893 resultados para Non-formal contexts of education
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In Queensland, there is little research that speaks to the historical experiences of schooling. Aboriginal education remains a part of the silenced history of Aboriginal people. This thesis presents stories of schooling from Aboriginal people across three generations of adult storytellers. Elders, grandparents, and young parents involved in an early childhood urban playgroup were included. Stories from the children attending the playgroup were also welcomed. The research methodology involved narrative storywork. This is culturally appropriate because Aboriginal stories connect the past with the present. The conceptual framework for the research draws on decolonising theory. Typically, reports of Aboriginal schooling and outcomes position Aboriginal families and children within a deficit discourse. The issues and challenges faced by urban Murri families who have young children or children in school are largely unknown. This research allowed Aboriginal families to participate in an engaged dialogue about their childhood and offered opportunities to tell their stories of education. Key research questions were: What was the reality of school for different generations of Indigenous people? What beliefs and values are held about mainstream education for Indigenous children? What ideas are communicated about school across generations? Narratives from five elders, five grandparents, and five (urban) mothers of young Indigenous children are presented. The elders offer testimony on their recollected experiences of schooling in a mission, a Yumba school (fringe-dwellers’ camp), and country schools. Their stories also speak to the need to pass as non-indigenous and act as “white”. The next generation of storytellers are the grandparents and they speak to their lives as “stolen children”. The final story tellers are the Murri parents. They speak to the current and recent past of education, as well as their family experiences as they parent young children who are about to enter school or who are in the early years of school.
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Designing systems for multiple stakeholders requires frequent collaboration with multiple stakeholders from the start. In many cases at least some stakeholders lack a professional habit of formal modeling. We report observations from two case studies of stakeholder-involvement in early design where non-formal techniques supported strong collaboration resulting in deep understanding of requirements and of the feasibility of solutions.
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Introduction The professional doctorate is specifically designed for professionals investigating real-world problems and relevant issues for a profession, industry, and/or the community. The focus is scholarly research into professional practices. The research programme bridges academia and the professions, and offers doctoral candidates the opportunity to investigate issues relevant to their own practices and to apply these understandings to their professional contexts. The study on which this article is based sought to track the scholarly skill development of a cohort of professional doctoral students who commenced the course in January 2008 at an Australian university. Because they hold positions of responsibility and are time-poor, many doctoral students have difficulty transitioning from professional practitioner to researcher and scholar. The struggle many experience is in the development of a theoretical or conceptual standpoint for argumentation (Lesham, 2007; Weese et al., 1999). It was thought that the use of a scaffolded learning environment that drew upon a blended learning approach incorporating face to face intensive blocks and collaborative knowledge-building tools such as wikis would provide a data source for understanding the development of scholarly skills. Wikis, weblogs and similar social networking software have the potential to support communities to share, learn, create and collaborate. The development of a wiki page by each candidate in the 2008 cohort was encouraged to provide the participants and the teaching team members with textual indicators of progress. Learning tasks were scaffolded with the expectation that the candidates would complete these tasks via the wikis. The expectation was that cohort members would comment on each other’s work, together with the supervisor and/or teaching team member who was allocated to each candidate. The supervisor is responsible for supervising the candidate’s work through to submission of the thesis for examination and the teaching team member provides support to both the supervisor and the candidate through to confirmation. This paper reports on the learning journey of a cohort of doctoral students during the first seven months of their professional doctoral programme to determine if there had been any qualitative shifts in understandings, expectations and perceptions regarding their developing knowledge and skills. The paper is grounded in the literature pertaining to doctoral studies and examines the structure of the professional doctoral programme. Following this is a discussion of the qualitative study that helped to unearth key themes regarding the participants’ learning journey.
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This chapter explores inclusive education as a social imaginary; that is, a common understanding that has become a global perspective. We trace the roots of inclusive education in early movements for social justice and the development of special education and note that these two domains continue to be seen in the ongoing tensions within the practice of inclusive education. We conclude that although much has been achieved in opening up greater opportunities for all children and young people to participate in and engage with education, there is still much work to be done. Creative imagining, discursive dialogue, and courageous actions in breaking down barriers in schools and communities will strengthen the local and global social imaginary of inclusive education, thus affording even greater opportunities for all children and young people regardless of any categorisation that may have been applied to their differences.
