853 resultados para Learning strategies.
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This study investigates three important issues in kanji learning strategies; namely, strategy use, effectiveness of strategy and orthographic background. A questionnaire on kanji learning strategy use and perceived effectiveness was administered to 116 beginner level, undergraduate students of Japanese from alphabetic and character backgrounds in Australia. Both descriptive and statistical analyses of the questionnaire responses revealed that the strategies used most often are the most helpful. Repeated writing was reported as the most used strategy type although alphabetic background learners reported using repeated writing strategies significantly more often than character background learners. The importance of strategy training and explicit instruction of fundamental differences between character and alphabetic background learners of Japanese is discussed in relation to teaching strategies. [Author abstract]
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A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Management from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
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Las Tecnologías de la Información y la Comunicación (TIC) han alcanzando una fuerte expansión en la última década y se convierten en una estrategia clave para la educación científica y tecnológica. Actualmente se realizan significativas inversiones en computadoras e insumos acordes a esta tecnología lo que no garantiza que éstas mejores disponibilidades sean necesariamente conducentes a propuestas educativas aceptables, ya que la incorporación de las TIC en la educación científica no puede consistir en un mero cambio de soporte sin que esto se acompañe de una renovación constructivista del aprendizaje. También se observa un escaso desarrollo y aplicación de las TIC tanto en la formación de grado de las carreras científicas, como en la formación permanente de los docentes. A partir de lo expuesto, nos planteamos los siguientes problemas: ¿cómo generar cursos de formación docente con alternativas virtuales que garanticen la construcción, actualización y transferencia de conocimientos en las disciplinas científicas? ¿qué diseño de materiales se requiere para potenciar aprendizajes flexibles de calidad?, ¿qué dimensiones, variables e indicadores dan cuenta de procesos de comunicación en estos entornos?, ¿Cuáles son las principales estrategias que promueven los desarrollos tecnológicos? ¿De qué manera se lleva a cabo el seguimiento y evaluación de los desarrollos tecnológicos? Para dar respuesta a estos interrogantes nos planteamos este proyecto que tiene por objetivos: diseñar, desarrollar, implementar y evaluar materiales basados en un modelo constructivista que utiliza como soporte las TIC el marco de la "Enseñanza para la Comprensión". Analizar las relaciones que se establecen en el intercambio comunicativo a través de las TIC, ya sea de manera síncrona o asíncrona e identificar las estrategias de aprendizaje utilizadas por los estudiantes cuando trabajan con entornos virtuales. Se profundizará en los siguientes temas: "La materia y sus cambios", "Biotecnología" y "Dilemas investigativos a los que se enfrentan los científicos". Los dos primeros módulos estarán destinados a la formación de futuros docentes en Ciencias y a la formación permanente de docentes en ejercicio. Los usuarios del tercer módulo serán los estudiantes del ciclo de nivelacion. Se propone desarrollar instrumentos de evaluación, adaptando indicadores que sirvan para evaluar el modelo, el diseño de los materiales, el medio tecnológico, la eficiencia de estos programas con TIC. Se van a definir variables que permitan identificar las estrategias de aprendizaje utilizadas por los usuarios de estos desarrollos tecnológicos y las relaciones que se establecen en el intercambio comunicativo de los entornos virtuales, haciendo hincapié en la lecto-escritura científica. Se utilizará la plataforma Moodle que permite la administración de los estudiantes, las interacciones sociales necesarias para integrar una comunidad de aprendizaje a través de los foros y correo electrónico y la evaluación continua de los aprendizajes. El desarrollo de los contenidos específicos y las actividades de aprendizaje se hará en CD interactivos elaborados con diferentes programas de computación. En el desarrollo de los materiales se incluyen algunas simulaciones interactivas que permiten comprender conceptos que habitualmente requerían experimentación fáctica. El estudio se enmarca en la combinación de dos enfoques metodológicos que integran técnicas y procedimientos de análisis tanto cuantitativos como cualitativos. Consideramos que esta investigación es una contribución teórica importante ya que propone mejorar un modelo para la enseñanza de las Ciencias Naturales introduciendo las TIC. Se espera realizar un aporte novedoso al campo de la Didáctica de las Ciencias con la obtención de los resultados y acciones tendientes a establecer una red de comunicaciones entre los docentes participantes y los investigadores involucrados en el programa, instalada en forma progresiva.
