672 resultados para Industry Based Learning
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This workshop draws on an emerging collaborative body of research by Lovett, Morrow and McClean that aims to understand architecture and its processes as a form of pedagogical practice: a civic pedagogy.
Architectural education can be valued not only as a process that delivers architecture-specific skills and knowledges, but also as a process that transforms people into critically active contributors to society. We are keen to examine how and where those skills are developed in architectural education and trace their existence and/or application within practice. We intend to examine whether some architectural and spatial practices are intrinsically pedagogical in their nature and how the level of involvement of clients, users and communities can mimic the project-based learning of architectural education – in particularly in the context of ‘live project learning’
1. This workshop begins with a brief discussion paper from Morrow that sets out the arguments behind why and how architecture can be understood as pedagogy. It will do so by presenting firstly the relationship between architectural practice and pedagogy, drawing out both contemporary and historical examples of architecture and architects acting pedagogically. It will also consider some other forms of creative practice that explicitly frame themselves pedagogically, and focus on participatory approaches in architectural practice that overlap with inclusive and live pedagogies, concluding with a draft and tentative abstracted pedagogical framework for architectural practice.
2. Lovett will examine practices of architectural operation that have a pedagogical approach, or which recognise within themselves an educational subtext/current. He is most interested in a 'liveness' beyond the 'Architectural Education' of university institutions. The presentation will question the scope for both spatial empowerment / agency and a greater understanding and awareness of the value of good design when operating as architects with participant-clients younger than 18, older than 25 or across varied parts of society. Positing that the learning might be greatest when there are no prescribed 'Learning Outcomes' and that such work might depend on risk-taking and playfulness, the presentation will be a curated showcase drawing on his own ongoing work.
Both brief presentations will inform the basis of the workshop’s discussion which hopes to draw on participants views and expereinces to enrich the research process. The intention is that the overall workshop will lead to a call for contributors and respondents to a forthcoming publication on ‘Architecture as Pedagogy’.
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Purpose: Changes to health care systems andworking hours have fragmentedresidents’ clinical experiences withpotentially negative effects ontheir development as professionals.Investigation of off-site supervision,which has been implemented in isolatedrural practice, could reveal importantbut less overt components of residencyeducation.
Method: Insights from sociocultural learningtheory and work-based learning provideda theoretical framework. In 2011–2012,16 family physicians in Australia andCanada were asked in-depth how theyremotely supervised residents’ workand learning, and for their reflectionson this experience. The verbatiminterview transcripts and researchers’memos formed the data set. Templateanalysis produced a description andinterpretation of remote supervision.
Results: Thirteen Australian family physiciansfrom five states and one territory, andthree Canadians from one province,participated. The main themes werehow remoteness changed the dynamicsof care and supervision; the importanceof ongoing, holistic, nonhierarchical,supportive supervisory relationships; andthat residents learned “clinical courage”through responsibility for patients’ careover time. Distance required supervisorsto articulate and pass on their expertiseto residents but made monitoringdifficult. Supervisory continuityencouraged residents to build on pastexperiences and confront deficiencies.
Conclusions: Remote supervision enabled residents todevelop as clinicians and professionals.This questions the supremacy of co-locationas an organizing principle forresidency education. Future specialists maybenefit from programs that give themongoing and increasing responsibilityfor a group of patients and supportive.
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Service user and carer involvement (SUCI) in social work education in England is required by the profession’s regulator, the Health and Care Professions Council. However, a recent study of 83 HEIs in England reported that despite considerable progress in SUCI, there is no evidence that the learning derived from it is being transferred to social work practice. In this article we describe a study that examines the question: ‘What impact does SUCI have on the skills, knowledge and values of student social workers at the point of qualification and beyond?’ Students at universities in England and Northern Ireland completed online questionnaires and participated in focus groups, spanning a period immediately pre-qualification and between six to nine months post-qualification. From our findings, we identify four categories that influence the impact of service user involvement on students’ learning: student factors; service user and carer factors; programme factors; and practice factors; each comprises of a number of sub-categories. We propose that the model developed can be used by social work educators, service user and carer contributors and practitioners to maximise the impact of SUCI. We argue that our findings also have implications for employment-based learning routes and post-qualifying education.