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We present a case study of formal verification of full-wave rectifier for analog and mixed signal designs. We have used the Checkmate tool from CMU [1], which is a public domain formal verification tool for hybrid systems. Due to the restriction imposed by Checkmate it necessitates to make the changes in the Checkmate implementation to implement the complex and non-linear system. Full-wave rectifier has been implemented by using the Checkmate custom blocks and the Simulink blocks from MATLAB from Math works. After establishing the required changes in the Checkmate implementation we are able to efficiently verify, the safety properties of the full-wave rectifier.
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An extension to a formal verification approach of hybrid systems is proposed to verify analog and mixed signal (AMS) designs. AMS designs can be formally modeled as hybrid systems and therefore lend themselves to the formal analysis and verification techniques applied to hybrid systems. The proposed approach employs simulation traces obtained from an actual design implementation of AMS circuit blocks (for example, in the form of SPICE netlists) to carry out formal analysis and verification. This enables the same platform used for formally validating an abstract model of an AMS design, to be also used for validating its different refinements and design implementation; thereby, providing a simple route to formal verification at different levels of implementation. The feasibility of the proposed approach is demonstrated with a case study based on a tunnel diode oscillator. Since the device characteristic of a tunnel diode is highly non-linear with a negative resistance region, dynamic behavior of circuits in which it is employed as an element is difficult to model, analyze and verify within a general hybrid system formal verification tool. In the case study presented the formal model and the proposed computational techniques have been incorporated into CheckMate, a formal verification tool based on MATLAB and Simulink-Stateflow Framework from MathWorks.
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Experiments have shown strong effects of some substrates on the localized plasmons of metallic nano particles but they are inconclusive on the affecting parameters. Here, we have used discrete dipole approximation in conjunction with Sommerfeld integral relations to explain the effect of the substrates as a function of the parameters of incident radiation. The radiative coupling can both quench and enhance the resonance and its dependence on the angle and polarization of incident radiation with respect to the surface is shown. Non-radiative interaction with the substrate enhances the plasmon resonance of the particles and can shift the resonances from their free-space energies significantly. The non-radiative interaction of the substrate is sensitive to the shape of particles and polarization of incident radiation with respect to substrate. Our results show that the plasmon resonances in coupled and single particles can be significantly altered from their free-space resonances and are quenched or enhanced by the choice of substrate and polarization of incident radiation. (C) 2012 American Institute of Physics. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4736544]
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Esta pesquisa tem por objetivo geral analisar a dinâmica de funcionamento das atividades não formais do Colégio Estadual Guadalajara e apontar para possíveis pontes-diálogo entre educação formal e não formal nesse espaço escolar. Para atingir esse objetivo a dissertação contemplou: a) a descrição das atividades do Núcleo de Cultura do Guadá desde a sua implementação, b) a análise das possíveis relações estabelecidas entre as atividades não formais e as atividades oferecidas pela instituição a partir do proposto pela rede oficial de ensino e c) a influência do Programa Mais Educação na promoção das atividades não formais de ensino pela escola. Nesse sentido, a investigação em foco, ressalta o regime colaborativo entre o ideal de educação integral proposto pelo programa e a perspectiva de formação holística do indivíduo presente nas atividades não formais do C.E. Guadalajara. Para isso conta com aporte teórico de autores como Gohn (2010), Trilla (2008), Gadotti (2005) e Libâneo (2010) para conceituar e categorizar educação formal e não formal. E, com Ferreira (2007), Guará (2006), Cavaliere (2002) e Coelho (s/d) para esclarecer a perspectiva de educação integral e problematizá-la. Os procedimentos metodológicos adotados foram: observação não-participante, análise documental, história oral e aplicação de entrevistas semi-estruturada realizadas com as duas animadoras culturais do Núcleo de Cultura. Os resultados revelam que, de fato existem articulações pontuais entre educação formal e não formal na escola pesquisada. Este aspecto está relacionado com a participação de professores no planejamento das atividades não formais e a melhoria do rendimento dos alunos nas disciplinas formais em virtude da participação nas oficinas ofertadas pelo núcleo. No tocante a colaboração do Programa Mais Educação para a promoção das atividades não formais da escola foi constatado que o programa serviu como auxílio para subsidiar atividades que já ocorriam no espaço escolar sem seu financiamento.
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This paper discusses the use of relation algebra operations on formal contexts. These operations are a generalisation of some of the context operations that are described in the standard FCA textbook (Ganter & Wille, 1999). This paper extends previous research in this area with respect to applications and implementations. It also describes a software tool (FcaFlint) which in combination with FcaStone facilitates the application of relation algebra operations to contexts stored in many formats.
