874 resultados para Education, Music|Education, Elementary
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This study focuses on the experiences of 91 Grade 4 students who had been introduced to expectation and variation through trials of tossing a single coin many times. They were then given two coins to toss simultaneously and asked to state their expectation of the chances for the possible outcomes, in a similar manner expressed for a single coin. This paper documents the journey of the students in discovering that generally their initial expectation for two coins was incorrect and that despite variation, a large number of tosses could confirm a new expectation.
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Drawing on multimodal texts produced by an Indigenous school community in Australia, I apply critical race theory and multimodal analysis (Jewitt, 2011) to decolonise digital heritage practices for Indigenous students. This study focuses on the particular ways in which students’ counter-narratives about race were embedded in multimodal and digital design in the development of a digital cultural heritage (Giaccardi, 2012). Data analysis involved applying multimodal analysis to the students’ Gamis, following social semiotic categories and principles theorised by Kress and Bezemer (2008), and Jewitt (2006, 2011). This includes attending to the following semiotic elements: visual design, movement and gesture, gaze, and recorded speech, and their interrelationships. The analysis also draws on critical race theory to interpret the students’ representations of race. In particular, the multimodal texts were analysed as a site for students’ views of Indigenous oppression in relation to the colonial powers and ownership of the land in Australian history (Ladson-Billings, 2009). Pedagogies that explore counter-narratives of cultural heritage in the official curriculum can encourage students to reframe their own racial identity, while challenging dominant white, historical narratives of colonial conquest, race, and power (Gutierrez, 2008). The children’s multimodal “Gami” videos, created with the iPad application, Tellagami, enabled the students to imagine hybrid, digital social identities and perspectives of Australian history that were tied to their Indigenous cultural heritage (Kamberelis, 2001).
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The study on which this presentation is based focuses on the particular ways in which students’ counter-narratives about race were embedded in multimodal and digital design in the development of a digital cultural heritage. The multimodal texts were analysed as a site for students’ views of Indigenous oppression in relation to the colonial powers and ownership of the land in Australian history. In this presentation, Kathy will demonstrate how pedagogies that explore counter-narratives of cultural heritage in the official curriculum can encourage students to reframe their own racial identity, while challenging dominant white, historical narratives of colonial conquest, race, and power. In the second part of this session, Indigenous Principal, John Davis and teachers from HymbaYumba Community Hub will provide a school-based, Indigenous panel to inspire educators with authentic ways to embed Indigenous knowledge in the curriculum.
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What is Universal Access-NY? Universal Access-NY is a complete online planning toolkit, www.UniversalAccessNY.org, where a One-Stop Delivery System can assess its practices, and develop work plans to improve physical and programmatic accessibility for all One-Stop customers. This web site and manual was developed by Cornell University’s Employment and Disability Institute, through the support and guidance of the New York State Department of Labor, with funding from two U.S. Department of Labor Work Incentive Grants (WIG 1 and 2). This web site was designed for use in a collaborative manner, bringing together One-Stop personnel, agency partners, business leaders and customers with disabilities. Universal Access-NY supports continuous improvement, with features that encourage multiple uses and incremental systems change.
