7 resultados para teacher perception
em Repositório Institucional da Universidade de Aveiro - Portugal
Resumo:
Neste trabalho apresenta-se um quadro teórico de referência para a avaliação do ensino online, que pretende situar as actividades definidas e desenvolvidas pelos docentes no que respeita às Dimensões da Aprendizagem, da Interacção e da Tecnologia. O referencial teórico que baliza este estudo foi desenvolvido tendo em linha de conta directrizes e orientações nacionais e europeias no que diz respeito ao Ensino Superior (ES), em especial em relação à questão da qualidade do ensino e da integração das tecnologias da informação e da comunicação no currículo. Desta forma, pretendeu-se cumprir um dos objectivos desta investigação, ou seja, contribuir para o desenvolvimento de um quadro conceptual enquadrador do pensamento sobre a avaliação do eLearning no ES e, em particular, das actividades de ensino online. Com base nos pressupostos teóricos definidos, desenvolveram-se dois instrumentos de avaliação que permitem perspectivar as percepções de docentes e de alunos em relação às actividades de ensino desenvolvidas online. No sentido de se definir um público-alvo para testar estes instrumentos, levou-se a cabo um estudo empírico que compreende três fases. A Fase I foi de cariz eminentemente exploratório, uma vez que se inquiriram todos os Estabelecimentos de Ensino Superior (EES) portugueses, com vista a caracterizar o panorama nacional no que releva da utilização de plataformas de eLearning por parte dos EES portugueses, outro objectivo deste trabalho. A Fase II constituiu o momento em que se aplicou pela primeira vez o instrumento de avaliação, apenas dirigido aos docentes, uma vez que universo de respondentes, a considerar-se também os alunos, seria de difícil gestão. Na Fase III seleccionou-se um universo mais reduzido (os quatro cursos de 3.º ciclo ministrados em bLearning em Portugal no ano lectivo de 2009/10), o que permitiu efectivar uma avaliação destes cursos na perspectiva dos docentes e também dos alunos (segundo instrumento de avaliação). Analisados os resultados obtidos nestas três fases, termina-se com a convicção de que se trata de um modelo de avaliação do ensino online passível de ser aplicado ao ES. Isto porque permite não só caracterizar os vários cenários de ensino online através das dimensões de avaliação estabelecidas, como também ter uma percepção bastante clara da forma como as directrizes nacionais e europeias relativas ao ES estão a ser implementadas. Por fim, são feitas propostas para investigação futura, em especial no que se refere à disponibilização online dos instrumentos de avaliação criados e ao desenvolvimento de estudos de investigação-acção que permitam a emergência de eventuais ajustes dos instrumentos e a identificação dos efeitos da sua utilização no aperfeiçoamento das práticas de ensino online.
Resumo:
Actualmente, a formação inicial de professores do 1º ciclo tem-se centrado na flexibilidade dos processos de trabalho, nas vertentes científica e técnica e no desenvolvimento de competências (Comissão Europeia, 2001), colocando-se ainda, no entanto, a tónica no conhecimento científico. O professor deve ser capaz de se adaptar aos diferentes contextos e funções a desempenhar e de resolver situações de grande imprevisibilidade e de grande indefinição. Será que a formação inicial de professores os prepara para um futuro próximo? Que futuro? “Tentarmos descrever o futuro, a partir do agora, significa que o que fizermos hoje será criticamente importante”, porque no futuro a formação inicial de professores será construída a partir do conhecimento básico, das ideias abstractas e das descobertas cientificas que fizermos hoje. “A base do modo como hoje, no século XXI, se formam professores está no que foi descoberto e legado nos anos 60, 70, 80, 90 do século XX”. Que fazemos hoje, agora mesmo, para contribuir para esse legado? Estamos convictos que muito de nada ou muito de pouco. O que alterar? Há quem pense que os professores do 1º ciclo não são analíticos. Talvez intuitivos, mas analíticos não. Ao aceitarmos esta dicotomia estamos a “atrapalhar” o futuro. Não somos apenas analíticos. Não somos apenas intuitivos. Na prática quotidiana, nas salas de aula, não usamos apenas as ferramentas diárias, usamos também a intuição e a análise. Uma análise baseada na teoria, enquanto manifestação do nosso esforço de expressar e partilhar, ou entender a nossa experiência, para influenciar o que nos é externo. Como “ensina” a formação inicial os futuros professores a trabalhar com os outros, para os outros? Todos temos um passado, um presente e um futuro em que nos formamos e que partilhamos uns com os outros, seja pela prática, seja pela teoria. Conceitos teóricos e práticos, como identidade, profissão, socialização