873 resultados para Learning processes
Resumo:
Rückmeldungen von Schülerinnen und Schülern zum Unterricht nehmen eine wichtige Rolle zur Verbesserung der Unterrichtsqualität ein. Während der Ausbildung von Lehrpersonen wird dieses Potenzial bisher aber selten genutzt. Der Beitrag stellt Ergebnisse aus dem Forschungsprojekt "Lernen im Praktikum" vor. Befragt wurden 150 Studierende des Lehramts für 7.-9. Klassen (Sekundarstufe 1) zur Bedeutung von Schülerrückmeldungen im Praktikum sowie 1331 Schülerinnen und Schüler aus Praktikumsklassen zum Praktikum und zum Lernprozess der Praktikantinnen und Praktikanten. Die Ergebnisse unterstützen einerseits die Relevanz systematischer Schülerrückmeldungen für das Lernen im Praktikum. Andererseits machen sie auf die Notwendigkeit aufmerksam, die Kriterien, die Schülerbeurteilungen zugrunde liegen, weiter zu erforschen.
Resumo:
Individuals with intellectual disabilities (ID) often struggle with learning how to read. Reading difficulties seem to be the most common secondary condition of ID. Only one in five children with mild or moderate ID achieves even minimal literacy skills. However, literacy education for children and adolescents with ID has been largely overlooked by researchers and educators. While there is little research on reading of children with ID, many training studies have been conducted with other populations with reading difficulties. The most common approach of acquiring literacy skills consists of sophisticated programs that train phonological skills and auditory perception. Only few studies investigated the influence of implicit learning on literacy skills. Implicit learning processes seem to be largely independent of age and IQ. Children are sensitive to the statistics of their learning environment. By frequent word reading they acquire implicit knowledge about the frequency of single letters and letter patterns in written words. Additionally, semantic connections not only improve the word understanding, but also facilitate storage of words in memory. Advances in communication technology have introduced new possibilities for remediating literacy skills. Computers can provide training material in attractive ways, for example through animations and immediate feedback .These opportunities can scaffold and support attention processes central to learning. Thus, the aim of this intervention study was to develop and implement a computer based word-picture training, which is based on statistical and semantic learning, and to examine the training effects on reading, spelling and attention in children and adolescents (9-16 years) diagnosed with mental retardation (general IQ 74). Fifty children participated in four to five weekly training sessions of 15-20 minutes over 4 weeks, and completed assessments of attention, reading, spelling, short-term memory and fluid intelligence before and after training. After a first assessment (T1), the entire sample was divided in a training group (group A) and a waiting control group (group B). After 4 weeks of training with group A, a second assessment (T2) was administered with both training groups. Afterwards, group B was trained for 4 weeks, before a last assessment (T3) was carried out in both groups. Overall, the results showed that the word-picture training led to substantial gains on word decoding and attention for both training groups. These effects were preserved six weeks later (group A). There was also a clear tendency of improvement in spelling after training for both groups, although the effect did not reach significance. These findings highlight the fact that an implicit statistical learning training in a playful way by motivating computer programs can not only promote reading development, but also attention in children with intellectual disabilities.
Resumo:
Better access to knowledge and knowledge production has to be reconsidered as key to successful individual and social mitigation and adaptation strategies for global change. Indeed, concepts of sustainable development imply a transformation of science towards fostering democratisation of knowledge production and the development of knowledge societies as a strategic goal. This means to open the process of scientific knowledge production while simultaneously empowering people to implement their own visions for sustainable development. Advocates of sustainability science support this transformation. In transdisciplinary practice, they advance equity and accountability in the access to and production of knowledge at the science–society interface. UNESCO points to advancements, yet Northern dominance persists in knowledge production as well as in technology design and transfer. Further, transdisciplinary practice remains experimental and hampered by inadequate and asymmetrically equipped institutions in the North and South and related epistemological and operational obscurity. To help identify clear, practicable transdisciplinary approaches, I recommend examining the institutional route – i.e., the learning and adaptation process – followed in concrete cases. The transdisciplinary Eastern and Southern Africa Partnership Programme (1998–2013) is a case ripe for such examination. Understanding transdisciplinarity as an integrative approach, I highlight ESAPP’s three key principles for a more democratised knowledge production for sustainable development: (1) integration of scientific and “non-scientific” knowledge systems; (2) integration of social actors and institutions; and (3) integrative learning processes. The analysis reveals ESAPP’s achievements in contributing to more democratic knowledge production and South ownership in the realm of sustainable development.