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The process of divorce as a family change process including outcomes and consequences has received considerable research attention in the western context. However, the experience of divorce for children within specific ethnic contexts has been rather limited leading to poor planning and practice provision with diverse families. By drawing upon an empirical qualitative study of British Indian adult children, this paper will make a case for recognising diverse needs within specific historical, socio-cultural and developmental contexts. There is a need to acknowledge these contexts in policy design to establish practice that is flexible, accessible and relevant to the needs of different and diverse communities. Results indicate that areas of impact may be similar to those identified by other studies within the literature review. However, the experiences, expressions, implications and larger consequences of impact are located within specific socio-cultural contexts. In support of this, major findings of the study (outlined below) will be discussed - Context: patriarchy, stigma, immigration; Impact: economic, social, emotional, career/education, physical; Coping: psychological strategies, physical strategies, social strategies, sources of support.
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Objective. The authors examined bidirectional relations between youth exposure to sectarian and nonsectarian antisocial behavior and mothers' efforts to control youths' exposure to community violence in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Design. Mother-child dyads (N = 773) were interviewed in their homes twice over 2 years regarding youths' exposure to sectarian and nonsectarian community antisocial behavior and mothers' use of control strategies, including behavioral and psychological control. Results. Youths' exposure to nonsectarian antisocial behavior was related to increases in mothers' use of behavioral and psychological control strategies over time, controlling for earlier levels of these constructs. Reflecting bidirectional relations, mothers' behavioral control strategies were associated with youths' reduced exposure to nonsectarian and sectarian antisocial behavior over time, whereas psychological control was not related to reduced exposure. Conclusion. Only nonsectarian community violence was associated longitudinally with mothers' increased use of control strategies, and only behavioral control strategies were effective in reducing youths' exposure to community antisocial behavior, including sectarian and nonsectarian antisocial behavior.
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Rates of smoking have decreased dramatically in most Northern European countries over the last 50 years or so, but manual working class groups are substantially more likely to smoke daily than are the professional and managerial classes. This article examines three hypotheses about the processes producing these inequalities. The first argues that social class inequalities reflect differences across education groups in knowledge of the risks of smoking. The second suggests that the living conditions of lower social class groups leads to the development of lower self-efficacy and a lower propensity to quit smoking. The third states that smoking has a functional use among poorer individuals. This article draws upon data from the Republic of Ireland to assess these hypotheses. Our analysis provides some support for the first hypothesis in that education independently reduces the odds of a manual class person smoking relative to a non-manual by 12 per cent. The second hypothesis is not supported by the data. The third hypothesis gains the most support: measures of disadvantage and deprivation account for almost one-third of the class differential in smoking. The results suggest that smoking cessation policy should reflect the importance of social and economic context in quitting behaviour.
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In addressing educational disengagement, government policy in England focuses primarily on raising the age of educational participation, promoting vocationalism and directing resources at the population of young people not engaged in any education, employment or training (NEETs). However, ‘disengagement’ is a more fluid and dynamic concept than policy allows for and is visible within a wide range of students, even those deemed to be engaged by their presence in education and educational settings. This paper presents students’ accounts of their educational experiences which suggest that the context of the classroom, student–teacher relationships, peer relationships and pedagogical methods used in classrooms are salient factors in understanding engagement.