profissional, práticas pedagógicas, formação inicial, instituição de formação, supervisão, relações pessoais e institucionais, representações sociais são conceitos construídos individual e socialmente, sempre em relação com os outros. Que percepção têm os professores cooperantes, detentores de uma turma de crianças do 1º ciclo, que “emprestam” aos futuros professores para desenvolverem a prática pedagógica da sua formação inicial, desta formação dada na instituição de formação? Foi o que pretendemos indagar com o presente trabalho. Do ponto de vista metodológico, o estudo foi desenvolvido segundo uma metodologia de natureza qualitativa, quantitativa e interpretativa que cruzou a informação recolhida através de diferentes instrumentos de recolha de dados, como as evocações livres e hierarquizadas, em contexto normal, e evocações hierarquizadas em contexto de substituição, um Teste de Reconhecimento do Objecto e um Questionário de Caracterização do Objecto. O tratamento dos dados foi feito com os programas SPSS, Excel, EVOC 2003 e SIMI. Participaram neste estudo 93 professores cooperantes. As conclusões mais genéricas apontam no sentido de confirmar os pressupostos adiantados no enquadramento teórico, quanto à hipótese da existência de um núcleo central e um sistema periférico, numa abordagem estruturalista das representações sociais, que parecem influenciar o modo como é percepcionada a formação inicial, pelos professores cooperantes.
Resumo:
Intercultural and plurilingual encounters have become increasingly frequent due to Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) developments, mobility (real/ virtual) and migration. To face the challenges inherent in such encounters, the development of intercultural communicative competence (ICC) is crucial. ICC development may start in the home but should also be a commitment in school curricula, in particular in language classrooms. To facilitate this, language teachers require training in order to integrate the intercultural dimension into their professional practice. In such a context, we implemented a training programme entitled The Intercultural Teacher with an experimental group of language teachers from secondary schools in the Aveiro district (Portugal). In this article, we describe teachers’ social perceptions of ICC and explore the following questions: (a) what does ICC mean for language teachers?; and (b) what are teachers’ views on the development of ICC? The findings of this analysis enabled us, firstly, to design a heuristic model of ICC, based on teachers’ views and perceptions. We were then able to identify some pathways for developing ICC through teacher education, which were validated by teachers themselves.
Resumo:
This thesis addresses the problem of word learning in computational agents. The motivation behind this work lies in the need to support language-based communication between service robots and their human users, as well as grounded reasoning using symbols relevant for the assigned tasks. The research focuses on the problem of grounding human vocabulary in robotic agent’s sensori-motor perception. Words have to be grounded in bodily experiences, which emphasizes the role of appropriate embodiments. On the other hand, language is a cultural product created and acquired through social interactions. This emphasizes the role of society as a source of linguistic input. Taking these aspects into account, an experimental scenario is set up where a human instructor teaches a robotic agent the names of the objects present in a visually shared environment. The agent grounds the names of these objects in visual perception. Word learning is an open-ended problem. Therefore, the learning architecture of the agent will have to be able to acquire words and categories in an openended manner. In this work, four learning architectures were designed that can be used by robotic agents for long-term and open-ended word and category acquisition. The learning methods used in these architectures are designed for incrementally scaling-up to larger sets of words and categories. A novel experimental evaluation methodology, that takes into account the openended nature of word learning, is proposed and applied. This methodology is based on the realization that a robot’s vocabulary will be limited by its discriminatory capacity which, in turn, depends on its sensors and perceptual capabilities. An extensive set of systematic experiments, in multiple experimental settings, was carried out to thoroughly evaluate the described learning approaches. The results indicate that all approaches were able to incrementally acquire new words and categories. Although some of the approaches could not scale-up to larger vocabularies, one approach was shown to learn up to 293 categories, with potential for learning many more.
