950 resultados para Elementary school teachers -- Catalonia -- History -- Republic, 1931-1939
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Escrito para apoyar a los profesores que necesitan mejorar su comprensión de la ciencia, este manual cubre el conocimiento científico con la amplitud y profundidad suficientes para que puedan enseñar eficazmente esta materia hasta el final de la etapa clave 2, así como el núcleo de la enseñanza y el aprendizaje de cuestiones relacionadas con el proceso de investigación. La introducción ofrece una guía de cómo utilizar el manual, incluye una tabla de referencias cruzadas; esto permite utilizarlo de diferentes maneras, dependiendo de las necesidades individuales. Es primordial asegurar que los profesores sean capaces de enseñar y dar respuestas adecuadas a las preguntas más allá de lo que se requiere para la etapa clave 2, esto es importante ya que ayuda a evitar la simplificación excesiva de los conceptos que a su vez pueden causar malentendidos en la etapa clave 3 y después. También ayuda a ampliar y desarrollar el conocimiento del maestro.
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Resumen tomado de la publicación
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Esta innovación obtuvo Mención Honorífica en los Premios Nacionales a la Innovación Educativa 2003
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Pretende ahondar en el conocimiento de la reforma educativa republicana y dentro de ella, de la primera enseñanza, ofreciendo aspectos inéditos que ayuden al más amplio y completo conocimiento del desarrollo de la enseñanza en la Segunda República. Los Consejos de Protección Escolar en la Región de Murcia. Estos Consejos formaron parte del primer grupo de disposiciones legales que vieron la luz en los primeros meses de la República, creados por Decreto de 9 de junio de 1931, en la Región de Murcia. La investigación se compone de dos partes diferenciadas: la primera dedicada al estudio del desarrollo de la administración educativa periférica durante la Segunda República en la que se analiza los órganos administrativos, inspección, etc., que tuvieron influencia en la actución de los Consejos de Protección Escolar, sus antecedentes históricos, evolución y actuación a lo largo de la Segunda República hasta el fin de la Guerra Civil. El segundo bloque se ocupa de analizar lo que fue el funcionamiento y la labor llevada a cabo por los Consejos de Protección Escolar en la provincia de Murcia, estructurada en tres partes: el Consejo Universitario, el Consejo Provincial y los Consejos Locales constituidos en los municipios murcianos. Los Consejos Provinciales quedaron constituidos en su totalidad antes de finalizar en año 1931, igualmente ocurrió con los locales, tal y como se disponía en el Decreto de su creación. De los Consejos Universitarios no se tiene constancia documental. Los Consejos Escolares a penas si funcionaron en algún centro escolar, por ser su constitución voluntaria a criterio de los padres y maestros. Es decir, tan sólo los Consejos Provinciales y Locales cumplieron con la normativa legal, pasando prácticamente desapercibidos los Universitarios y Escolares. Los Consejos de Protección Escolar cumplieron con sus atribuciones iniciándose un proceso de descentralización administrativa con relación a las atribuciones de las anteriores Juntas de Enseñanza, precedentes administrativos de los Consejos.
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Resumen tomado de la publicaci??n
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This paper provides resources to help hearing impaired students in primary and elementary grades with personal and social competency training.
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This paper presents materials for educators and students, grades K-6, about hearing and hearing impairment that will help prepare them for more successful mainstreaming and inclusion of hearing-impaired children.
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This article reports about the development and validation of a measurement instrument assessing elementary school students' achievement emotions (Achievement Emotions Questionnaire-Elementary School, AEQ-ES). Specifically, the instrument assesses students' enjoyment, anxiety, and boredom pertaining to three types of academic settings (i.e., attending class, doing homework, and taking tests and exams). Scale construction was based on Pekrun's (2006) control-value theory of achievement emotions. The instrument was tested using samples from German and American elementary school classrooms. The results of Study 1 (German sample) corroborate the reliability and structural validity of the new emotion measure. Moreover, they show that students' achievement emotions were linked with their control and value appraisals as well as their academic performance, thus supporting the external validity of the measure as well as propositions of Pekrun's (2006) control-value theory of achievement emotions. Study 2 (American sample) corroborated the cross-cultural equivalence of the measure and the generalizability of findings across the German and American samples. Implications for research on achievement emotions and educational practice are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2013 APA, all rights reserved)(journal abstract)
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This study examines the feedback practices of 110 EFL teachers from five different countries (Cyprus, France, Korea, Spain, and Thailand), working in secondary school contexts. All provided feedback on the same student essay. The coding scheme developed to analyse the feedback operates on two axes: the stance the teachers assumed when providing feedback, and the focus of their feedback. Most teachers reacted as language teachers, rather than as readers of communication. The teachers overwhelmingly focused on grammar in their feedback and assumed what we called a Provider role, providing the correct forms for the student. A second role, Initiator, was also present, in which teachers indicate errors or issues to the learner but expect the learner to pick this up and work on it. This role was associated with a more even spread of feedback focus, where teachers also provided feedback on other areas, such as lexis, style and discourse.