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Esta dissertação enquadra-se no âmbito do projeto de investigação “Arqueologia das Aprendizagens no Concelho de Alandroal”1, promovido pelo Centro de Investigação em Educação e Psicologia da Universidade de Évora. Este projeto visa apurar quais as aprendizagens disponíveis neste concelho entre 1997 e 2007, bem como determinar o que foi aprendido pela população em contextos formais e não-formais. É também objetivo deste projeto descobrir o que mudou na vidas das pessoas e da comunidade, ou seja verificar qual o impacto das aprendizagens e dos investimentos realizados num território que apresenta uma das mais elevadas taxas de analfabetismo e uma baixa taxa de qualificação. A presente dissertação partilha destes objetivos mas centra-se na dimensão das aprendizagens de âmbito profissional. O principal contributo deste trabalho de investigação é a apresentação do estudo relativo às aprendizagens de âmbito profissional concretizadas pela população do Alandroal, no período 1997-2007 e respetivas consequências a nível das trajetórias pessoais e profissionais. Este estudo é completado pela apresentação de importantes conclusões, retiradas da análise dos dados que foram recolhidos durante a realização do projeto “Arqueologia das Aprendizagens no Concelho de Alandroal”; ABSTRACT:This thesis is included in the research project, with the title: “Learning Arqueology in Alandroal”2, promoted by the Centre for Research in Education and Psychology of the University of Évora, in Portugal. That project targets the identification of which learning processes were available in Alandroal, during the period between 1997 and 2007, and to determine what has been learned by the population in formal and non-formal contexts. Also, that study aims to discover, what were the changes, in persons ‘lives and within the community. In summary, the project aims to verify the impact of the learning processes, as well as the impact of the investments made, on a territory that presents one of the highest levels of illiteracy, followed by a low qualification level. Now, the research work here presented, shares those same objectives, but it’s focused on the professional education. The main contribute of this research study, is to present the consequences of those professional’s learning, developed by the population of Alandroal, for the personal and professional choices and trajectories of that same population, between the years of 1997 and 2007. This study is also completed with the presentation of important conclusions, inferred from the analysis of data collected throughout the realization of the “Learning Arqueology in Alandroal” project.
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A educação integral ao longo da vida de todos os indivíduos, em contextos formais, não formais e informais, com vista ao desenvolvimento inteligente, sustentável e inclusivo das nações é, actualmente, uma recomendação unânime de entidades e organizações a nível internacional (ex. UNESCO, UNICEF, NU, OCDE, OEI, UE). Neste âmbito, destaca-se o papel fulcral da literacia científica dos indivíduos, como motor do crescimento, produtividade e competitividade dos países e como um dos pilares basilares para o exercício de uma cidadania consciente na vida política, social e cultural. Para alcançar tais propósitos é necessário uma forte aposta numa educação de qualidade desde os primeiros anos de vida dos indivíduos. Para tal, é fundamental: (re)pensar perspectivas de educação, de ensino e de aprendizagem; dar reposta às amplamente reconhecidas necessidades de formação inicial e continuada de professores; e assegurar a existência de infraestruturas e recursos de suporte à concretização de tais anseios. O presente estudo pretende ser um contributo para a operacionalização de tais intenções, no campo particular da educação em ciências ao nível do ensino básico, tendo subjacente uma perspectiva de abordagem integrada e integradora da educação em ciências. O percurso de investigação, de natureza qualitativa, foi desenvolvido incidindo em dois focos fundamentais: (i) o desenvolvimento de infra-estruturas e recursos de suporte à educação em ciências e (ii) o desenvolvimento de um programa de formação continuada para professores do 1º CEB de educação em ciências na perspectiva considerada. Assim uma das grandes finalidades do estudo foi desenvolver (conceber, planificar, implementar e validar) um Centro Integrado de Educação em Ciências (CIEC) como parte integrante de uma escola do 1ºCEB. Partindo de orientações da literatura, da proficiência da equipa multidisciplinar e dos contributos de avaliadores externos procedeu-se ao desenvolvimento do conceito CIEC e respectivo espaço físico de suporte: espaço de educação formal - laboratório de ciências para o 1ºCEB; espaço de educação não formal – Centro de Ciência do CIEC.A segunda grande finalidade do estudo, foi o desenvolvimento (concepção, planificação, implementação e avaliação) de um programa de formação continuada que habilitasse os professores do 1ºCEB a desenvolverem actividades integradas de educação em ciências (AIEC). Tendo por base as orientações da literatura, bem como a caracterização das práticas, necessidades e expectativas dos professores-formandos, concebeu-se, planificou-se e implementou-se o programa de formação. A avaliação do programa efectuou-se tendo por base a análise dos dados recolhidos através de fontes distintas, e o seu cruzamento com recurso a métodos, técnicas e instrumentos diversificados. Assumindo-se como um contributo para a melhoria da educação em ciências nos primeiros anos de escolaridade, o presente estudo apresenta como resultados orientações para: o desenvolvimento de laboratórios em escolas do 1ºCEB; o desenvolvimento de centros de ciência, e ou espaços de educação não formal similares, e respectivo funcionamento; a implementação de actividades integradas da educação em ciências; o desenvolvimento de programas de formação continuada de professores; o processo de auto e hetero avaliação de práticas de professores no que respeita ao ensino das ciências em contextos formal e não formal.