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Este trabalho objetiva investigar os processos de produção de sentidos na construção de políticas curriculares no entre-lugar Educação Infantil - Ensino Fundamental, analisando as articulações/mediações/negociações firmadas nas arenas em que são produzidos os sentidos que se hegemonizam na construção do currículo, observando e compreendendo a Coordenação Pedagógica como instância de articulação/mediação/negociação. Para tanto, optei por observar no contexto amplo no Colégio de Aplicação do Instituto Superior do Rio de Janeiro (CAp-ISERJ) os encontros dos professores da Educação Infantil e Ensino Fundamental realizados como espaço de produção curricular, ancorando-se na perspectiva metodológica da abordagem do ciclo de políticas desenvolvido por Stephen J. Ball, que considera os contextos de influências, contextos da produção de textos e contextos da prática instâncias que não estão segmentadas, superando a ideia de que as políticas curriculares são produzidas pelos governos e a escola as implementa. Esse entendimento insere ainda a Coordenação Pedagógica no contexto que rompe com a perspectiva geralmente a ela associada, de esfera administrativa de onde emana ou representa as políticas governamentais, mas como esfera marcada pela ação de articulação por meio de mediação e negociação no processo de construção dos textos na escola. Introduzo as questões da pesquisa trazendo inicialmente os caminhos pelos quais a pesquisa foi se delineando e os objetivos. No primeiro capítulo situo a pesquisa, o cotidiano escolar e as situações provocadas pela Lei Estadual n 5.488/09 no espaço do CAp-ISERJ. Através dos textos das legislações e orientações curriculares sobre a ampliação do Ensino Fundamental para nove anos, observo seu processo de construção da legislação em vigor a partir do olhar para o lugar da criança com seis anos, em âmbito nacional e com seis/cinco no âmbito estadual. No segundo capítulo, proponho o diálogo a partir da abordagem metodológica do ciclo de políticas em Ball. As leituras de Bhabha e Bakhtin se configuram no horizonte de entendimento dos processos discursivos no espaço dos encontros dos professores como espaço pesquisado. A postura desconstrutivista perpassou a construção do terceiro capítulo; a análise foi desenvolvida a partir dos vieses da integração, como discurso na escola e a criança com cinco anos e como esses sentidos vêm sendo disputados na escola; essa leitura possibilitou o desdobramento das questões relativas a infância, escolarização e ludicidade no processo de negociação das produções de políticas curriculares no contexto da prática. Na impossibilidade da totalidade, as questões inerentes à construção da pesquisa e os fios que foram puxados como aberturas de reflexões não concluem ou não fixam as considerações apresentadas.
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There are a number of reasons why this researcher has decided to undertake this study into the differences in the social competence of children who attend integrated Junior Infant classes and children who attend segregated learning environments. Theses reasons are both personal and professional. My personal reasons stem from having grown up in a family which included both an aunt who presented with Down Syndrome and an uncle who presented with hearing impairment. Both of these relatives' experiences in our education system are interesting. My aunt was considered ineducable while her brother - my uncle - was sent to Dublin (from Cork) at six years of age to be educated by a religious order. My professional reasons, on the other hand, stemmed from my teaching experience. Having taught in both special and integrated classrooms it became evident to me that there was somewhat 'suspicion' attached to integration. Parents of children without disabilities questioned whether this process would have a negative impact on their children's education. While parents of children with disabilities debated whether integrated settings met the specific needs of their children. On the other hand, I always questioned whether integration and inclusiveness meant the same thing. My research has enabled me to find many answers. Increasingly, children with special educational needs (SEN) are attending a variety of integrated and inclusive childcare and education settings. This contemporary practice of educating children who present with disabilities in mainstream classrooms has stimulated vast interest on the impact of such practices on children with identified disabilities. Indeed, children who present with disabilities "fare far better in mainstream education than in special schools" (Buckley, cited in Siggins, 2001,p.25). However, educators and practitioners in the field of early years education and care are concerned with meeting the needs of all children in their learning environments, while also upholding high academic standards (Putman, 1993). Fundamentally, therefore, integrated education must also produce questions about the impact of this practice on children without identified special educational needs. While these questions can be addressed from the various areas of child development (i.e. cognitive, physical, linguistic, emotional, moral, spiritual and creative), this research focused on the social domain. It investigates the development of social competence in junior infant class children without identified disabilities as they experience different educational settings.
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Gemstone Team GABS (Grammar Acquisition in Bilingual Students)
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This article presents an educational experiment carried out in the Primary School Teaching Degree at the University of Barcelona. Specifically, the article analyses the application of the “Work Corners” approach in a core subject. In a three-year action research process, trainers put into practice an innovation which enabled them to boost cooperative work and reflexive learning among trainees. Firstly, the theoretical model underpinning the project and guiding many of the actions carried out by the training team is presented. After providing detailed information on the practical development of the experiment, the data-gathering process and its results are shown. Various information-gathering strategies were used in assessing the project, such as a questionnaire, participant observation, and teachers’ diaries. The results demonstrate, amongst other things, that “work corners” offer viable and appropriate educational conditions for the articulation of theoretical and practical knowledge, for building professional knowledge, and therefore, the beginnings of a reflexive teaching practice.
