek government's and foreign institutions' rationales for engaging with transnational education (TNE) in Uzbekistan, as well as the founding and operational challenges, and the early outcomes. The data used in this study were obtained primarily from a range of expert stakeholders, who have expert and up-to-date knowledge on the development and operation of TNE institutions in Uzbekistan. Guided by our participants' views and the secondary data examined, an optimistic outlook is anticipated for higher education development in Uzbekistan. The paper concludes with sets of recommendations for local policy makers, TNE institutions, and host countries aspiring to elevate their higher education through TNE.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Paper Assessment or Online Assessment: Exploring the Impact of Assessment Modes on EFL Students' Language Learning Outcomes and Personal Development
- Author
-
Barno Sayfutdinovna Abdullaeva, Fidel Çakmak, and Diyorjon Abdullaev
- Abstract
This research explores how paper and online assessments (OA) can affect EFL learners' personal development variables such as self-esteem, mindfulness, demotivation, and language learning development. Sixty intermediate English as a foreign language (EFL) students participated in the current research and were randomly grouped into the experimental group (EG) and the control group (CG). Before the intervention, the data collection tools assessing language learners' self-esteem, mindfulness, demotivation, and language learning development were administered as pre-tests to all the participants. Subsequently, the EG was taught all lessons of the coursebook, Top Notch 2, by utilizing OA while the CG was taught the identical lessons using a conventional (pen and paper) assessment. In the post-treatment phase, the two groups completed the post-tests on self-esteem mindfulness, demotivation, and language learning progress. The study demonstrated that the EG group outperformed the CG group on the four post-tests. The findings indicate that the intervention of OA significantly enhanced language learning outcomes and psychological well-being regarding the measured personal development variables. The enhanced efficacy in the EG group can be ascribed to the utilization of OA during the treatment phase, which has a beneficial effect on academic and personal development. This study also posits that integrating OA augments psychological engagement and language development among EFL learners. It highlights the implications of the results associating teaching EFL via OA with the observed personal development aspects and attributes them to effects of positive psychology.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. A Scoping Review of Autism Research Conducted in Central Asia: Knowledge Gaps and Research Priorities
- Author
-
Rano Zakirova-Engstrand and Gulnoza Yakubova
- Abstract
Very little is known about the status of autism research in Central Asia. The purpose of this scoping review was to examine the scope and focus of the peer-reviewed research studies conducted with autistic people and their families in five Central Asian countries - Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. The electronic databases of EBSCO Host and Web of Science were used for systematic search of literature. Eleven articles that met eligibility criteria were included in the review and analyzed for topics and research areas outlined in the Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee Strategic Plan. Ten of these studies were conducted in Kazakhstan and one in Uzbekistan using qualitative, quantitative, and mixed-methods research designs. Five of the seven research areas - Diagnosis, Biology, Risk Factors, Services, and Treatment and Interventions - were represented in these studies, while there were no studies identified in the areas of Lifespan Issues or Infrastructure and Surveillance, highlighting a gap in research. None of the studies reported co-authorship of scientists from Central Asian countries. The review identified knowledge gaps and research needs to guide future research in autism in Central Asia to address the needs of autistic individuals and their families living in this region.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Reproducing Inequality While Celebrating Diversity: An Ethnographic Study of International Students' EMI Learning Experiences in China
- Author
-
Yawen Han and Juan Dong
- Abstract
The adoption of English medium instruction (EMI) in higher education has gained popularity in China's tertiary education as a result of globalization. International students in Chinese universities are celebrated as part of soft power projection to extend China's global impact. Informed by Piller and Cho's concept of "Neoliberalism as language policy" (2013) and Collins' "social reproduction theory" (2009, 2012), this study attempts to explore the EMI learning experiences of a cohort of international students at a border university in China. The policy documents, in-depth interviews, classroom observation, reflective journals and online interactions converge to reveal that, international students in EMI programmes experience exclusion and inequality despite the welcoming discourses of diversity. The paper highlights the necessity to pay attention to the ways in which higher education institutions reproduce inequalities of social stratification of international students through explicit and implicit institutional practices. It is argued that EMI policy in China's peripheral regions targeting international students from less-developed countries tends to perpetuate and accentuate educational inequalities. The study sheds light on a more inclusive pedagogical approach to alleviating international students' marginalisation and educating students of diverse linguistic, cultural, socioeconomic backgrounds for global citizenship in the context of China's Belt and Road Initiative.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Literature in Language Education: Exploring Teachers' Beliefs, Practices, Creativity, and Literary Competence