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Practice based learning in Northern Ireland is a core element of social work education and comprising 50% of the degree programme for undergraduate and postgraduate students. This article presents evidence about the perceptions of practice learning from voluntary sector/non-government organisation (NGO) placement providers and final year social work students on social work degree programmes in Northern Ireland in 2011. It draws on data from 121 respondents from189 final year students and focus group interviews with voluntary sector providers offering 16% (85) of the total placements available to students. The agencies who participated in the research study provide a total of 55 PLOs to social work students, and are therefore fairly representative in terms of voluntary sector (NGO) provision. The article locates these data in the context of practice learning pedagogy and the changes introduced by the Regional Strategy for Practice Learning Provision in Northern Ireland 2010–2015. Several themes emerged including; induction, support and guidance, practice educator/student relationship, professional identity and confidence in risk assessment and decision-making. Social work educators, placement providers and employers must be cognisant of newly qualified social workers’ needs in terms of consolidating knowledge within the formative stages of their professional development.
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Background: Peer tutoring has been described as “people from similar social groupings who are not professional teachers helping each other to learn and learning themselves by teaching”. Peer tutoring is well accepted as a source of support in many medical curricula, where participation and learning involve a process of socialisation.
Peer tutoring can ease the transition of the junior students from the university class environment to the hospital workplace. In this paper, we apply the Experienced Based Learning (ExBL) model to explore medical students’ perceptions of their experience of taking part in a newly established peer tutoring program at a hospital based
clinical school.
Methods: In 2014, all students at Sydney Medical School – Central, located at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital were invited to voluntarily participate in the peer tutoring program. Year 3 students (n = 46) were invited to act as tutors for Year 1 students (n = 50), and Year 4 students (n = 60) were invited to act as tutors for Year 2 students (n = 51). Similarly, the ‘tutees’ were invited to take part on a voluntary basis. Students were invited to attend focus groups, which were held at the end of the program. Framework analysis was used to code and categorise data into themes.
Results: In total, 108/207 (52 %) students participated in the program. A total of 42/106 (40 %) of Year 3 and 4 students took part as tutors; and of 66/101 (65 %) of Year 1 and 2 students took part as tutees. Five focus groups were held, with 50/108 (46 %) of students voluntarily participating. Senior students (tutors) valued the opportunity to practice and improve their medical knowledge and teaching skills. Junior students (tutees) valued the opportunity for additional practice and patient interaction, within a relaxed, small group learning environment.
Conclusion: Students perceived the peer tutoring program as affording opportunities not otherwise available within the curriculum. The peer teaching program provided a framework within the medical curriculum for senior students to practice and improve their medical knowledge and teaching skills. Concurrently, junior students were provided with a valuable learning experience that they reported as being qualitatively different to traditional teaching by faculty.
