897 resultados para action learning group
Resumo:
Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder experience difficulty in communication and in understanding the social world which can have negative consequences for their relationships, in managing emotions, and generally dealing with the challenges of everyday life. This thesis examines the effectiveness of the Active and Reflective components of the Get REAL program through the assessment of the detailed coding of video-recorded observations and longitudinal quantitative analysis. The aim of Get REAL is to increase the social, emotional, and cognitive learning of children with High Functioning Autism (HFA). Get REAL is a group program designed specifically for use in inclusive primary school settings. The Get REAL program was designed in response to the mixed success of generalisation of learning to new contexts of existing social skills programs. The theoretical foundation of Get REAL is based upon pedagogical theory and learning theory to facilitate transfer of learning, combined with experiential, individualised, evaluative and organisational approaches. This thesis is by publication and consists of four refereed journal papers; 1 accepted for publication and 3 that are under review. Paper 1 describes the development and theoretical basis of the Get REAL program and provides detail of the program structure and learning cycle. The focus of Paper 1 reflects the first question of interest in the thesis which is about the extent to which learning derived from participation in the program can be generalised to other contexts. Participants are 16 children with HFA ranging in age from 8-13 years. Results provided support for the generalisability of learning from Get REAL to home and school evidenced by parent and teacher data collected pre and post participation in Get REAL. Following establishment of the generalisation of learning from Get REAL, Papers 2 and 3 focus on the Active and Reflective components of the program in order to examine how individual and group learning takes place. Participants (N = 12) in the program are video-taped during the Active and Reflective Sessions. Using identical coding protocols of video data, improvements in prosocial behaviour and diminishing of inappropriate behaviours were apparent with the exception of perspective taking. Data also revealed that 2 of the participants had atypical trajectories. An in-depth case study analysis was then conducted with these 2 participants in Paper 4. Data included reports from health care and education professionals within the school and externally (e.g., paediatrician) and identified the multi-faceted nature of care needed for children with comorbid diagnoses and extremely challenging family circumstances as a complex task to effect change. Results of this research support the effectiveness of the Get REAL program in promoting pro social behaviours such as improvements in engaging with others and emotional regulation, and in diminishing unwanted behaviours such as conduct problems. Further, the gains made by the participating children were found to be generalisable beyond Get REAL to home and other school settings. The research contained in the thesis adds to current knowledge about how learning can take place for children with HFA. Results show that an experiential learning framework with a focus on social cognition, together with explicit teaching, scaffolded with video feedback, are key ingredients for the generalisation of social learning to broader contexts.
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Advancing the development of good practice around the teaching team has been the focus of a recently completed, nationally funded Australian grant entitled Coordinators Leading Advancement of Sessional Staff (CLASS). The project focused on developing leadership capacity of subject coordinators to provide supportive contexts for sessional staff to enhance their knowledge of teaching practice and contribute to subject improvement through a team approach. An action learning approach and notions of distributed leadership underpinned the activities of the teaching teams in the program. This paper provides an overview of a practical approach, led by the subject coordinator, to engaging sessional staff through the facilitation of a supportive network within the teaching team. It addresses some of the gaps identified in the recent literature which includes lack of role clarity for all members of the team and provides some examples of initiatives that teams engaged with to address some of the challenges identified. Resources to support this approach were developed and are shared through the project website. Recommendations for future direction include improved policy and practice at the institutional level, better recognition and reward for subject coordinators and resourcing to support the participation and professional development needs of sessional staff.
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The editorial indicates that the issue contains a diverse array of project reports, the theme of sustainability can be discerned, with ethical and aspirational aspects evident. Aspects of what is termed a 'sustainability project’ include a commitment to change, to meaningfully involve people over time, having an eye to detail, fostering creativity, embedding action learning and action research qualities into the systems we work in, producing resources and artifacts that can support communities beyond the confines of a particular project, and articulating models and frameworks that help platform the efforts of others.
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There has been a greater focus on strengthening evaluation capacity building (ECB) within development organisations in recent years. This can be attributed in part to the growing appreciation of the value of participatory and collaborative forms of evaluation. Evaluation is increasingly seen as an ongoing learning process and an important means of strengthening capacity and improving organisational performance (Horton et al., 2003:7). While there are many benefits of using participatory methodologies in ECB projects, our experiences and a review of the literature in this area highlight the many challenges, issues and contradictions that can affect the success of such ECB efforts. We discuss these issues, drawing on our learnings from the ongoing participatory action research (PAR) project 'Assessing Communication for Social Change’ (AC4SC). This four year project, which began in 2007, is a collaboration between communication and development academics and evaluation specialists from two Australian universities and communication for development practitioners and monitoring and evaluation (M&E) staff in the NGO Equal Access Nepal (EAN). The aim is to develop, implement, and evaluate a participatory methodology for assessing the social change impacts of community radio programs produced by EAN. It builds on previous projects that used ethnographic action research (EAR) methodology (Tacchi et al., 2007).