- Author
-
Raees Calafato
- Abstract
Given the growing movement in support of blurring the divisions between language and literature teaching, it has become increasingly vital to understand what language teachers think of literature as a language resource, the approaches they employ when teaching with it, the extent to which they can appreciate, understand, analyse, and interpret literary texts, that is, their literary competence, and whether certain traits predict such competence. Yet, research into the use of literature in language education has been primarily concerned with learners rather than teachers. This article reports on an online questionnaire-based study that explored the creativity, orientations towards literature, teaching approaches, and beliefs regarding literature of 170 language teachers in Central Asia and how these elements predicted their literary competence. Participants worked at universities in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan and were teaching Chinese, English, French, German, Russian, and Spanish as foreign languages. The findings revealed that their reading habits and creativity statistically significantly predicted their literary competence while their selection of texts was partly at odds with their professed orientations towards literature.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Chopping Carrots and Becoming 'Real' Men: Uzbek Boys, Household Work and the Reproduction of Masculinities in Post-Soviet Uzbekistan
- Author
-
Yang Zhao
- Abstract
Since Uzbekistan gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, nationalist discourses have been overtly masculinized, continuing to inform Uzbek males' daily lives. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in Uzbekistan, this article illustrates how Uzbek boys' domestic relations contribute to the way they learn to (re)produce masculinities, foregrounding a high degree of agency and utility. The analysis uncovered three themes central to the (re)production of Uzbek boyhood in Uzbek families as a site of informal learning: (1) being helpful through domestic labour; (2) being social through showing hospitality; and (3) being tarbiyali through practising national culture. Through scrutinizing the intersections of gender, education and nationalism, this article concludes by connecting Uzbek boyhood in the domestic sphere and nationalist campaigns fostering masculine hegemony in Uzbekistan's nation building process. Through domesticity -- a contentious concept in feminist criticism -- this article expands our understanding of the (re)production of boyhood in a conventionally feminized space.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Learning for Careers: What Kinds of Career Guidance and Career Education Services Do Young People Want in Europe and Central Asia?
- Author
-
European Training Foundation (ETF) (Italy), United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), Europe and Central Asia Regional Office (ECARO), Cristina Bacalso, Florian Kadletz, Nina Ferencic, Contributor, Aida Ailarova, Contributor, Pagmasuren Ganbold, Contributor, and Cristina Mereuta, Contributor
- Abstract
The European Training Foundation (ETF) and the UNICEF Europe and Central Asia Regional Office (ECARO) conducted polls and focus groups to better understand the needs, views, sentiments, and experiences of young people, mainly between the ages of 14 and 34, in relation to career guidance. The geographical focus of the research was on select countries in the Europe and Central Asia region, specifically covering Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Greece, Kosovo, Kyrgyzstan, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Romania, Serbia, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan. The research was co-designed and conducted in close collaboration, and with the full participation, of young people. The initiative's main objective has been to generate new evidence on career guidance demand and expectations among the young generations in these 11 countries and beyond. Fit-for-purpose career guidance should ideally be: a systematic combination of structured career education programs (as part of curricula throughout formal education, to be able to reach whole generations), quality online self-learning and self-help opportunities; and person-centered career guidance service offered outside of school, both face-to-face and online.
- Published
- 2024
28. Student Success in a University First-Year Statistics Course: Do Students' Characteristics Affect Their Academic Performance?