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This paper describes a Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL) case study in engineering education carried out within the context of a network management course. The case study shows that the use of two computing tools developed by the authors and based on Free- and Open-Source Software (FOSS) provide significant educational benefits over traditional engineering pedagogical approaches in terms of both concepts and engineering competencies acquisition. First, the Collage authoring tool guides and supports the course teacher in the process of authoring computer-interpretable representations (using the IMS Learning Design standard notation) of effective collaborative pedagogical designs. Besides, the Gridcole system supports the enactment of that design by guiding the students throughout the prescribed sequence of learning activities. The paper introduces the goals and context of the case study, elaborates onhow Collage and Gridcole were employed, describes the applied evaluation methodology, anddiscusses the most significant findings derived from the case study.
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This study examined the effects of providing students with explicit instruction in how to use a repertoire of reading comprehension strategies and test taking skills when reading and responding to three types of questions (direct, inferential, critical). Specifically, the study examined whether providing students with a "model" of how to read and respond to the text and to the comprehension questions improved their reading comprehension relative to providing them with implicit instruction on reading comprehension strategies and test taking skills. Students' reading comprehension and test taking performance scores were compared as a function of instructional condition. Students from 2 grade 8 classes participated in this study. The reading component of the Canadian Achievement Tests, Third Edition (CAT/3) was used to identify students' level of reading comprehension prior to the formal instructional sessions. Students received either explicit instruction, which involved modelling, or implicit instruction, which consisted of review and discussion of the strategies to be used. Comprehension was measured through the administration of formative tests after each instructional session. The formative tests consisted of reading comprehension questions pertaining to a specific form of text (narrative, informational, graphic). In addition, students completed 3 summative tests and a delayed comprehension test which consisted of the alternative version of the CAT/3 standardized reading assessment. These data served as a posttest measure to determine whether students had shown an improvement in their reading comprehension skills as a result of the program delivery. There were significant differences in students' Canadian Achievement Test performance scores prior to the onset of the study. Students in the implicit group attained significantly higher comprehension scores than did students in the explicit group. The results from the program sessions indicated no significant differences in reading comprehension between the implicit and explicit conditions, with the exception of the 6th session involving the reading and interpreting of graphic text. Students in the explicit group performed significantly better when reading and interpreting graphic text than those in the implicit group. No significant differences were evident between the two study conditions across the three summative tests. Upon completion of the study, the results from the Canadian Achievement Test indicated no significant differences in performance between the two study conditions. The findings from this study reveal the effectiveness of providing students with explicit strategy instruction when reading and responding to various forms of text. Modelling the appropriate reading comprehension strategies and test taking skills enabled students to apply the same thought processes to their own independent work. This form of instruction enabled students in the explicit group to improve in their abilities to comprehend and respond to text and therefore should be incorporated as an effective form of classroom teaching.
