999 resultados para carpeta de aprendizaje
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Resumen tomado del autor
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Monográfico con el título: 'El Espacio Europeo de Educación Superior ¿Hacia dónde va la Universidad Europea?'. Resumen basado en el de la publicación
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Students reflect more on their learning in course subjects when they participate in managing their teaching–learning environment. As a form of guided participation, peer assessment serves the following purposes: (a) it improves the student’s understanding of previously established learning objectives; (b) it is a powerful metacognitive tool; (c) it transfers to the student part of the responsibility for assessing learning, which means deciding which learning activities are important and choosing the degree of effort a course subject will require; (d) it emphasizes the collective aspect of the nature of knowledge; and (e) the educational benefits derived from peer assessment clearly justify the efforts required to implement activities. This paper reports on the relative merits of a learning portfolio compiled during fine arts-related studies in which peer assessment played an important role. The researchers analyzed the student work load and the final marks students received for compulsory art subjects. They conclude that the use of a closed learning portfolio with a well-structured, sequential and analytical design can have a positive effect on student learning and that, although implementing peer assessment may be complex and students need to become familiar with it, its use is not only feasible but recommendable.
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Las autoras muestran la experiencia del aprendizaje cooperativo que desarrollaron en la asignatura de Ciencias Sociales en la Diplomatura de Maestro especialidad Educación Física, Educación Musical y Lengua extranjera en la Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona durante el curso 2005-2006. Los objetivos del aprendizaje cooperativo son: incrementar el aprendizaje mediante la interacción, facilitar diferentes estilos de aprendizaje, mejorar la comunicación oral y escrita, aumentar la asistencia a clase y disminuir los niveles de abandono, facilitar el razonamiento crítico, organizar, gestionar y administrar la información y el tiempo de trabajo y ser empático y asertivo. La presencia en las aulas del aprendizaje cooperativo es todavía poco significativa, pero se puede convertir en una dinámica más habitual gracias a los ECTS. La carpeta de aprendizaje (CAES) es el sistema de evaluación de la asignatura. Permite construir una visión panorámica de los contenidos de la asignatura. Además el aprendizaje cooperativo forma parte de las destrezas que todo docente debe garantizar en su práctica docente.
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El artículo pertenece a una sección de la revista dedicada a competencia artística y cultural.
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Duración (en horas): Más de 50 horas. Destinatario: Estudiante y Docente
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22 hojas.
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Resumen tomado de la publicaci??n. Resumen tambi??n en ingl??s
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Esta carpeta didáctica de educación secundaria contiene el siguiente material: 1. Guía didáctica del profesorado. 2. Cuadernos de experiencias ejemplificadoras. 3. Unidades didácticas: a) Somos seres sexuados. b) Desarrollo sexual. c) Fecundación, embarazo y parto. d) Anticoncepción y aborto. e) E.T.S. y SIDA. Con estos materiales se pretende contribuir a la educación integral de los alumnos y alumnas y a la construcción de una sociedad más saludable, desde una visión de la sexualidad como fuente de comunicación, afectividad y placer, y desde una concepción constructiva y participativa de los procesos de enseñanza y de aprendizaje.
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Resumen tomado de la publicación. Este artículo forma parte del dossier 'Ambiente de clase e investigación escolar: el aula como contexto'
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Resumen tomado de la autora. La página web citada se encuentra en: http://www.xtec.es/sgfp/llicencies/200203/memories/asantiago/ART/index.html
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El objetivo principal es desarrollar y establecer un modelo de aprendizaje y enseñanza basado en la autonomía, en la responsabilidad de los propios aprendizajes, en los itinerarios personales, en el desarrollo de la creatividad y el espíritu crítico, en los valores de solidaridad y trabajo en equipo y en la interdisciplinariedad de los contenidos. Para ello, se elebora una unidad didáctica conjunta donde se interrelacionen todas las áreas del currículo escolar. El tema seleccionado es Una boda toledana en el siglo XIII. Las actividades son conciertos, audiciones y representaciones artísticas. Otras son las actividades que se desarrollan, tres veces en semana, en las llamadas mañanas abiertas y que consisten en juntar en la misma aula alumnos del mismo nivel pero de distintas clases y se mezclan materias afines como las Matemáticas con las Ciencias de la Naturaleza, o la Lengua con la Geografía e Historia. Se intenta que el alumno despliegue su propio aprendizaje y trabaje a su ritmo, todo supervisado, apoyado y evaluado por profesores. La metodología se lleva a cabo de forma individual, en pequeños grupos o en grandes grupos. Los pequeños grupos giran en torno al ámbito sociolingüístico; científico; informática y educación plástica; búsqueda y elaboración de recursos; y coordinación, orientación y seguimiento. También se dan tres horas de formación con un especialista en inteligencia emocional. Algunos de los puntos para la evaluación son el funcionamiento en cuanto a la organización de las actividades, resultados académicos, contenidos y capacidades adquiridas y seguimiento general del grado de motivación e interés de los alumnos. Se adjunta como anexo una carpeta con la unidad didáctica completa de Una boda toledana en el siglo XIII, y su versión en CD-ROM..
