868 resultados para undergraduate student
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Neste trabalho o processo não linear de transmissão de calor condução-radiação é abordado num contexto bidimensional plano e simulado com o uso de um esquema linear em diferenças finitas. O problema original é tratado como o limite de uma sequencia de problemas lineares, do tipo condução-convecção. Este limite, cuja existência é comprovada, é facilmente obtido a partir de procedimentos básicos, accessíveis a qualquer estudante de engenharia, permitindo assim o emprego de hipóteses mais realistas, já que não se tem o limitante matemático para a abordagem numérica de uma equação diferencial parcial elíptica. Neste trabalho foi resolvido o problema de condução de calor em regime permanente em uma placa com condições de contorno convectivas e radioativas utilizando-se o software MatLab, vale ressaltar, que a mesma metodologia é aplicável para geometrias mais complexas.
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Como crítica à perspectiva da Educação Física Escolar (EFE) voltada à aptidão física e ao desenvolvimento técnico-esportivo, tão comum até a década de 1970, surgem, a partir da década de 1980, novas propostas de ensino que a aproximariam dos reais objetivos da escola é o que se chama de movimento renovador da EFE. Ao longo dos anos, essas propostas foram incorporadas aos cursos de graduação, de pós-graduação e aos documentos oficiais de ensino. Era de se esperar que as aulas de EFE nas escolas brasileiras, hoje, representassem, hegemonicamente, as propostas do movimento renovador, mas paradoxalmente temos visto intervenções difusas e até aleatórias, muitas vezes representadas pelo rola a bola. Diante da necessidade de investir em práticas renovadoras e a fim de abolir o caráter de estudos que apenas pomovem denúncias de práticas caducas, este estudo buscou professores que, alinhados aos conhecimentos renovadores, procuram desenvolver aulas de EFE que se aproximam e representam tais conhecimentos didático-metodológicos. Assim, buscou-se investigar a influência do movimento renovador na intervenção pedagógica de cinco professores de Educação Física da rede municipal de ensino do Rio de Janeiro. O estudo divide-se em três artigos complementares. O primeiro traz a problematização e a revisão bibliográfica. O segundo busca identificar o que os professores pensam acerca do movimento renovador, bem como analisar características acadêmicas e profissionais-interventivas. Os resultados do artigo 2 apontam que os professores parecem conhecer, se alinham e afirmam ministrar aulas em acordo com as propostas renovadoras, mas possuem ambientes e condições de trabalho distintas. O terceiro artigo traz a análise de 20 aulas de EFE dos cinco professores, a partir de uma ficha de observação sistemática composta por indicadores didático-metodológicos sugeridos por Resende e Nascimento (2004), além da discussão de uma entrevista sobre questões didáticas e metodológicas e críticas às intervenções. Percebeu-se que, apesar de intervenções com características distintas, a maioria das ações intervetivas se aproximou dos indicadores nas categorias planejamento, objetivo, conteúdo, método, avaliação e relação professor-aluno. Todos os professores fizeram críticas às aulas, acreditando que estas deveriam ser melhores e diferentes do que frequentemente são, o que representa limitações do campo interventivo e o compromisso dos professores com a qualidade da intervenção. Acredita-se que os dados deste estudo representam mais um pequeno passo às discussões e construções de práticas renovadoras no campo da EFE, ao buscar e apontar possibilidades, limitações e exemplos de ações didáticas concretas do cotidiano.
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This paper presents a simple, cost-effective and robust atomic force microscope (AFM), which has been purposely designed and built for use as a teaching aid in undergraduate controls labs. The guiding design principle is to have all components be open and visible to the students, so the inner functioning of the microscope has been made clear to see. All of the parts but one are off the shelf, and assembly time is generally less than two days, which makes the microscope a robust instrument that is readily handled by the students with little chance of damage. While the scanning resolution is nowhere near that of a commercial instrument, it is more than sufficient to take interesting scans of micrometer-scale objects. A survey of students after their having used the AFM resulted in a generally good response, with 80% agreeing that they had a positive learning experience. © 2009 IEEE.
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This paper discusses innovations in curriculum development in the Department of Engineering at the University of Cambridge as a participant in the Teaching for Learning Network (TFLN), a teaching and learning development initiative funded by the Cambridge-MIT Institute a pedagogic collaboration and brokerage network. A year-long research and development project investigated the practical experiences through which students traditionally explore engineering disciplines, apply and extend the knowledge gained in lectures and other settings, and begin to develop their professional expertise. The research project evaluated current practice in these sessions and developed an evidence-base to identify requirements for new activities, student support and staff development. The evidence collected included a novel student 'practice-value' survey highlighting effective practice and areas of concern, classroom observation of practicals, semi-structured interviews with staff, a student focus group and informal discussions with staff. Analysis of the data identified three potentially 'high-leverage' strategies for improvement: development of a more integrated teaching framework, within which practical work could be contextualised in relation to other learning; a more transparent and integrated conceptual framework where theory and practice were more closely linked; development of practical work more reflective of the complex problems facing professional engineers. This paper sets out key elements of the evidence collected and the changes that have been informed by this evidence and analysis, leading to the creation of a suite of integrated practical sessions carefully linked to other course elements and reinforcing central concepts in engineering, accompanied by a training and support programme for teaching staff.