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O presente relatório tem como principal intuito a reflexão da estudante sobre a Prática Pedagógica Supervisionada (PPS) desenvolvida nos contextos de Educação Pré-Escolar e do 1.º CEB, no âmbito do Mestrado em Educação Pré-Escolar e Ensino do 1.º Ciclo do Ensino Básico, espelhando, assim, o processo formativo que promoveu o seu desenvolvimento profissional e pessoal. Neste contexto, realça a metodologia de investigação-ação que susteve este processo, proporcionando um saber, saber-fazer, estar e ser imprescindíveis na transformação e melhoria da prática educativa e na construção de um perfil profissional, Realça, ainda, o processo socio-construtivista e de colaboração que envolveu a díade de formação, a educadora e professora cooperantes e supervisores institucionais, mas sobretudo a estagiária que construiu as suas representações do que é ser educadora de EPE e professora do 1.º CEB na atualidade. Deste modo, releva o desenvolvimento de competências, de atitudes e postura ética adquiridas na formação inicial, imprescindíveis para a profissionalidade docente e base fundamental para a construção da identidade profissional da futura professora.
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This study explored the impact of training parents and children concurrently in principled negotiation skills for the purpose of developing negotiation skills and problem solving abilities in children. A second experimental group was utilized to determine the viability of negotiation skills training of junior elementary students for the purpose of improving problem solving and conflict resolving abilities. The student population in each experimental group was trained using The Program for Young Negotiators (Curhan, 1996). A control group was also established using the remaining grade four and five students attending the participating school. These students did not receive training as part of this study. Student group distribution was as follows: Experimental group 1 (students with parent participant) consisted of 10 (5 grade five and 5 grade 4 students), Experimental group 2 students without parent participant) consisted of 48 (20 grade 4 and 28 grade 5 students), and the Control group 3 (55 grade 4 and 5 students). The impact of training was measured using the Five Factor Negotiation Scale developed for use with the Program for Young Negotiators (Curhan, 1996). This measure was employed as a pre- and post-test questionnaire to the total student population, (113 students) to determine levels of ability in each of the key elements of negotiation, personal initiative, collaboration, communication, conflict based perspective taking, and conflict resolution approach (Nakkula & Nikitopoulos, unpublished). This measure has a coefficient alpha of .75 which is acceptable for this type of affective instrument. As well, open ended ability questions designed to measure ability, knowledge, and behaviour as they relate to negotiation skill application were given to the total student population, (113 students). Finally, journals were maintained by the students in both experimental groups, and informal feedback discussions were held with students and parents participating in the study.The intent of using both qualitative and quantitative measures was to provide an overall perspective of student abilities as they related to principled negotiation skills. While the quantitative measures were from the student perspective, more qualitative information was sought from parents and teachers through informal interviews, discussions, and use of confidential feedback cards. For analysis purposes, the ability questions were randomly selected for Experimental group 2 and Control group 3 in an effort to balance the groups more equitably with Experimental group 1. The findings of this study indicate that students of the junior elementary school age can be taught how to perceive conflict in a more constructive way. However, they are not as likely to use their skills when the conflict is with a sibling as they are with a peer, a teacher, or a parent. While no statistically significant differences between mean scores for Experimental groups 1 and 2 exist some subtle differences are noted. Overall, increases in mean scores for grade 4 students exceeded the increases for grade 5 students within Experimental group 1 . The implication being that younger students benefit more from having a parent trained in principled negoUation skills than older students. The skill level of a parent in principled negotiation can not be underesUmated. Without a consistent and effective role model the likelihood of developing student skill level to a point of automaticity is greatly reduced. Enough so that perhaps the emphasis should be placed on training parents more so than the students.