Resumo:
Identity achievement is related to personality, as well as cognitive and interpersonal development. In tandem with the deep structural changes that have taken place in society, education must also shift towards a teaching approach focused on learning and the overall development of the student. The integration of technology may be the drive to foster the needed changes. We draw on the literature of multiple subject areas as basis for our work, namely: identity construction and self-representation, within a psychological and social standpoint; Higher Education (HE) in Portugal after Bologna, college student development and other intrinsic relationships, namely the role of emotions and interpersonal relationships in the learning process; the technological evolution of storytelling towards Digital Storytelling (DS) – the Californian model – and its connections to identity and education. Ultimately we propose DS as the aggregator capable of humanizing HE while developing essential skills and competences. Grounded on an interpretative/constructivist paradigm, we implemented a qualitative case study to explore DS in HE. In three attempts to collect student data, we gathered detailed observation notes from two Story Circles; twelve student written reflections; fourteen Digital Stories and detailed observation notes from one Story Show. We carried out three focus groups with teachers where we discussed their perceptions of each student prior to and after watching the Digital Stories, in addition to their opinion on DS in HE as a teaching and learning method and its influence on interpersonal relationships. We sought understandings of the integration of DS to analyze student selfperception and self-representation in HE contexts and intersected our findings with teachers’ perceptions of their students. We compared teachers’ and students’ perspectives, through the analysis of data collected throughout the DS process – Story Circle, Story Creation and Story Show – and triangulated that information with the students’ personal reflections and teacher perceptions. Finally we questioned if and how DS may influence teachers’ perceptions of students. We found participants to be the ultimate gatekeepers in our study. Very few students and teachers voluntarily came forth to take part in the study, confirming the challenge remains in getting participants to see the value and understand the academic rigor of DS. Despite this reluctance, DS proved to be an asset for teachers and students directly and indirectly involved in the study. DS challenges HE contexts, namely teacher established perception of students; student’s own expectations regarding learning in HE; the emotional realm, the private vs. public dichotomy and the shift in educational roles.
Resumo:
This thesis explores the possibilities of spatial hearing in relation to sound perception, and presents three acousmatic compositions based on a musical aesthetic that emphasizes this relation in musical discourse. The first important characteristic of these compositions is the exclusive use of sine waves and other time invariant sound signals. Even though these types of sound signals present no variations in time, it is possible to perceive pitch, loudness, and tone color variations as soon as they move in space due to acoustic processes involved in spatial hearing. To emphasize the perception of such variations, this thesis proposes to divide a tone in multiple sound units and spread them in space using several loudspeakers arranged around the listener. In addition to the perception of sound attribute variations, it is also possible to create rhythm and texture variations that depend on how sound units are arranged in space. This strategy permits to overcome the so called "sound surrogacy" implicit in acousmatic music, as it is possible to establish cause-effect relations between sound movement and the perception of sound attribute, rhythm, and texture variations. Another important consequence of using sound fragmentation together with sound spatialization is the possibility to produce diffuse sound fields independently from the levels of reverberation of the room, and to create sound spaces with a certain spatial depth without using any kind of artificial sound delay or reverberation.
Resumo:
When developing software for autonomous mobile robots, one has to inevitably tackle some kind of perception. Moreover, when dealing with agents that possess some level of reasoning for executing their actions, there is the need to model the environment and the robot internal state in a way that it represents the scenario in which the robot operates. Inserted in the ATRI group, part of the IEETA research unit at Aveiro University, this work uses two of the projects of the group as test bed, particularly in the scenario of robotic soccer with real robots. With the main objective of developing algorithms for sensor and information fusion that could be used e ectively on these teams, several state of the art approaches were studied, implemented and adapted to each of the robot types. Within the MSL RoboCup team CAMBADA, the main focus was the perception of ball and obstacles, with the creation of models capable of providing extended information so that the reasoning of the robot can be ever more e ective. To achieve it, several methodologies were analyzed, implemented, compared and improved. Concerning the ball, an analysis of ltering methodologies for stabilization of its position and estimation of its velocity was performed. Also, with the goal keeper in mind, work has been done to provide it with information of aerial balls. As for obstacles, a new de nition of the way they are perceived by the vision and the type of information provided was created, as well as a methodology for identifying which of the obstacles are team mates. Also, a tracking algorithm was developed, which ultimately assigned each of the obstacles a unique identi er. Associated with the improvement of the obstacles perception, a new algorithm of estimating reactive obstacle avoidance was created. In the context of the SPL RoboCup team Portuguese Team, besides the inevitable adaptation of many of the algorithms already developed for sensor and information fusion and considering that it was recently created, the objective was to create a sustainable software architecture that could be the base for future modular development. The software architecture created is based on a series of di erent processes and the means of communication among them. All processes were created or adapted for the new architecture and a base set of roles and behaviors was de ned during this work to achieve a base functional framework. In terms of perception, the main focus was to de ne a projection model and camera pose extraction that could provide information in metric coordinates. The second main objective was to adapt the CAMBADA localization algorithm to work on the NAO robots, considering all the limitations it presents when comparing to the MSL team, especially in terms of computational resources. A set of support tools were developed or improved in order to support the test and development in both teams. In general, the work developed during this thesis improved the performance of the teams during play and also the e ectiveness of the developers team when in development and test phases.