Resumo:
Better access to knowledge and knowledge production has to be reconsidered as key to successful individual and social mitigation and adaptation strategies for global change. Indeed, concepts of sustainable development imply a transformation of science (Lubchenco 1998; WBGU 2011 and 2012) towards fostering democratisation of knowledge production as a contribution to the development of knowledge societies as a strategic goal (UNESCO 2005). This means to open the process of scientific knowledge production while simultaneously empowering people to implement their own visions for sustainable development. Advocates of sustainability science support this transformation. In transdisciplinary practice, they advance equity and accountability in the access to and production of knowledge at the science–society interface (Hirsch Hadorn et al 2006; Hirsch Hadorn et al 2008; Jäger 2009; Adger and Jordan 2009; KFPE 2012). UNESCO (2010) points to advancements, yet Northern dominance persists in knowledge production as well as in technology design and transfer (Standing and Taylor 2007; Zingerli 2010). Further, transdisciplinary practice remains experimental and hampered by inadequate and asymmetrically equipped institutions in the North and South and related epistemological and operational obscurity (Wiesmann et al 2011). To help identify clear, practicable transdisciplinary approaches, I recommend examining the institutional route (Mukhopadhyay et al 2006) – i.e., the learning and adaptation process – followed in concrete cases. The transdisciplinary Eastern and Southern Africa Partnership Programme (1998–2013) is a case ripe for such examination. Understanding transdisciplinarity as an integrative approach (Pohl et al 2008; Stock and Burton 2011), I highlight ESAPP’s three key principles for a more democratised knowledge production for sustainable development: (1) integration of scientific and “non-scientific” knowledge systems; (2) integration of social actors and institutions; and (3) integrative learning processes. The analysis reveals ESAPP’s achievements in contributing to more democratic knowledge production and South ownership in the realm of sustainable development.
Resumo:
This paper studies the relation between coalition structures in policy processes and policy change. While different factors such as policy images, learning processes, external events, or venue shopping are important to explain policy change, coalition structures within policy processes are often neglected. However, policy change happens as a result of negotiations and coordination among coalitions within policy processes. The paper analyzes how conflict, collaboration, and power relations among coalitions of actors influence policy change in an institutional context of a consensus democracy. Empirically, I rely on a Qualitative Comparative Analysis to conduct a cross-sector comparison of the 11 most important policy processes in Switzerland between 2001 and 2006. Coalition structures with low conflict and strong collaboration among coalitions as well as structures with dominant coalitions and weak collaboration both facilitate major policy change. Competing coalitions that are separated by strong conflict but still collaborate strongly produce policy outputs that are close to the status quo.
Resumo:
Given the centrality of control for achieving success in outsourced software projects, past research has identified key exogenous factors that determine the choice of controls. This view of exogenously driven control choice is based on a number of assumptions; particularly, clients and vendors are seen as separate cognitive entities that combat opportunistic threats under environmental uncertainty by one-off choices or infrequent revisions of controls. In this paper we complement this perspective by acknowledging that an outsourced software project may be characterized as a collective, evolving process faced with the challenge of coping with cognitive limitations of both client and vendor through a continuous process of learning. We argue that if viewed in this way, controls are less subject of a deliberate choice but rather are subject of endogenously driven change, i.e. controls evolve in close interaction with the evolving software project. Accordingly, we suggest a complementary model of endogenous control, where controls mediate individual and collective learning processes. Our research contributes to a better understanding of the dynamics in outsourced software projects. It also spells out methodological implications that may help improve cross-section control research.