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As children are becoming increasingly inactive and obese, there is an urgent need for effective early prevention and intervention programs. One solution is a comprehensive school health (CSH) program, a health promotion initiative aimed at educating students about healthy behaviours and lifestyles, which also provides a link between the school, students, families, and the surrounding community. The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between different components of CSH programs, as well as three determinants of health (gender, social support, socio-economic status), and physical activity, on the aerobic fitness and body mass index (BMI) of children. A newly developed and pilot-tested survey derived from Health Canada's fourpart CSH model (instruction, social support, support services, and a healthy physical environment) was sent to elementary school principals. Data on the gender, physical activity, parental education, and social support levels of students from these schools were gathered from a previous study. Multiple regression procedures were conducted to estimate the relationships between CSH components, the social determinants of health, physical activity, and BMI and aerobic fitness. Results showed that three CSH components were significantly associated with both BMI and aerobic fitness values in children, but accounted for less than 5% of the variance in both variables. Physical activity partially mediated the relationship between the significant CSH components, BMI, and particularly aerobic fitness. Furthermore, the social determinant and physical activity variables played independent roles in aerobic fitness values. No moderating effects of the social determinants were discovered.
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This experimental study examined the effects of cooperative learning and a question-answering strategy called elaborative interrogation ("Why is this fact true?") on the learning of factual information about familiar animals. Retention gains were compared across four study conditions: elaborative-interrogation-plus-cooperative learning, cooperative-learning, elaborative-interrogation, and reading-control. Sixth-grade students (n=68) were randomly assigned to the four conditions. All participants were given initial training and practice in cooperative learning procedures via three 45-minute sessions. After studying 36 facts about six animals, students' retention gains were measured via immediate free recall, immediate matched association, 30-day, and GO-day matched association tests. A priori comparisons were made to analyze the data. For immediate free recall and immediate matched association, significant differences were found between students in the three experimental conditions versus those in the control condition. Elaborative-interrogation and elaborativeinterrogation- plus-cooperative-learning also promoted longterm retention (measured via 30-day matched association) of the material relative to repetitive reading with elaborative-interrogation promoting the most durable gains (measured via GO-day matched association). The relationship between the types of elaborative responses and probability of subsequent retention was also examined. Even when students were unable to provide adequate answers to the why questions, learning was facilitated more so than repetitive reading. In general, generation of adequate elaborations was associated with greater probability of recall than was provision of inadequate answers. The findings of the study demonstrate that cooperative learning and the use of elaborative interrogation, both individually and collaboratively, are effective classroom procedures for facilitating children's learning of new information.
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Forty-five 12- and 13-year-old females attending Grade 7 in North York, Ontario were randomly selected from a group of 100 females who had volunteered to participate in a oneday hands-on workshop called It's Your Choice at Seneca College. The goals of this intervention were to broaden the career horizons of these students and to help them realize the need to continue mathematics and science through high school in order to keep occupational options unlimited. The young women were given a pre- and post-attitude survey to provide background information. In the month following participation in the workshop the students were interviewed in small groups (S students per group) to discover their perceptions of the impact of the workshop. The interviews revealed that participants felt that after the workshop their feelings of self-confidence increased, specifically with respect to working with their hands. Participants felt more aware of the usefulness and importance of the study of mathematics, science and technology, They also felt that It's Your Choice increased their interest in careers in these domains and helped them to see that these careers are viable choices for females. The interviews also revealed that many of the participants felt that in this society their roles and their choices were influenced and probably limited by the fact that they are female.