Resumo:
"In this chapter the authors present a critique of Participatory Evaluation as worked in development projects, in this case, in Nepal. The article works between established claims that Participatory Evaluation builds capacity at programmatic and organisational levels, and the specific experiences of these claims in the authors’ current work. They highlight the need to address key difficulties such as high turn-over of staff and resulting loss of capacity to engage in Participatory Evaluation, and the difficulty of communication between academic as compared with local practical wisdoms. A key issue is the challenge of addressing the inevitable issues of power inequities that such approaches encounter. While Participatory Evaluation has been around for some time, it has only enjoyed more widespread recognition of its value in comparatively recent times, with its uptake in international development environments. To this extent, the practice is still in its early stages of development, and Jo, June and Michael’s work contributes to strengthening and more comprehensively understanding it. With regard to the meta-theme of this publication, this chapter is an example of how context not only influences the methodology to be used and the praxis of how it is to be used, but contributes to early explication of the core nature of an emerging methodology."
Resumo:
Dynamics is an essential core engineering subject and it is considered as one of the hardest subjects in the engineering discipline. Many students acknowledged that Dynamics is very hard to understand and comprehend the abstract concepts through traditional teaching methods with normal tutorials and assignments. In this study, we conducted an investigation on the application of visualization technique to help students learning the unit with the fundamental theory displayed in the physical space. The research was conducted based on the following five basic steps of Action Learning Cycle including: Identifying problem, Planning action, Implementing, Evaluating, and Reporting. Through our studies, we have concluded that visualization technique can definitely help students in learning and comprehending the abstract theories and concepts of Dynamics.
Resumo:
This paper focuses on a practice-led research project where the author as artist/researcher participates in a Queensland-wide women’s history project to celebrate Queensland’s Suffrage Centenary in 2005. The author participated in the Women’s Historical Shoebox Collection, where Queensland women were invited to decorate and fill a shoebox with personal and symbolic items that speak about their lives and the lives of their women forebears. This paper explores the practice-led research process that enabled the artist/researcher to design and assemble her contribution. Fredericks describes the iterative process of developing the shoebox and the themes that developed through her artistic practice. She also describes the content of her shoebox and explains the symbolism underpinning the items. The Women’s Historical Shoebox Collection is now owned by the State Library of Queensland and the Jessie Street National Women’s Library.
Resumo:
Runoff, soil loss, and nutrient loss were assessed on a Red Ferrosol in tropical Australia over 3 years. The experiment was conducted using bounded, 100-m(2) field plots cropped to peanuts, maize, or grass. A bare plot, without cover or crop, was also instigated as an extreme treatment. Results showed the importance of cover in reducing runoff, soil loss, and nutrient loss from these soils. Runoff ranged from 13% of incident rainfall for the conventional cultivation to 29% under bare conditions during the highest rainfall year, and was well correlated with event rainfall and rainfall energy. Soil loss ranged from 30 t/ha. year under bare conditions to <6 t/ha. year under cropping. Nutrient losses of 35 kg N and 35 kg P/ha. year under bare conditions and 17 kg N and 11 kg P/ha. year under cropping were measured. Soil carbon analyses showed a relationship with treatment runoff, suggesting that soil properties influenced the rainfall runoff response. The cropping systems model PERFECT was calibrated using runoff, soil loss, and soil water data. Runoff and soil loss showed good agreement with observed data in the calibration, and soil water and yield had reasonable agreement. Longterm runs using historical weather data showed the episodic nature of runoff and soil loss events in this region and emphasise the need to manage land using protective measures such as conservation cropping practices. Farmers involved in related, action-learning activities wished to incorporate conservation cropping findings into their systems but also needed clear production benefits to hasten practice change.
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This paper reflects on the motivation, method and effectiveness of teaching leadership and organisational change to graduate engineers. Delivering progress towards sustainable development requires engineers who are aware of pressing global issues (such as resource depletion, climate change, social inequity and an interdependent economy) since it is they who deliver the goods and services that underpin society within these constraints. In recognition of this fact the Cambridge University MPhil in Engineering for Sustainable Development has focussed on educating engineers to become effective change agents in their professional field with the confidence to challenge orthodoxy in adopting traditional engineering solutions. This paper reflects on ten years of delivering this course to review how teaching change management and leadership aspects of the programme have evolved and progressed over that time. As the students on this professional practice have often extensive experience as practising engineers and scientists, they have learned the limitations of their technical background when solving complex problems. Students often join the course recognising their need to broaden their knowledge of relevant cross-disciplinary skills. The course offers an opportunity for these early to mid-career engineers to explore an ethical and value-based approach to bringing about effective change in their particular sectors and organisations. This is achieved through action learning assignments in combination with reflections on the theory of change to enable students to equip themselves with tools that help them to be effective in making their professional and personal life choices. This paper draws on feedback gathered from students during their participation on the course and augments this with alumni reflections gathered some years after their graduation. These professionals are able to look back on their experience of the taught components and reflect on how they have been able to apply this key learning in their subsequent careers.