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We investigate the Student-t process as an alternative to the Gaussian process as a non-parametric prior over functions. We derive closed form expressions for the marginal likelihood and predictive distribution of a Student-t process, by integrating away an inverse Wishart process prior over the co-variance kernel of a Gaussian process model. We show surprising equivalences between different hierarchical Gaussian process models leading to Student-t processes, and derive a new sampling scheme for the inverse Wishart process, which helps elucidate these equivalences. Overall, we show that a Student-t process can retain the attractive properties of a Gaussian process - a nonparamet-ric representation, analytic marginal and predictive distributions, and easy model selection through covariance kernels - but has enhanced flexibility, and predictive covariances that, unlike a Gaussian process, explicitly depend on the values of training observations. We verify empirically that a Student-t process is especially useful in situations where there are changes in covariance structure, or in applications such as Bayesian optimization, where accurate predictive covariances are critical for good performance. These advantages come at no additional computational cost over Gaussian processes.
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In this article, we begin from the research about how money influences the behavior of people, and try to discuss how money influences people's moral judgment on the five degrees of morality (harm/care, fairness/reciprocal, loyalty/in-group, authority/respect, purity/sanctity). Meanwhile, we try to discuss whether the money priming is based on the mechanism of competition priming. Besides that, we want to find out whether moral identification and positive vocabulary could rescue the change of moral judgment after money priming. The money priming in this research is based on picture priming and syntax priming; the competition priming and moral identification priming are based on imagination priming. We chose the undergraduate, graduate student and adult as sample, combined the scale investigation with computer based experiment. This research contains five standard case experiments, which form three. Based on all the research above, we have some conclusions: 1. Money priming has impacts on moral judgment, which are not consistent on different degree of morality. But the total effect of money priming is that it changes moral judgment to a worse state. 2. Money priming is not complete competition priming, but social value orientation (including competition orientation) could mediate the influence of money priming on moral judgment. Generally, people with personal orientation or competition orientation could be influenced more easily by money priming. 3. After money priming, the moral judgment could be influence by moral identification and positive vocabulary. In all, both the moral judgment and positive vocabulary could make the moral judgment to a better state. But the function of them may be different, moral identification is more related to moral cognition and positive vocabulary is more related to moral emotional regulation. This research is based on priming method, and supports the money influence on psychology, the concept of morality and moral identification with experimental evidence. Also this research discusses the measurement of morality.
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Summary Background Reflective writing is a mandatory part of nurse education but how students develop their skills and use reflection as part of their experiential learning remains relatively unknown. Understanding reflective writing in all forms from the perspective of a student nurse is therefore important. Objectives To explore the use of reflective writing and the use of poetry in pre-registered nursing students. Design A qualitative design was employed to explore reflective writing in pre-registered nursing students. Setting A small university in Scotland. Participants BSc (Hons) Adult and Mental Health Pre-registration Student Nurses. Methods Two focus groups were conducted with 10 student nurses during March 2012. Data was analysed thematically using the framework of McCarthy (1999). Results Students found the process of reflective writing daunting but valued it over time. Current educational methods, such as assessing reflective accounts, often lead to the ‘narrative’ being watered down and the student feeling judged. Despite this, reflection made students feel responsible for their own learning and research on the topic. Some students felt the use of models of reflection constricting, whilst poetry freed up their expression allowing them to demonstrate the compassion for their patient under their care. Conclusions Poetry writing gives students the opportunity for freedom of expression, personal satisfaction and a closer connection with their patients, which the more formal approach to reflective writing did not offer. There is a need for students to have a safe and supportive forum in which to express and have their experiences acknowledged without the fear of being judged.
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The setting, marking and providing feedback on assessments forms an important part of a tutor’s role. Studies into the use of feedback and how it is interpreted by students indicate a mismatch between what students are looking for and what tutors think they are giving. Tutors comment that students are more interested in the mark than the feedback, and yet students indicate that they do not get enough feedback, or that it is not useful. This study investigates student and staff perceptions of the linking of marking and feedback in face-to-face sessions. A cohort of year one university students were given the option of receiving either written feedback or a 15 minute meeting with one of their tutors to have their essay marked with them. Forty nine students chose face-to-face marking, the remaining 35 students received written feedback. Focus groups were used to investigate the student experience. Staff members were also asked to reflect on the process. Students and staff found the experience of face-to-face marking beneficial and positive. Both felt that the time spent together allowed for a feedback dialogue about the piece of work, and that staff could explain and justify why marks were given.
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Sin índice de impacto (2013)
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Urquhart,C., Thomas, R., Spink, S., Fenton, R., Yeoman, A., Lonsdale, R., Armstrong, C., Banwell, L., Ray, K., Coulson, G. & Rowley, J. (2005). Student use of electronic information services in further education. International Journal of Information Management, 25(4), 347-362. Sponsorship: JISC
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Eckerdal, A. McCartney, R. Mostr?m, J.E. Ratcliffe, M. Zander, C. Comparing Student Software Designs Using Semantic Categorization. Proceedings of the Fifth Finnish/Baltic Sea Conference on Computer Science Education, 2005