- Author
-
Alexandr Akimov, Mirela Malin, Yermone Sargsyan, Gayrat Suyunov, and Salim Turdaliev
- Abstract
In this article, we explore the drivers of students' success in a first-year university statistics course. Using a unique sample from Westminster International University in Tashkent, we discover that student engagement with their studies is reflected in their class attendance and in the use of online resources, which continue to play an important role in their academic performance. Moreover, we discovered that socio-demographic factors such as age, gender, marital status, employment, and language of instruction of prior schooling are significant in explaining student academic outcomes. These factors have important policy implications for both the university and the broader national level.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The Spatiotemporal Dynamics of Translingual Practices and Agency: A Three-Year Longitudinal Study of A Migrant Youth from Uzbekistan to South Korea
- Author
-
Jinsil Jang
- Abstract
With the large influx of Russian-speaking migrant workers and their children to South Korea, there is a growing need to explore the language and literacy practices of emerging multilingual learners. Specifically, as the Korean language is predominantly used in South Korean contexts, including school, Russian-speaking children face enormous linguistic and academic challenges and demonstrate different language practices in and out of school contexts. Drawing upon the conceptual frameworks of translingualism and agency, this three-year longitudinal case study attempts to investigate how and for what purposes an emergent multilingual youth executes his agency to engage in translingual practices within and across different contexts (in and out of school, and in an after-school program called Translingual Writing Program) and how his participation in translingual practices influences how he exercises his agency as a language learner. This study employs multiple sources of data to build a multifaceted perspective on an emerging multilingual youth's translingual practices and agency across multiple contexts over the course of three years. The findings suggest that the youth's engagement in translingual practices became more agentive and active under circumstances in which his multilingual beliefs and competence were valued, and where a relatively large number of resources were available.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Roleplaying Simulations for International Relations Education: Cases of Russian Federation and Uzbekistan
- Author
-
Arkadiy Alekseevich Eremin
- Abstract
This article reports upon roleplaying simulations used for teaching and learning subjects in the field of international relations. It is based upon five years of experience gained by the author while teaching in RUDN University in Moscow, Russia, and Webster University in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. The article aims to unravel both the value of roleplaying simulations in teaching international relations subjects, and how this practice correlates with the regional specificity of students in post-Soviet space. The main hypothesis advanced is that due to the peculiarities of traditional higher education processes in the countries of post-Soviet space, and the unique national traits of the students involved, the application of roleplaying simulations has provided additional motivation for the students. It has raised their level of immersion in their education, partially alleviating concerns about under-performance and low interest in the classroom activities among most of the students. The author argues that besides such scenario-based learning being in general a more pro-active way of learning, leading to better performance and overall facilitating competences formation process, it is specifically effective in learning environments that can be characterised as conservative and reactive, which for the most part is the case for post-Soviet space higher education.
- Published
- 2024
31. Workbook: Tools to Support Caregivers of Children with Disabilities
- Author
-
UNICEF Office of Research – Innocenti (Italy), United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), Europe and Central Asia Regional Office (ECARO), United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), Uzbekistan, and United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), Armenia
- Abstract
This document is part of a set of resources to support the marginalized caregivers of children with disabilities with inclusive education, which also includes guides for caregivers, teachers and schools, as well as templates for directories of resources and organizations to be adapted for specific systems. This workbook contains tools to be used by caregivers, teachers and other school staff to apply and work through the steps presented in the guides. Based on proof-of-concept pilots in Armenia and Uzbekistan, the tools work best when they are used in collaboration between these different stakeholders. Completing the activities in the workbook will help to identify the specific challenges caregivers face as well as to identify solutions to address them. [For "Teacher Guide to Supporting Marginalized Caregivers of Children with Disabilities," see ED624392. For "School Guide to Supporting Marginalized Families of Children with Disabilities," see ED624391. For "Caregivers' Guide to Inclusive Education," see ED624390. For "Directory of Resources to Support Caregivers of Children with Disability," see ED624411. For "Resources to Support Marginalized Caregivers of Children with Disabilities: Guidelines for Implementation," see ED624412.]
- Published
- 2022
32. Resources to Support Marginalized Caregivers of Children with Disabilities: Guidelines for Implementation
- Author
-
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) (Italy), Innocenti Research Centre, United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), Europe and Central Asia Regional Office (ECARO), United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), Armenia, United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), Uzbekistan, Nugroho, Dita, Graham, Natasha, Baghdasaryan, Bella, and Ljunggren Elisson, Malin
- Abstract
Support from caregivers is critical for children's learning both at home and at school. However, the COVID-19 pandemic and disruption of education systems globally created additional expectations for parents to support their children's learning at home. This particularly affected the most marginalized children as the crises exacerbated already existing inequalities in education. This document introduces the approach and purpose of a set of resources to support the marginalized caregivers of children with disabilities with inclusive education. It presents lessons learned from proof-of-concept pilots in Armenia and Uzbekistan, followed by step-by-step guidelines on how to adopt and adapt the resources for education ministries and others who want to implement them in their education system. The Directory of Associations and Organizations to Support Caregivers of Children with Disabilities is a template to develop a directory of local associations, organizations and networks that exist to connect and support parents and caregivers of children with disabilities. [For "Teacher Guide to Supporting Marginalized Caregivers of Children with Disabilities," see ED624392. For "School Guide to Supporting Marginalized Families of Children with Disabilities," see ED624391. For "Caregivers' Guide to Inclusive Education," see ED624390. For "Directory of Resources to Support Caregivers of Children with Disability," see ED624411. For "Workbook: Tools to Support Caregivers of Children with Disabilities," see ED624414.]