Resumo:
Local communities have often underestimated their endogenous potentials for innovation – potentials that could help them adapt to changing socio-cultural, political, economic and environmental conditions, to improve their livelihoods, develop their own visions, and negotiate their own priorities. While the significance of local innovation potentials for sustainable development is now increasingly acknowledged, projects and development plans rarely attempt to explicitly develop these potentials; nor do they try to disseminate local innovations within and among communities. Based on the conceptual framework of “social learning”, CDE has developed an instrument to promote existing local potential for innovation. The instrument is based on social learning processes involving different stakeholder groups in local contexts. It was successfully tested during two pilot workshops in a rural development context in the Peruvian highland. The present paper reports on the experience of these two workshops held in April and May 2004 in the communities of Tungasuca in the Cuzco Province. The paper describes the context of innovations and the methodology applied, followed by a detailed description of the contents and outcomes of the workshops, as well as the experience gained in the process. Finally it draws a set of conclusions and presents the lessons learnt.
Resumo:
Soils provide us with over 90% of all human food, livestock feed, fibre and fuel on Earth. Soils, however, have more than just productive functions. The key challenge in coming years will be to address the diverse and potentially conflicting demands now being made by human societies and other forms of life, while ensuring that future generations have the same potential to use soils and land of comparable quality. In a multi-level stakeholder approach, down-to-earth action will have to be supplemented with measures at various levels, from households to communities, and from national policies to international conventions. Knowledge systems, both indigenous and scientific, and related research and learning processes must play a central role. Ongoing action can be enhanced through a critical assessment of the impact of past achievements, and through better cooperation between people and institutions.
Resumo:
El objetivo de este trabajo es argumentar sobre la importancia del enfoque de redes de conocimiento, generado en el campo de los estudios sociales de la ciencia y la tecnología (CTS), para el análisis de las relaciones entre ciencia, universidad y sociedad. La construcción de procesos interactivos, cooperativos entre actores y el aprendizaje constituyen dimensiones clave para producir y utilizar conocimiento en la mejora del bienestar social de nuestras poblaciones. El trabajo expone brevemente las concepciones que han dominado en las políticas de ciencia y tecnología en la región latinoamericana; se argumenta sobre la importancia de los enfoques de redes de conocimiento y de la perspectiva regional y local al interior de los países, tanto para analizar la generación, intercambio y uso de conocimiento como para el diseño e implementación de políticas públicas de ciencia, tecnología e innovación; se documenta si en las nuevas concepciones de políticas de ciencia, tecnología e innovación en América Latina que destacan la importancia de la inclusión social se está adoptando el enfoque de redes de conocimiento y la perspectiva regional; y, se ofrecen, a manera de conclusiones, algunas argumentaciones sobre el futuro de las relaciones entre universidad y sociedad en lo que al desarrollo científico y tecnológico se refiere.
Resumo:
En este trabajo realizo una reflexión metodológica acerca de la incorporación de una técnica utilizada en el campo de las etnociencias a un estudio etnográfico sobre las experiencias formativas de niños indígenas y campesinos del noreste argentino. Dado que mi investigación se centra en el aprendizaje acerca de la naturaleza, la técnica del "free listing" utilizada habitualmente por las etnociencias constituyó un aporte importante a mi trabajo de campo. En este artículo examino de qué forma incorporé dicha técnica y que modificaciones realicé en pos de estudiar los procesos de aprendizaje de los niños desde una perspectiva etnográfica
Resumo:
This work belongs to the Project "Teaching and learning Psychology: a study of the educational practice in professors and beginners". It is part of an investigation program developed in the context of the subject "Didactic and Practical Planning of Psychology teaching" in which we have been working since 1998. This subject is also considered as the final stage of the formative itinerary for Psychology s professors. The reached results show the incidence that the beliefs and professors' representations have in the teaching processes. By getting into the studies centered in the educational knowledge we guide the inquiry around the development of the professor's professional knowledge and particularly the development of their formation. Our proposal contemplates a formation device which incorporates the observation, reflection, evaluation and self-evaluation of the practice in order to facilitate the reconstruction, significance and re-significance of the teaching and learning processes by giving relevance to the development of the teacher professional knowledge. The analysis of teaching practices process reveals that the mediations that cross the knowledge in the being taught instances are constituted in reflections axes. This involves the future professor's relationship with the knowledge and their projection in the construction of the professional identity.