Resumo:
This paper reflects on the motivation, method and effectiveness of teaching leadership and organisational change to graduate engineers. Delivering progress towards sustainable development requires engineers who are aware of pressing global issues (such as resource depletion, climate change, social inequity and an interdependent economy) since it is they who deliver the goods and services that underpin society within these constraints. They also must understand how to implement change in the organisations within which they will work. In recognition of this fact the Cambridge University MPhil in Engineering for Sustainable Development has focussed on educating engineers to become effective change agents in their professional field with the confidence to challenge orthodoxy in adopting traditional engineering solutions. This paper reflects on ten years of delivering a special module to review how teaching change management and leadership aspects of the programme have evolved and progressed over that time. As the students who embark on this professional practice have often extensive experience as practising engineers and scientists, many have already learned the limitations of their technical background when solving complex problems. Students often join the course recognising their need to broaden their knowledge of relevant cross-disciplinary skills. The programme offers an opportunity for these early to mid-career engineers to explore an ethical and value-based approach to bringing about effective change in their particular sectors and organisations. This is achieved through action learning assignments in combination with reflections on the theory of change to enable students to equip themselves with tools that help them to be effective in making their professional and personal life choices. This paper draws on feedback gathered from students during their participation on the programme and augments this with alumni reflections gathered some years after their graduation. These professionals are able to look back on their experience of the taught components and reflect on how they have been able to apply this key learning in their subsequent careers. Copyright © 2012 September.
Resumo:
Most reinforcement learning models of animal conditioning operate under the convenient, though fictive, assumption that Pavlovian conditioning concerns prediction learning whereas instrumental conditioning concerns action learning. However, it is only through Pavlovian responses that Pavlovian prediction learning is evident, and these responses can act against the instrumental interests of the subjects. This can be seen in both experimental and natural circumstances. In this paper we study the consequences of importing this competition into a reinforcement learning context, and demonstrate the resulting effects in an omission schedule and a maze navigation task. The misbehavior created by Pavlovian values can be quite debilitating; we discuss how it may be disciplined.
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A new index, i.e., the periphery representation of the projection of a molecule from 3D space to a 2D plane is described. The results, correlation with toxicity of substituted nitrobenzenes, obtained by using periphery descriptors are much better than that obtained by using the areas (i.e., shadows) of projections of the compounds. Even better results were achieved by using the combination of periphery descriptors and the projections areas as well as the indicated variable K reflecting the action of group NO position on the benzene ring.
Resumo:
Urquhart, C., Spink, S. & Thomas, R., Assessing training and professional development needs of library staff. Report for National Library of Health. (2005). Aberystwyth: Department of Information Studies, University of Wales Aberystwyth Sponsorship: National Library for Health (NHS Information Authority)
Resumo:
O atual contexto social de aceleração exponencial, resultante de alterações políticas, económicas e do acesso imediato a um extenso conjunto de informações e a um manancial de desenvolvimentos científicos e tecnológicos, cujas implicações são imprevisíveis e transversais a diferentes setores, está em dissonância com as características do modelo escolar dominante e a naturalizada ‘gramática da escola’ (Formosinho & Machado, 2008; Nóvoa, 2009a; Tyack & Tobin, 1994). Este desfasamento, amplificado em países com sistemas de ensino de matriz centralizada, resvala entre uma ação docente acrítica e executora e, em oposição, uma ação docente de natureza profissional, caracterizada por um alinhamento entre o desenvolvimento profissional e a afirmação da especificidade do conhecimento profissional docente, enquanto saber que se constrói na interação com os outros, com o próprio, nos e sobre os contextos de prática. A implementação do processo de reorganização curricular do ensino básico (Decreto-Lei n.