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This study \Alas initiated in response to the Junior Division Review (1985) publ ished by the Ministry of Education for the Province of Ontario. Curriculum integration is an element used within the educational paradigm designed by the Ontario Ministry of Education. It is a term frequent1y verbal ized b>' educators in this province, but because of 1 imi ted resource support regarding this methodology, it was open to broad interpretation resulting in an extreme v ar i at i on i nit simp 1 eme n tat i on • I n de ed, the Min i s try intimated that it was not occurring to any significant degree across the province. The objective of this thes is was· to define integration in the junior classroom and de-:.ign a meas.ur·ement in-:.tr-ument which would in turn high 1 i gh t indicators of curriculum integration. The :.tudy made a prel iminary, field-based survey of educa tiona 1 professionals in order to generate a relevant description of integrated curr-iculum programm i ng as def i ned in the j un i or classroom. The description was a compilation of views expressed by a random selection of teachers, consultants, supervisory officers and principals. The survey revea 1 ed a much more comprehens i ve vi et·<,l of the attributes of integrated programming than tradition would dictate and resulted in a functional definition tha t was broader than past prac t ices. Based on the information generated by this survey, an instrument ou t 1 in i ng program cr iter i a of was devised. an integrated junior cla~·sroom Th i s measuremen t i nstrumen t , designed for all levels of educators, was named uThe Han~.son I nstrumen t for the Measuremen t of Program Integrat ion in the Jun i or Cl assroom". It refl ected five categories intrinsic to the me thodol ogy of integration: Teacher Behaviour, Student Behaviour, Classroom Layout, Cl as~·r oom Environment and Progr amm i ng. Each category and the items therein were successfully tested in val idi ty and rel iabi 1 i ty checKs. Interestingly, the individual class was found to be the major variable programming in in the measuremen t the j un i or d i vis i on • of The integrated instrument demonstrated potential not onl)' a~· an initial measure of the degree of integrated curriculum, but as a guide to strategies to implement such a methodology.
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Le programme -Une école adaptée à tous ses élèves-, qui s'inscrit dans la réforme actuelle de l'éducation au Québec, nous a amenée à nous intéresser aux représentations dans les grandeurs en mesure en mathématiques des élèves en difficulté d'apprentissage. Nous nous sommes proposés de reconduire plusieurs paramètres de la recherche de Brousseau (1987, 1992) auprès de cette clientèle. La théorie des champs conceptuels (TCC) de Vergnaud (1991), appliquée aux structures additives, a été particulièrement utile pour l'analyse et l'interprétation de leurs représentations. Comme méthode de recherche, nous avons utilisé la théorie des situations didactiques en mathématiques (TSDM), réseau de concepts et de méthode de recherche appuyé sur l'ingénierie didactique qui permet une meilleure compréhension de l'articulation des contenus à enseigner. Grâce à la TSDM, nous avons observé les approches didactiques des enseignants avec leurs élèves. Notre recherche est de type exploratoire et qualitatif et les données recueillies auprès de 26 élèves de deux classes spéciales du deuxième cycle du primaire ont été traitées selon une méthode d'analyse de contenu. Deux conduites ont été adoptées par les élèves. La première, de type procédural a été utilisée par presque tous les élèves. Elle consiste à utiliser des systèmes de comptage plus ou moins sophistiqués, de la planification aux suites d'actions. La deuxième consiste à récupérer directement en mémoire à long terme le résultat associé à un couple donné et au contrôle de son exécution. L'observation des conduites révèle que les erreurs sont dues à une rupture du sens. Ainsi, les difficultés d'ordre conceptuel et de symbolisation nous sont apparues plus importantes lorsque l'activité d'échange demandait la compétence "utilisation" et renvoyait à la compréhension de la tâche, soit les tâches dans lesquelles ils doivent eux-mêmes découvrir les rapports entre les variables à travailler et à simuler les actions décrites dans les énoncés. En conséquence, les problèmes d'échanges se sont révélés difficiles à modéliser en actes et significativement plus ardus que les autres. L'étude des interactions enseignants et élèves a démontré que la parole a été presque uniquement le fait des enseignants qui ont utilisé l'approche du contrôle des actes ou du sens ou les deux stratégies pour aider des élèves en difficulté. Selon le type de situation à résoudre dans ces activités de mesurage de longueur et de masse, des mobilisations plurielles ont été mises en oeuvre par les élèves, telles que la manipulation d'un ou des étalon(s) par superposition, par reports successifs, par pliage ou par coupure lorsque l'étalon dépassait; par retrait ou ajout d'un peu de sable afin de stabiliser les plateaux. Nous avons également observé que bien que certains élèves aient utilisé leurs doigts pour se donner une perception globale extériorisée des quantités, plusieurs ont employé des procédures très diverses au cours de ces mêmes séances. Les résultats présentés étayent l'hypothèse selon laquelle les concepts de grandeur et de mesure prennent du sens à travers des situations problèmes liées à des situations vécues par les élèves, comme les comparaisons directes. Eles renforcent et relient les grandeurs, leurs propriétés et les connaissances numériques.