- Published
- 2022
33. Directory of Resources to Support Caregivers of Children with Disability
- Author
-
UNICEF Office of Research – Innocenti (Italy), United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), Europe and Central Asia Regional Office (ECARO), United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), Armenia, and United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), Uzbekistan
- Abstract
This document is part of a set of resources to support the marginalized caregivers of children with disabilities with inclusive education, which also includes guides for caregivers, teachers and schools, a workbook containing tools to support the activities, and a template for a directory of associations and organizations to be adapted for different systems. An initial set of helpful materials, information and links from proof-of-concept pilots in Armenia and Uzbekistan have been included, with templates to add more local resources within each system. It is designed to be a useful first place for caregivers, teachers and school staff to search for solutions to challenges they have identified while using guides. [For "Teacher Guide to Supporting Marginalized Caregivers of Children with Disabilities," see ED624392. For "School Guide to Supporting Marginalized Families of Children with Disabilities," see ED624391. For "Caregivers' Guide to Inclusive Education," see ED624390. For "Resources to Support Marginalized Caregivers of Children with Disabilities: Guidelines for Implementation," see ED624412. For "Workbook: Tools to Support Caregivers of Children with Disabilities," see ED624414.]
- Published
- 2022
34. Reopening with Resilience: Lessons from Remote Learning during COVID-19 in Europe and Central Asia
- Author
-
UNICEF Office of Research – Innocenti (Italy), Carnelli, Marta, and Dreesen, Thomas
- Abstract
When schools started closing their doors due to COVID-19, countries in Europe and Central Asia quickly provided alternative learning solutions for children to continue learning. More than 90 per cent of countries offered digital solutions to ensure that education activities could continue. However, lack of access to digital devices and a reliable internet connection excluded a significant amount of already marginalized children and threatened to widen the existing learning disparities. This report builds on existing evidence highlighting key lessons learned during the pandemic to promote learning for all during school closure and provides actionable policy recommendations on how to bridge the digital divide and build resilient education systems in Europe and Central Asia.
- Published
- 2022
35. Examining and Comparison of Education and Training Systems from Pre-School to High School in Turkiye and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, States of the Turkic World
- Author
-
Akkaya, Burcu, Celik, Sibel Acisli, and Ergin, Ismet
- Abstract
The aim of the research is to examine the structure of education and training from pre-school to high school in Turkey and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, the States of the Turkic World, and to compare them with each other. In order to achieve this aim, it has been collected through document review from the literature related to each of these states, printed scientific and official sources, and data on the official websites of the ministries of the relevant states. While analyzing the data, descriptive analysis method was used. In the research, the themes of languages of education, pre-school education, primary school education, secondary school education and high school education were created by considering the descriptive analysis method stages. The sources that can be accessed and evaluated within the scope of the research were examined within the scope of these themes. The data obtained were defined, supported by direct quotations, and interpreted by adhering to the original form of the data. At the end of the research, it was concluded that there are similarities and differences in the structure of the education and training systems of the Turkish States. Based on these results, at the end of the research, suggestions were presented for the continuation and further development of the common points and good practices in the education and training system of the Turkish States with an increasing contribution.
- Published
- 2022
36. Developing a Personalised Learning Model Based on Interactive Novels to Improve the Quality of Mathematics Education
- Author
-
Soboleva, Elena V., Zhumakulov, Khurshidzhon K., Umurkulov, Kayumzhon P., Ibragimov, Gasanguseyn I., Kochneva, Lyubov V., and Timofeeva, Maria O.
- Abstract
The lack of sufficiently developed methodological basis before graduation adversely affects the mathematical competency of future experts that are required by the modern economy. The study aims to investigate the features of the development of a personalized model of teaching mathematics by means of interactive novels to improve the quality of educational results. The main methods of research were the generalization of pedagogical experience and science literature, modelling, observation, analysis of results in AXMA Story Research methods. The chosen methods made it possible to justify the necessity of using interactive novels to personalize teaching mathematics and to confirm the qualitative improvements in the pedagogical system. Fisher's criterion was used to evaluate the results. 121 schoolchildren from Russian and Uzbek schools participated in the experiment. Individual educational routes supporting the studying of mathematical theory, problem solving in the interactive space AXMA Story Maker were developed. The peculiarities to be considered when designing a personalized model of mathematics learning by means of interactive novelties were formulated. These are the correlation between the didactic goal and the result of educational and research work in a nonlinear environment, the selection of the plot for a visual novel, the elaboration of the text component and the personalized learning track, etc. According to ANCOVA test results, the post-score of the experimental group is statistically higher than the control group. The results of the article can be used to develop ideas for personalising of learning in the digital school, as well as justification for the need for inclusion of digital interactive tools in mathematics education at all levels of education and training.