Resumo:
En este trabajo proponemos discutir algunos puntos clave que atraviesan la problemática de las TIC y su aplicación al ámbito de la educación. En él introducimos algunas experiencias en investigación y educación que, como docentes y formadores de profesores de historia, nos condujeron a explorar el uso de las nuevas tecnologías para pensar y mediar los procesos de aprendizaje. Para ello, nos servimos fundamentalmente de dos herramientas conceptuales, el marco pedagógico-didáctico y el marco psicológico cognitivista. Luego de analizar las principales competencias necesarias desde el punto de vista del alumno para trabajar con TIC, nos detenemos en su impacto cognitivo, sobre todo en lo que respecta a la comprensión de la lectura electrónica. Abordamos, además, una reflexión crítica sobre el papel actual de las TIC en la educación media y en la formación de docentes. Puesto que no se puede negar que las nuevas herramientas de comunicación han modificado la relación que los jóvenes tienen con el acceso a la información y el mundo del conocimiento, nos preguntamos si esta condición implica reformular los esquemas de enseñanza hasta hoy conocidos para incorporar estos nuevos saberes. En definitiva, planteamos cuestiones sobre las ventajas que nos aportan las TIC, su papel como fuentes de conflictos, qué representan hoy en materia de política educativa y cuáles son los desafíos que, como docentes, podemos asumir
Resumo:
El objetivo de este trabajo es argumentar sobre la importancia del enfoque de redes de conocimiento, generado en el campo de los estudios sociales de la ciencia y la tecnología (CTS), para el análisis de las relaciones entre ciencia, universidad y sociedad. La construcción de procesos interactivos, cooperativos entre actores y el aprendizaje constituyen dimensiones clave para producir y utilizar conocimiento en la mejora del bienestar social de nuestras poblaciones. El trabajo expone brevemente las concepciones que han dominado en las políticas de ciencia y tecnología en la región latinoamericana; se argumenta sobre la importancia de los enfoques de redes de conocimiento y de la perspectiva regional y local al interior de los países, tanto para analizar la generación, intercambio y uso de conocimiento como para el diseño e implementación de políticas públicas de ciencia, tecnología e innovación; se documenta si en las nuevas concepciones de políticas de ciencia, tecnología e innovación en América Latina que destacan la importancia de la inclusión social se está adoptando el enfoque de redes de conocimiento y la perspectiva regional; y, se ofrecen, a manera de conclusiones, algunas argumentaciones sobre el futuro de las relaciones entre universidad y sociedad en lo que al desarrollo científico y tecnológico se refiere.
Resumo:
En este trabajo realizo una reflexión metodológica acerca de la incorporación de una técnica utilizada en el campo de las etnociencias a un estudio etnográfico sobre las experiencias formativas de niños indígenas y campesinos del noreste argentino. Dado que mi investigación se centra en el aprendizaje acerca de la naturaleza, la técnica del "free listing" utilizada habitualmente por las etnociencias constituyó un aporte importante a mi trabajo de campo. En este artículo examino de qué forma incorporé dicha técnica y que modificaciones realicé en pos de estudiar los procesos de aprendizaje de los niños desde una perspectiva etnográfica
Resumo:
This work belongs to the Project "Teaching and learning Psychology: a study of the educational practice in professors and beginners". It is part of an investigation program developed in the context of the subject "Didactic and Practical Planning of Psychology teaching" in which we have been working since 1998. This subject is also considered as the final stage of the formative itinerary for Psychology s professors. The reached results show the incidence that the beliefs and professors' representations have in the teaching processes. By getting into the studies centered in the educational knowledge we guide the inquiry around the development of the professor's professional knowledge and particularly the development of their formation. Our proposal contemplates a formation device which incorporates the observation, reflection, evaluation and self-evaluation of the practice in order to facilitate the reconstruction, significance and re-significance of the teaching and learning processes by giving relevance to the development of the teacher professional knowledge. The analysis of teaching practices process reveals that the mediations that cross the knowledge in the being taught instances are constituted in reflections axes. This involves the future professor's relationship with the knowledge and their projection in the construction of the professional identity.