990 resultados para curriculum access


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Cumple con los requisitos del curriculum nacional inglés para la etapa 3 (key stage 3) de secundaria, en el nivel 2 de inglés. Incluye actividades estructuradas para desarrollar las habilidades a nivel de texto, de oración y de palabra, así como textos de distintos géneros, de ficción y no ficción, para prácticas de lectura, escritura, conversación y comprensión oral.

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Cumple con los requisitos del curriculum nacional inglés para la etapa 3 (key stage 3) de secundaria, en el nivel 3 de inglés. Incluye actividades estructuradas para desarrollar las habilidades a nivel de texto, de oración y de palabra, así como textos de distintos géneros, de ficción y no ficción, para prácticas de lectura, escritura, conversación y comprensión oral.

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Cumple con los requisitos del curriculum nacional inglés para la etapa 3 (key stage 3) de secundaria, en el nivel 4 de inglés. Incluye actividades estructuradas para desarrollar las habilidades a nivel de texto, de oración y de palabra, así como textos de distintos géneros, de ficción y no ficción, para prácticas de lectura, escritura, conversación y comprensión oral.

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Este recurso para el profesor con material de refuerzo para la enseñanza, incluye distintos tipos de hojas para fotocopiar: unas, de apoyo a las actividades del libro del alumno, para facilitar el trabajo en clase y como hojas de tareas; otras, para la autoevaluación que ayudan a los alumnos a llegar a los objetivos. Cumple con los requisitos del curriculum nacional inglés para la etapa 3 (key stage 3) de secundaria, en el nivel 4 de inglés.

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This article presents the findings of ethnographic case studies of three girls on the autistic spectrum attending mainstream primary schools and illustrates the difficulties they experience and the ways in which these are often unrecognised. The observations of the girls and subsequent individual interviews with their mothers, class teachers, SENCO’s and ultimately themselves, reveal the personal adjustments the girls make in response to the hidden curriculum and the ways in which these go unnoticed, effectively masking their need for support, and contributing to their underachievement in school. The research also identifies a misunderstanding of autism in girls by some teachers that contributes to a lack of support for their needs, despite their diagnosis. Teachers need to understand how autistic girls present, and how they learn, if they are to recognise the need to illuminate the hidden curriculum. The implications of these findings are that without this awareness autistic girls in mainstream settings are also at risk of limited access to the known curriculum and of social isolation.

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What does it mean for curriculum to be interactive? It encourages student engagement and active participation in both individual and group work. It offers teachers a coherent set of materials to choose from that can enhance their classes. It is the product of on-going development and continuous improvement based on research and feedback from the field. This paper will introduce work in progress from the Center for Excellence in Education, Science, and Technology (CELEST), an NSF Science of Learning Center. Among its many goals, CELEST is developing a unique educational curriculum, an interactive curriculum based upon models of mind and brain. Teachers, administrators, and governments are naturally concerned with how students learn. Students are greatly concerned about how minds work, including how to learn. CELEST aims to introduce curricula that not only meet current U.S. standards in mathematics, science, and psychology but also influence plans to improve those standards. Software and support materials are in development and available at http://cns.bu.edu/celest/private/. Interested parties are invited to contact the author for access.

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CONTEXT: E-learning resources, such as virtual patients (VPs), can be more effective when they are integrated in the curriculum. To gain insights that can inform guidelines for the curricular integration of VPs, we explored students' perceptions of scenarios with integrated and non-integrated VPs aimed at promoting clinical reasoning skills. METHODS: During their paediatric clerkship, 116 fifth-year medical students were given at least ten VPs embedded in eight integrated scenarios and as non-integrated add-ons. The scenarios differed in the sequencing and alignment of VPs and related educational activities, tutor involvement, number of VPs, relevance to assessment and involvement of real patients. We sought students' perceptions on the VP scenarios in focus group interviews with eight groups of 4-7 randomly selected students (n = 39). The interviews were recorded, transcribed and analysed qualitatively. RESULTS: The analysis resulted in six themes reflecting students' perceptions of important features for effective curricular integration of VPs: (i) continuous and stable online access, (ii) increasing complexity, adapted to students' knowledge, (iii) VP-related workload offset by elimination of other activities, (iv) optimal sequencing (e.g.: lecture--1 to 2 VP(s)--tutor-led small group discussion--real patient) and (V) optimal alignment of VPs and educational activities, (vi) inclusion of VP topics in assessment. CONCLUSIONS: The themes appear to offer starting points for the development of a framework to guide the curricular integration of VPs. Their impact needs to be confirmed by studies using quantitative controlled designs.

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An effective K-12 science education is essential to succeed in future phases of the curriculum and the e-Infrastructures for education provide new opportunities to enhance it. This paper presents ViSH Viewer, an innovative web tool to consume educational content which aims to facilitate e-Science infrastructures access through a next generation learning object called "Virtual Excursion". Virtual Excursions provide a new way to explore science in class by taking advantage of e-Infrastructure resources and their integration with other educational contents, resulting in the creation of a reusable, interoperable and granular learning object. In order to better understand how this tool can allow teachers and students a joyful exploration of e-Science, we also present three Virtual Excursion examples. Details about the design, development and the tool itself are explained in this paper as well as the concept, structure and metadata of the new learning object.

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National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Office of Alcohol Countermeasures, Washington, D.C.

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National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Washington, D.C.

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National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Washington, D.C.

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National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Washington, D.C.

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DeKalb County School System, Decatur, Ga.

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National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Washington, D.C.

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Mode of access: Internet.