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Considerando que, na sociedade atual, o conhecimento flui incessantemente, renovando-se a cada momento, o cidadão do séc. XXI confronta-se com novos desafios que exigem o desenvolvimento de novas competências. Os recursos da web social – como os fóruns de discussão online –, gratuitos e fáceis de utilizar, permitem que os indivíduos acedam à informação, construam conhecimento, partilhem interesses e desenvolvam múltiplas competências em colaboração. Face a esta realidade, as instituições de Ensino Superior têm vindo a reconhecer que os estudantes já não se sentem confortáveis com abordagens de ensino tradicionais, em que impera a transmissão de informação, preferindo envolver-se em experiências de aprendizagem em que possam interagir com a tecnologia, pelas potencialidades que já lhe reconhecem. Procurando ir ao encontro das exigências da sociedade e do mundo do trabalho atuais, o Processo de Bolonha veio renovar os cursos de Ensino Superior, centrando-os no estudante e no desenvolvimento da autonomia e da colaboração, entre outras competências. Esta tendência vai ao encontro da reconhecida valorização da colaboração com vista à melhoria do desempenho de um grupo profissional. Também no contexto educacional se reconhece o seu contributo para o desenvolvimento profissional do professor e a operacionalização de um ensino por competências. Compete à formação de professores lançar as bases deste movimento.A formação inicial de professores do 1º Ciclo do Ensino Básico tem, entre outras preocupações, a de levar o futuro professor a refletir sobre princípios didáticos que informem a conceção, implementação e avaliação de estratégias e atividades que contribuam para o desenvolvimento de competências nos alunos. Entre as competências a desenvolver nas crianças a frequentar este nível de escolaridade, no que concerne à aprendizagem da língua materna, figura a competência ortográfica, indispensável a uma boa comunicação escrita. Quanto mais cedo for automatizada, mais possibilidades o aluno terá de se ocupar prioritariamente de outros aspetos mais complexos e exigentes do processo de escrita. Tendo em vista estas preocupações, desenvolvemos um estudo, com futuros professores do 1º Ciclo do Ensino Básico a frequentar um mestrado profissionalizante da Universidade de Aveiro, cujos objetivos de investigação eram os seguintes: i) descrever as suas representações sobre colaboração; ii) compreender a influência dessas representações na adoção de práticas colaborativas num fórum de discussão online; iii) compreender o contributo da colaboração adotada num fórum de discussão online para a construção de conhecimento didático sobre a abordagem da ortografia; iv) compreender o contributo desse conhecimento para a conceção de instrumentos didáticos sobre a abordagem da ortografia. Numa primeira fase, o estudo desenvolveu-se com dois grupos de alunos, que nele participaram em dois anos letivos distintos (2009/2010 e 2010/2011), no contexto da unidade curricular de Didática da Língua Portuguesa (inserida no plano de estudos do 1º semestre do 1º ano do Mestrado em Educação Pré- Escolar e Ensino no 1º Ciclo do Ensino Básico da Universidade de Aveiro). Numa segunda fase (entre o 2º semestre do ano letivo de 2011/2012 e 1º semestre do ano letivo de 2012/2013), recolheu-se o resultado de uma intervenção didática desenvolvida por uma professora estagiária (participante na primeira fase do estudo), no âmbito da Prática Pedagógica Supervisionada, apoiada pelo Seminário de Investigação Educacional. Tratando-se de um estudo de caso, a investigação envolveu a recolha de dados através de inquérito por questionário disponibilizado online, uma reflexão individual apresentada por escrito, posts e documentos publicados num fórum de discussão online e instrumentos didáticos (planificação de aulas e relatório de estágio) elaborados pelos estudantes. Procedeu-se a uma análise de conteúdo fundamentada nos quadros teóricos e no estudo empírico.Os resultados vêm aprofundar a discussão em torno da utilização de ferramentas da web social no Ensino Superior, nomeadamente na formação inicial de professores, para desenvolver a colaboração, visando a construção de conhecimento didático, particularmente sobre a abordagem da ortografia. Por um lado, apontam para a influência de representações sobre colaboração na adoção dessa modalidade de trabalho num fórum de discussão online. Por outro, revelam a influência dessa modalidade no conhecimento didático coconstruído e apontam para uma valorização do mesmo por parte dos participantes no estudo, no momento de conceber, implementar e avaliar instrumentos didáticos. Daqui emergiram algumas sugestões pedagógico-didáticas com vista à promoção de práticas inovadoras no Ensino Superior, com recurso a ferramentas da web social, centradas na aprendizagem dos estudantes e no desenvolvimento da colaboração, particularmente na formação inicial de professores.