- Published
- 2022
37. The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Education: International Evidence from the Responses to Educational Disruption Survey (REDS)
- Author
-
International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA) (Netherlands), United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) (France), Meinck, Sabine, Fraillon, Julian, Strietholt, Rolf, Meinck, Sabine, Fraillon, Julian, Strietholt, Rolf, International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA) (Netherlands), and United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) (France)
- Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted education provision at an unprecedented scale, with education systems around the world being impacted by extended school closures and abrupt changes to normal school operations. The Responses to Educational Disruption Survey (REDS) investigated how teaching and learning were affected by the health crisis, and how education stakeholders responded to the educational disruption across and within countries. The study aimed to provide a systemic, multi-perspective, and comparative picture of the situation at the secondary education level (grade eight) in 11 countries spanning Africa, Asia, Arab region, Europe, and Latin America. While many other efforts exist that collect and provide similar information, they are mostly derived from non-representative rapid surveys and lack internationally comparable information from schools, collected in a systematic and scientific manner. The REDS International Report presents unique data, collected from countries, schools, teachers, and students for the first time, in chapters that cover several themes on which data were collected which include student and teacher well-being, students' academic progress during the school closures, and the measures countries have implemented to keep all children learning. Initial findings provide evidence for better orienting and tailoring policy responses to crisis and provide invaluable information on what may be required to accelerate education, recover from crisis, and to strengthen the resilience of education systems in the future. [Foreword written by Stefania Giannini and Dirk Hastedt. For "Responses to Educational Disruption Survey [REDS]: User Guide for the International Database," see ED618544.]
- Published
- 2022
38. Responses to Educational Disruption Survey [REDS]: User Guide for the International Database
- Author
-
International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA) (Netherlands) and United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) (France)
- Abstract
The Responses to Educational Disruption Survey (REDS), conducted by the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA), studied how teaching and learning were affected by the disruptions caused by COVID-19 and aimed to paint a picture of national responses to the global pandemic. REDS was based on the premise that current, robust data were needed to measure the impacts of implemented measures on education systems both across and within countries. REDS collected data from 21,063 Grade 8 (or equivalent students, 15,004 teachers, and 1,581 school principals from 11 countries. The REDS International Database (IDB) offers researchers and analysts a rich and innovative environment for examining responses to the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic in an international context. This user guide describes the organization, content, and use of the international database from a practical perspective. It is recommended to be used in conjunction with the REDS International Report (ED618542), which provides a comprehensive account of the conceptual, methodological, and analytical implementation of the study. Using both publications in combination will allow analysts to understand and confidently replicate the procedures used, as well as to correctly undertake new analyses in areas of special interest.
- Published
- 2022
39. Uzbek Learners' Opinions on the Effect of Dialect and Cultural Similarity on the Process of Foreign Language Learning
- Author
-
Albayrak, Fatma and Serin, Nilüfer
- Abstract
The aim of this research is to determine the effect of Uzbeks' views towards Turkish language and Turkish culture on language learning processes. In the study, which was designed according to the qualitative research model, a semi-structured interview form was used as a data collection tool. Interviews were held with 33 B1-level Uzbek learners who study Turkish language in language teaching centers affiliated to higher education institutions in Turkey. After the data obtained through semi-structured interviews were transcribed, the researchers carried out coding, categorization and classification according to themes on the raw data. According to the results of the study, it was revealed that Uzbek learners generally had a positive perception of Turkish language learning processes, life in Turkey and Turkish culture, and this situation was directly related to the perception that Turkey provided historical closeness, religion, language, cultural similarity and quality education and life opportunities in today's conditions for Uzbeks. In addition, it was seen that learners developed a positive attitude towards learning because they thought that they were advantageous as speakers of the same language dialects in the language learning process, and they also supported their positive view of language with the facilitating effect of vocabulary and grammatical similarity.