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The question of where to locate teaching about the relationships between science and religion has produced a long-running debate. Currently, Science and Religious Education (RE) are statutory subjects in England and are taught in secondary schools by different teachers. This paper reports on an interview study in which 16 teachers gave their perceptions of their roles and responsibilities when teaching topics that bridge science and religion and the extent to which they collaborated with teachers in the other subject area. We found that in this sample, teachers reported very little collaboration between the curriculum areas. Although the science curriculum makes no mention of religion, all the science teachers said that their approaches to such topics were affected by their recognition that some pupils hold religious beliefs. All the RE teachers reported struggling to ensure students know of a range of views about how science and religion relate. The paper concludes with a discussion about implications for curriculum design and teacher training.
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Schools in England have recently undergone a shift in their pupil demographic which in part reflects changing patterns of trans-European migration since the accession of new member states to the EU in 2004 and 2007. There is evidence that this shift is one experienced not just in inner-city schools most commonly associated with minority ethnic populations, but in a wide range of schools in rural and smaller town settings in a number of counties across the country (Vertovec, 2007). This article explores the responses of English primary school teachers to Polish children arriving since 2006 in a county in the South of England. Using Bourdieu’s logic of practice, interview data are analysed in order to examine attitudes towards Polish children and their families. Discussion centres on how teachers’ professional habitus may unconsciously govern their reception of children from Poland, and of how the teacher-friendly behaviour of Polish children and families may support a generalised construction of the Polish model learner.
BlueFriends: measuring, analyzing and preventing social exclusion between elementary school students
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Social exclusion is a relatively recent term, whose creation is attributed to René Lenoir(Lenoir, 1974). Its concept covers a remarkably wide range of social and economic problems, and can be triggered for various reasons: mentally and physically handicapped, abused children, delinquents, multi-problem households, asocial people, and other social “misfits” (Silver, 1995, pp. 63; Foucault, 1992). With an increasingly multi-cultural population, cultural and social inequalities rapidly ascend, bringing with them the need for educational restructuring. We are living in an evermore diverse world, and children need to be educated to be receptive to the different types of people around them, especially considering social and cultural aspects. It is with these goals that inclusive education has seen an increased trend in today’s academic environment, reminding us that even though children may be taught under the same roof, discriminatory practices might still happen. There are, however, a number of developed tools to assess the various dimensions of social networks. These are mostly based on questionnaires and interviews, which tend to be fastidious and don’t allow for longitudinal, large scale measurement. This thesis introduces BlueFriends, a Bluetooth-based measurement tool for social inclusion/exclusion on elementary school classes. The main goals behind the development of this tool were a) understanding how exclusion manifests in students’ behaviors, and b) motivating pro-social behaviors on children through the use of a persuasive technology. BlueFriends is a distributed application, comprised by an application running on several smartphones, a web-hosted database and a computer providing a visual representation of the data collected on a TV screen, attempting to influence children behaviors. The application makes use of the Bluetooth device present on each phone to continuously sample the RSSI (Received Signal Strength Indication) from other phones, storing the data locally on each phone. All of the stored data is collected, processed and then inserted into the database at the end of each day. At the beginning of each recess, children are reminded of how their behaviors affect others with the help of a visual display, which consists of interactions between dogs. This display illustrates every child’s best friends, as well as which colleagues they don’t interact with as much. Several tips encouraging social interaction and inclusiveness are displayed, inspiring children to change their behaviors towards the colleagues they spend less time with. This thesis documents the process of designing, deploying and analyzing the results of two field studies. On the first study, we assess how the current developed tools are inferior to our measuring tool by deploying a measurement only study, aimed at perceiving how much information can be obtained by the BlueFriends application and attempting to understand how exclusion manifests itself in the school environment. On the second study, we pile on the previous to try and motivate pro-social behaviors on students, with the use of visual cues and recommendations. Ultimately, we confirm that our measurement tool’s results were satisfying towards measuring and changing children’s behaviors, and conclude with our thoughts on possible future work, suggesting a number of possible extensions and improvements.