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Relatório da prática de ensino supervisionada, Mestrado em Ensino de Informática, Universidade de Lisboa, Instituto de Educação, 2014
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Relatório da Prática de Ensino Supervisionada, Mestrado em Ensino de Informática, Universidade de Lisboa, 2014
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Relatório da Prática de Ensino Supervisionada, Mestrado em Ensino de História e Geografia no 3º Ciclo do Ensino Básico e Ensino Secundário, Universidade de Lisboa, 2014
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Relatório da prática de ensino supervisionada, Mestrado em Ensino da Informática, Universidade de Lisboa, 2014
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Relatório da Prática de Ensino Supervisionada, Mestrado em Ensino de Inglês e Espanhol, Universidade de Lisboa, 2014
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Background: Development programmes to support newly qualified practitioners gain confidence in their first professional role often show varied levels of engagement, due to competing priorities and demands. In Scotland, the Flying Start NHS® programme uses a structured programme of online and work-based learning with associated mentoring, to support individuals through an often difficult transition to become capable, confident practitioners. . Whilst the programme was generally well received, the factors leading to widely varying completion rates between professions and organisations were not well understood. Aim: to identify the factors leading to successful completion of Flying Start, a transition programme for newly qualified practitioners. Method: A qualitative approach was adopted to gather data from two groups of participants. Semi-structured telephone interviews were conducted with strategic and management level participants (n=23), from five health boards in Scotland. Semi-structured interviews (n=22) and focus groups (n=11) were conducted with practitioners within 6 months either side of completing the programme. The interviews were transcribed and analysed using framework analysis. Results: Four key themes related to successful completion emerged from the analysis: organisational support; the format of the programme; understanding completion; motivation and incentives to complete. Factors leading to successful completion were identified at programme, organisational and individual level. These included clear communication and signposting, up-to-date and relevant content, links with continuing professional development frameworks, effective leadership, mentor and peer support, setting clear standards for assessment, and facilitating appropriate IT access. Conclusions: A strong strategic commitment to embedding a development programme for newly qualified practitioners can ensure the necessary support is available to encourage timely completion. The mentor’s role - to provide face-to-face support - is identified as a key factor in completion and is achieved through setting attainable targets, monitoring progress, and providing motivation. However organisational structures that facilitate the mentoring relationship are also necessary.
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As the profile of disability sport has risen, so has the emphasis grown beyond participation to include the development of a high performance environment. This book is the first to take an in-depth look at the role of coaches and coaching in facilitating the professionalisation of disability sport, in raising performance standards, and as an important vector for the implementation of significant political, socio-cultural and technological change. Using in-depth case studies of elite disability sport coaches from around the world, the book offers a framework for critical reflection on coaching practice as well as the reader’s own experiences of disability sport. The book also evaluates the vital role of the coach in raising the bar of performance in a variety of elite level disability sports, including athletics, basketball, boccia, equestrian sport, rowing, soccer, skiing, swimming and volleyball. Providing a valuable evidence-based learning resource to support coaches and students in developing their own practice, High Performance Disability Sport Coaching is essential reading for all those interested in disability sport, coaching practice, elite sport development and the Paralympic Games.
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As the profile of disability sport has risen, so has the emphasis grown beyond participation to include the development of a high performance environment. This book is the first to take an in-depth look at the role of coaches and coaching in facilitating the professionalisation of disability sport, in raising performance standards, and as an important vector for the implementation of significant political, socio-cultural and technological change. Using in-depth case studies of elite disability sport coaches from around the world, the book offers a framework for critical reflection on coaching practice as well as the reader’s own experiences of disability sport. The book also evaluates the vital role of the coach in raising the bar of performance in a variety of elite level disability sports, including athletics, basketball, boccia, equestrian sport, rowing, soccer, skiing, swimming and volleyball. Providing a valuable evidence-based learning resource to support coaches and students in developing their own practice, High Performance Disability Sport Coaching is essential reading for all those interested in disability sport, coaching practice, elite sport development and the Paralympic Games.
Resumo:
As the profile of disability sport has risen, so has the emphasis grown beyond participation to include the development of a high performance environment. This book is the first to take an in-depth look at the role of coaches and coaching in facilitating the professionalisation of disability sport, in raising performance standards, and as an important vector for the implementation of significant political, socio-cultural and technological change. Using in-depth case studies of elite disability sport coaches from around the world, the book offers a framework for critical reflection on coaching practice as well as the reader’s own experiences of disability sport. The book also evaluates the vital role of the coach in raising the bar of performance in a variety of elite level disability sports, including athletics, basketball, boccia, equestrian sport, rowing, soccer, skiing, swimming and volleyball. Providing a valuable evidence-based learning resource to support coaches and students in developing their own practice, High Performance Disability Sport Coaching is essential reading for all those interested in disability sport, coaching practice, elite sport development and the Paralympic Games.