- Published
- 2022
40. Scaling Education Innovations for Impact in Low- and Middle-Income Countries during COVID: Reflections on Key Themes
- Author
-
Brookings Institution, Center for Universal Education and Olsen, Brad
- Abstract
Interest in scaling promising innovations to effect systemic change in education around the world has grown over the last decade. The work of scaling education innovations (up, out, down, and into deep and lasting impact) has always required nimble attention to the unpredictability of implementation. Much has been written about the need for adaptive mindsets, planning for scale at the beginning, enlisting allies and champions, and embedding continuous improvement loops into the whole process (Al-Ubaydli, List, & Suskind, 2019; Gargani & McLean, 2019; Perlman Robinson, Curtiss, & Hannahan, 2020). As challenging as scaling is under ordinary 21st-century circumstances, it has become downright arduous over the last two years due to the global COVID-19 pandemic. This first annual brief reflects on scaling insights from different scaling teams across many low- and middle-income countries to jointly learn and share best practices related to scaling in education. Effective scaling is not just about designing and delivering promising innovations for use but also embedding them in thoughtful, mutifaceted ways to ensure that they grow, deepen, and have lasting impact. This brief discusses how several teams went about this work during the difficult last year. [This project is supported by the Global Partnership for Education Knowledge and Innovation Exchange (KIX), a joint partnership between the Global Partnership for Education (GPE) and the International Development Research Centre (IDRC).]
- Published
- 2021
41. Digital Development of Education and Universities: Global Challenges of the Digital Economy
- Author
-
Abduvakhidov, Abdumalik Maxkamovich, Mannapova, Elzara Toraxanovna, and Akhmetshin, Elvir Munirovich
- Abstract
The article deals with the main aspects of the digital technology impact on education. The aim of the research is to collect and analyze most of digital technologies that have been implemented into educational system of Uzbekistan recently and to find out how they have influenced upon the development of the modern educational methods. The paper presents an assessment of the quality of education on the basis of system performance indicators, which makes it possible to evaluate education in the framework of management criteria based on the results of the participants' preparedness for practical activities. Analysing the foreign and domestic experience, the solution was found out to manage the educational system of the higher education organizations. At the same time, the work stipulates that such an approach should not violate the existing academic traditions and prevent commercial orientation of university management.
- Published
- 2021
42. COVID-19 as a Crucible: The Transformation of Global Educators
- Author
-
Kirshner, Jean
- Abstract
This article examines how the crisis of Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) became a crucible, or a means of transformation, for global educators. How teachers leverage their lived experience of teaching through the implications of COVID-19 to transform identity and practice is a new phenomenon and merits examination. Through a collection of interviews, the ways in which the life experiences of teaching through COVID-19 worked to create new identities in teachers and new practices within the classroom is examined. Data was gathered through informal interviews from eleven educators teaching through the crisis of COVID-19 across the world, including four continents and six countries. Drawing on simple thematic analysis, a narrative approach was utilized to examine the process of transformation in teachers across the globe. The findings and analysis of this research will help those working with teachers better understand how teachers leverage a crisis be it COVID-19, or another disruptive force, as a crucible for transformation.
- Published
- 2021
43. A Comparative Study on the Education Systems in the Turkic Countries
- Author
-
Ergin, Ismet, Acisli Celik, Sibel, and Akkaya, Burcu
- Abstract
The purpose of this research is to examine the structure of education and training in the Turk World and to compare them with each other. In the study, the general structure, development and current situation of the education and training systems of the Turk World has been researched in detail and compared. In this comparative study, a horizontal approach was used that examined the elements of different education systems as a whole. The education and training systems in these countries, the stages of the educational institutions, the structure of the institutions that educate students, the admission conditions of the students to the schools, the duration of education, the status of higher education, and postgraduate education were examined, and evaluated. The education and training systems of the countries in the Turk World were first researched one by one and explanations were made in the light of the gathered information, then the tables were created with the information, the information in the tables was analysed and explanations were made under the tables. In the conclusion part, the information in the tables for all countries was summarized, the current situations were compared, and evaluations were made. At the stage of data collection; printed scientific resources such as thesis, books, journals, and articles related to the education and training systems applied in the Turk World were used. The data gathered were analysed using descriptive analysis approach according to the criteria determined with the aims of the research. As a result, it has been determined that there are similarities and differences in the structure of the education and training of the Turk World, and these determinations have been revealed. The main differences achieved are; secondary education (high school) and higher education periods, and the difference in the age of starting primary school. The duration of basic education (primary school) is the same in all countries. The Turk World should establish common quality standards in education and training, reflect these standards in their programs, and carry out remedial studies to bring education and training to the level of exclusive civilizations and put them into practice as soon as possible.