º 6/2001, de 18 de janeiro) redefiniu o currículo nacional segundo duas perspetivas: a nacional e a local, veiculando uma conceção curricular flexível e emancipatória, isto é, uma proposta curricular que confere aos professores autonomia no desenvolvimento e gestão do currículo, instigando-os à realização de práticas curriculares com intencionalidade pedagógica estratégica. Neste sentido, a pretensão desta investigação situou-se ao nível da problematização de saberes profissionais e da concetualização de algumas possibilidades de ação tangenciais à capacidade de autotransformação de cada profissional docente e da escola. As opções metodológicas consideradas visaram, sobretudo, compreender quais os possíveis conhecimentos profissionais mobilizados por professores de Ciências Físicas e Naturais, em particular ao nível do desenvolvimento e gestão do currículo desta área curricular. Assim, perspetivado sob a forma de questão enquadradora, o problema que esteve na génese desta investigação assume a seguinte formulação: Que conhecimento mobilizam professores do ensino básico no desenvolvimento e na gestão do currículo das Ciências Físicas e Naturais? De que forma e com que ações poderá ser potenciado esse conhecimento nos processos de ensino e aprendizagem? O estudo empírico que sustentou este projeto de investigação organizou-se em dois momentos distintos. O primeiro, de natureza predominantemente quantitativa e dimensão de análise extensiva, envolveu a administração de um inquérito por questionário a professores de Ciências Físicas e Naturais que, no ano letivo de 2006/2007, se encontravam a lecionar em escolas públicas com 2.º e 3.º ciclos afetas à Direção Regional de Educação do Norte e ao, anteriormente, designado Centro de Área Educativa de Aveiro. Com um enfoque preponderantemente qualitativo, o segundo momento do estudo decorreu ao longo do ano letivo de 2007/2008 num agrupamento de escolas da região norte do país e consistiu na realização de entrevistas a oito professores de Ciências Físicas e Naturais, à coordenadora do departamento de Matemática e Ciências Experimentais e aos presidentes do Conselho Pedagógico e do Conselho Executivo. Ao longo do ano letivo, os professores de Ciências Físicas e Naturais desenvolveram, igualmente, um percurso formativo cuja ênfase se situava ao nível da adequação do desenvolvimento e gestão do currículo desta área disciplinar. As técnicas de tratamento de dados privilegiadas foram a análise estatística e a análise de conteúdo. Os resultados deste estudo apontam para a prevalência de uma ação docente desprovida de intencionalidades pedagógica e curricular ou de integração na construção do corpo geral do saber, designadamente ao nível dos processos de desenvolvimento e gestão do currículo. Não obstante alguma familiarização com conceitos inerentes à dimensão do conhecimento do currículo, os indicadores de reapropriação ao nível da ação docente foram escassos, denunciando a presença de constrangimentos no domínio teórico das orientações curriculares nacionais e locais, bem como no desenvolvimento de práticas curriculares articuladas e estrategicamente definidas. Por outro lado, o predomínio de uma ação docente tendencialmente acrítica, de matriz executora, associada ao cumprimento de normativos legais e de rotinas e burocracias instituídas, indiciou fragilidades ao nível do conhecimento profissional configurado como mobilização complexa, organizada e coerente de conhecimentos científicos, curriculares, pedagógicos e metodológicos, em função da especificidade de cada situação educativa e cuja finalidade é a otimização da aprendizagem do aluno. O percurso formativo afigurou-se como um espaço de partilha e de reflexão colegial, propício ao desenvolvimento de ações que se inserem numa perspetiva de ‘action learning’, possibilitando a reflexão e a aprendizagem através de ações empreendidas em função de práticas educativas. As possibilidades de ação remetem para a integração da formação contínua em contexto, com intencionalidades pedagógicas e curriculares estrategicamente definidas, e a problematização da formação inicial e contínua dos professores, envolvendo as perspetivas de diferentes atores educativos e de investigadores educacionais.
Resumo:
A sociedade portuguesa e o seu ensino em particular enfrentam múltiplos desafios, entre os quais se encontram a promoção da interculturalidade e a formação de cidadãos para o século XXI. Este relatório pretende apontar a aprendizagem cooperativa como uma resposta a estas questões, para além de tentar demonstrar que a utilização desta metodologia de ensino/aprendizagem em sala de aula promove o aumento da motivação dos alunos pela dinamização e enriquecimento das atividades escolares. No primeiro capítulo é feita a apresentação teórica da aprendizagem cooperativa por meio de uma breve perspetiva histórica acerca da presença da cooperação no ensino, da sua definição e de uma exposição das suas vantagens em vários domínios. São ainda destacados os fatores a ter em conta para que a sua implementação obtenha resultados positivos. No segundo capítulo caracteriza-se a escola onde teve lugar a componente prática do estágio e a turma para a qual foram desenvolvidas sequências didáticas relacionadas com o tema deste relatório. No último capítulo, descreve-se a experiência relativa à referida componente prática, que contempla a observação de aulas, a produção de atividades cooperativas nas disciplinas de Português e de Espanhol, segundo os fundamentos expostos na primeira parte deste trabalho, e uma reflexão acerca dos resultados obtidos.