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Resumen tomado de la publicaci??n
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Resumen basado en el de la publicaci??n
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El sistema CLIC puede bajarse de la siguiente dirección: http://www.xtec.es/recursos/clic/esp/info/download.htm
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Incluye un anexo que recoge los items que componen el cuestionario utilizado para este estudio. Resumen basado en el de los autores. Resumen y título en castellano y en inglés. Este trabajo forma parte del proyecto: Estrategias de enseñanza-aprendizaje en la universidad. Subvencionado por una beca del Instituto de Cooperación Iberoamericana-ICI, España y apoyo económico de la Vollmer Foundation - Caracas, Venezuela
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This paper seeks to answer the research question "How does the flipped classroom affect students’ learning strategies?" In e-learning research, several studies have focused on how students and teachers perceive the flipped classroom approach. In general, these studies have reported pleasing results. Nonetheless, few, if any, studies have attempted to find out the potential effects of the flipped classroom approach on how students learn. This study was based on two cases: 1) a business modelling course and 2) a research methodology course. In both cases, participating students were from information systems courses at Dalarna University in Sweden. Recorded lectures replaced regular lectures. The recorded lectures were followed by seminars that focused on the learning content of each lecture in various ways. Three weeks after the final seminar, we arranged for two focus group interviews to take place in each course, with 8 to 10 students participating in each group. We asked open questions on how the students thought they had been affected and more dedicated questions that were generated from a literature study on the effects of flipped classroom courses. These questions dealt with issues about mobility, the potential for repeating lectures, formative feedback, the role of seminars, responsibility, empowerment, lectures before seminars, and any problems encountered. Our results show that, in general, students thought differently about learning after the courses in relation to more traditional approaches, especially regarding the need to be more active. Most students enjoyed the mobility aspect and the accessibility of recorded lectures, although a few claimed it demanded a more disciplined attitude. Most students also expressed a feeling of increased activity and responsibility when participating in seminars. Some even felt empowered because they could influence seminar content. The length of and possibility to navigate in recorded lectures was also considered important. The arrangement of the seminar rooms should promote face-to-face discussions. Finally, the types of questions and tasks were found to affect the outcomes of the seminars. The overall conclusion with regard to students’ learning strategies is that to be an active, responsible, empowered, and critical student you have to be an informed student with possibilities and mandate to influence how, where and when to learn and be able to receive continuous feedback during the learning process. Flipped classroom can support such learning.
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This study aim to verify the use of learning strategies in students of the elementary level presenting interdisciplinary diagnosis of attention dei cit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Nine students, male gender, attending 3rd to 9th grade level of the elementary level, average age 10 years and 7 months, presenting interdisciplinary diagnosis of attention dei cit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). h e students were submitted to the application of the Evaluation of Learning Strategies from elementary level – EAVAP-EF – scale, which aimed to evaluate the strategies reported and used by students in situation of study and learning, as follows: cognitive strategies, metacognitive strategies and absence of dysfunctional metacognitive strategies. h e general result at EAVAP-EF scale, showed that students with ADHD reached the percentile 25%, considered as low performance in the use of the learning strategies. For the variable absence of dysfunctional metacognitive strategies, the students presented percentile 30%, percentile 25% for cognitive strategies and 55% for metacognitive strategies. h e results showed that ADHD students do not use ef ectively the learning cognitive and metacognitive strategies and present the use of dysfunctional metacognitive strategies. h ese alterations match with the framework of ADHD because the entry of information, either visual or auditory, showed alterations, derived from inattention, which af ected the learning in classroom situation.
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The purpose of this paper is to examine ways in which pedagogy and gender of instructor impact the development of self-regulated learning strategies as assessed by the Motivated Strategies for Learning Questionnaire (MSLQ) in male and female undergraduate engineering students. Pedagogy was operationalized as two general formats: lecture plus active learning techniques or problem-base/project-based learning. One hundred seventy-six students from four universities participated in the study. Within-group analyses found significant differences with regard to pedagogy, instructors’ gender, and student gender on the learning strategies and motivation subscales as operationalized by the MSLQ. Male and females students reported significant post-test differences with regard to the gender of instructor and the style of pedagogy. The results of this study showed a pattern where more positive responses for students of both genders were found with the same-gendered instructor. The results also suggested that male students responded more positively to project and problem-based courses with changes evidenced in motivation strategies and resource management. Female students showed decreases in resource management in these two types of courses. Further, female students reported increases in the lecture with active learning courses.