- Published
- 2021
44. Task-Based Reading Activities Using Authentic Materials and Skills
- Author
-
Gavell, Mina
- Abstract
One of the biggest challenges seasoned English language teacher Mina Gavell has faced in the classroom is how to liven up reading classes. Not only is reading inherently a quiet and solo task, but the standard skills teachers are trying to build in their students--skimming, scanning, making predictions and inferences, guessing vocabulary meaning from context--require practice, practice, practice. While useful and necessary, such practice can easily come to feel repetitive, redundant, and downright boring. One solution Gavell came up with while teaching university students in Uzbekistan combines the use of authentic materials, task-based learning, and stations. This article discusses this activity and how it evolved into two separate stages, both of which can easily be adapted for a variety of needs, levels, and age groups. The strategy encourages learners to explore, make their own choices, and apply critical thinking, all while changing their physical space. It is a strategy that can be used once in a semester or on a more regular basis. The result will be a reading class that is active, engaging, and effective.
- Published
- 2021
45. The Role of Electronic Literature in the Formation of Speech Skills and Abilities of Learners and Students in Teaching Russian Language with the Uzbek Language of Learning (On the Example of Electronic Multimedia Textbook in Russian Language)
- Author
-
Khashimova, Dildora, Niyazova, Nasiba, Nasirova, Umida, Israilova, Dildora, Khikmatov, Nodir, and Fayziev, Shakhram
- Abstract
In this scientific article we take a look about education and that, one of the important components in the education of future specialists is language training. So, the main goal of teaching languages at a university is the formation and improvement of skills and abilities in the educational and professional sphere of communication, both orally and in writing. In this regard, the problem of studying language and literature by law students seems to us actual. For this reason we created self-education "Electronic multimedia textbook on the Russian language for law students" and we have discussed in this article its features, one of them is, that in the process of studying the program material, the student has the opportunity to receive current reference information. To do this, in our tutorial there is a section Reference, where a student with the help of a video can find commenting, interpretation, clarity of words and phrases, which interesting to him/her. Also we see, that the material of the textbook supports and enhances the interest of pupils and students of national groups in the country of the target language, which in turn contributes to the implementation of the principles of connection between learning and life and the development of cognitive activity of students.
- Published
- 2021
46. Skills Development and Climate Change Action Plans: Enhancing TVET's Contribution. Education 2030
- Author
-
UNESCO-UNEVOC International Centre for Technical and Vocational Education and Training (Germany) and United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) (France)
- Abstract
Climate change is an ongoing process that, at the current pace of such activities, cannot be avoided. Tools have been proposed to deal with climate change focus on adaptation and mitigation. Strengthening national and international awareness of and commitment to reducing the impact of climate change has become the only viable option to ensure the sustainability of life on Earth. The Paris Agreement entered into force in 2016 with the aim of bringing all nations together in a common goal of combating climate change and adapting to its impacts. According to the Agreement, every party should submit a climate plan laying out its adaptation and mitigation targets. Technical and vocational education and training (TVET) has the potential to play significant roles in these plans. The smooth transition to green societies and economies relies on amongst others the knowledge, skills and competencies to promote sustainable development. Effective education and training for sustainable development pivots on governance and vision, and the ability to empower people in an inclusive manner to act in favour of sustainable development. It also relies on the ability to train, upskill, reskill and empower those that can take advantage of the job growth and job creation potential in a changing economy. This discussion paper compiles and reviews relevant information regarding the country submissions (Nationally Determined Contributions and National Communications) which lay out adaptation plans and the policies created in fifty-seven selected countries. The aim is to summarize key information that can help assess the ongoing and potential contribution of TVET to the realization of these plans. The analysis made through this discussion paper has helped to generate a set of approaches for climate change adaption, through the education and training lens. These approaches can be used to advance the discussion in strengthening the technical and vocational skills development component in country climate adaptation plans. [This report was written in collaboration with Uthpala Sankalpani.]
- Published
- 2021
47. The Impact of National Independence and Globalization on the Status of English Language Instruction within Uzbekistan
- Author
-
Abdullaev, Ruslan
- Abstract
Uzbekistan is a multinational country where the Uzbek language remains the only official language within the country. While historically the Russian language has served the function of a "lingua franca" for ethnic minorities, and was often viewed as a second "mother tongue" within Uzbekistan, its status appears to be declining with assent of the English language since independence in 1991. Clearly, the English language has been viewed as a more desirable alternative to the more repressive Russian language, and was viewed as a basic opportunity to obtain an internationally based education. It is often seen as the route to better employment within a competitive global marketplace. The importance of English language instruction was underscored by the first President of Uzbekistan, Islam Karimov, and the role of English was also emphasized in both education and the media. The emphasis on continuous English language training was also included in the presidential decree. Today, English language instruction begins in the 1st grade, rather than in the 5th grade of primary school. However, with this emphasis on continuous English language instruction, have teacher education programs in Uzbekistan kept pace? Has there been financial support for the development of quality English language instruction throughout Uzbekistan's schools? Moreover, has this emphasis on quality English language instruction been universal across all populations within Uzbekistan? These issues will be examined in detail within the paper. [For the complete Volume 19 proceedings, see ED613922.]
- Published
- 2021
48. New Challenges to Education: Lessons from around the World. BCES Conference Books, Volume 19
- Author
-
Bulgarian Comparative Education Society (BCES), Popov, Nikolay, Wolhuter, Charl, de Beer, Louw, Hilton, Gillian, Ogunleye, James, Achinewhu-Nworgu, Elizabeth, Niemczyk, Ewelina, Popov, Nikolay, Wolhuter, Charl, de Beer, Louw, Hilton, Gillian, Ogunleye, James, Achinewhu-Nworgu, Elizabeth, Niemczyk, Ewelina, and Bulgarian Comparative Education Society (BCES)
- Abstract
This volume contains a collection of selected papers submitted to the 19th Annual International Conference of the Bulgarian Comparative Education Society (BCES) held in June 2021. The 19th BCES Conference theme is "New Challenges to Education: Lessons from around the World." The book includes 40 papers written by 66 authors from 15 countries. The volume starts with an introductory piece co-authored by Zoltán Rónay and Ewelina K Niemczyk. The other 39 papers are divided into 6 parts representing the thematic sections: (1) Comparative and International Education & History of Education; (2) International Organizations and Education; (3) School Education: Policies, Innovations, Practices & Entrepreneurship; (4) Higher Education & Teacher Education and Training; (5) Law and Education; and (6) Research Education & Research Practice. The papers included in this year's conference volume outline a variety of challenges all actors in the education process (students, teachers, administrators, policy decision makers) at all levels of the education systems have recently faced. Readers can find conceptual and empirical studies, quantitative and qualitative methods, descriptive and analytical approaches, and even pessimistic and optimistic authors' views. This volume presents how novel concepts, ironical definitions, and provoking considerations are born in difficult times, when restricted life meets unrestricted spirit. [Individual papers are indexed in ERIC.]
- Published
- 2021
49. The Transformations of Higher Education in 15 Post-Soviet Countries: The State, the Market and Institutional Diversification
- Author
-
Smolentseva, Anna and Platonova, Daria
- Abstract
Soviet higher education had a distinctive institutional landscape. It combined two institutional types in a uniform model that embedded higher education in the national economy. This paper focuses on the post-Soviet system-level changes in the institutional landscape in all 15 countries of the former USSR. It shows that over last three decades the Soviet two-type institutional model evolved into a three-type model, with the specialized university as a new institutional type. Highlighting the instruments of horizontal and vertical differentiation for each country, the paper explains how structural reforms and market forces led to the rise of the university/multiversity form of institution, and the strengthening of vertical stratification at system level. The comparative analysis shows that there have been different patterns of transformation in the 15 countries, shaped by unique combinations of structural reforms and marketization policies, with certain countries having made more distinctive steps away from the Soviet institutional model. There are now 15 formally different systems of higher education which poses further questions for comparative analysis.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Promoting Intercultural Competence in a Learning Activity Supported by Virtual Reality Technology
- Author
-
Shadiev, Rustam, Xueying, Wang, and Huang, Yueh Min
- Abstract
Virtual reality (VR) technology makes it possible to create an authentic virtual environment that benefits immersive learning. We designed an intercultural learning activity and applied VR technology to support it. Then, we investigated students' perceptions of the learning activity, VR technology, and intercultural competence (IC) development during learning. Students from China and Uzbekistan participated in the activity, in which a pragmatic mixed-methods approach was used. The data were collected through student reports, three questionnaires, and interviews, and then analyzed. Three main findings were obtained. First, 13 items related to perception of the learning activity were revealed. When compared with earlier studies, new items were found, including presence, immersion, and authentic cultural experience. Second, the results showed that the participants intended to continue using VR technology, were satisfied with intercultural learning supported by VR technology, and felt that the technology confirmed their expectations. Third, the results showed that intercultural learning supported by VR technology helped facilitate IC development. Based on these results, we discuss implications and offer suggestions for educators and researchers.
- Published
- 2020
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.