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El artículo pertenece a una sección monográfica de la revista dedicada a evaluación. - El trabajo forma parte del proyecto de investigación 'Los instrumentos de evaluación de los contenidos históricos en cuarto de educación secundaria obligatoria', financiado por la Consejería de Educación, Ciencia e Investigación de la CARM. - Resumen tomado parcialmente de la revista.
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Resumen basado en el de la publicación
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Welcome to Informed Learning. If you have opened this book, it is probably because you are interested in how people learn. It may also be because you are interested in how learners interact with their information environment and would like to help them do so in ways that help them learn better. What should we teach and how, so that our students will use information successfully, creatively and responsibly in their journey as lifelong learners? Informed learning provides a unique perspective on helping students become successful learners in our rapidly evolving information environments. It presents a new framework for informed learning, that will enable teachers, librarians, researchers and teacher-researchers to work together as they continue to respond to the need to help students use information to learn. Do you want to help your students engage with the information practices of their discipline or chosen profession? Are you looking for ideas to invigorate and refresh your curriculum? Are you looking for ways to help your students write better essays or search the internet more successfully? Are you looking for strategies to enhance your research supervision? Are you trying to discover how information literacy and information literacy education can contribute to academic curriculum? Informed Learning can help you. Informed learning is using information, creatively and reflectively, in order to learn. It is learning that draws on the different ways in which we use information in academic, professional and community life; and it is learning that draws on emerging understanding of our varied experiences of using information to learn. Indeed, we cannot learn without using information. It is problemetising the interdependence between information use and learning that is the foundation of this book. Most of the time we take for granted that aspect of learning which we call information use. What might happen to the learning experience if we attend to it? Informed Learning examines research into the experience of using information to learn in academic, workplace and community contexts, that can be used to inform learning and learning design at many levels. It draws on contemporary higher education teaching and learning theory to suggest ways forward for a learning agenda that values the need for engaging with the wider world of information. In doing so, it offers a new and unified framework for implementing curriculum that recognises the importance of successful, creative and reflective information use as a strategy for learning as well as a learning outcome; and proposes a research agenda that will continue to inform learning. Informed Learning reconceptualises information literacy as being about engaging in information practices in order to learn; engaging with the different ways of using information to learn. Based on the author’s work in developing the seven faces of information literacy, it proposes the need for teaching and learning to 1) bring about new ways of experiencing and using information, and 2) engage students with those information practices relevant to their discipline or profession. This book is written for a diverse audience of educators from many disciplines, curriculum designers, researchers, and administrators. While this book both establishes a new approach to learning design and an associated research agenda, it is also intended to be practical. I have sought to ground the ideas in practice through: • using Steve and Jane as academics from different disciplines on a journey; experiencing the implementation of informed learning; • using examples from the literature and personal experience; • using reflective questions towards the end of each chapter. In this book you will find many examples of how people experience information use as they go about learning in different contexts. The research reported here shows that as people go about learning they interact with information in different ways. They may be learning about a content area in a formal context, they may be engaged in informal learning as they go about their everyday work, or they may be learning through doing original research. The emphasis on experience and ways of seeing comes from the work of researchers into student learning such as Ference Marton, Paul Ramsden, Shirley Booth, Michael Prosser, Keith Trigwell and others who have shown that, if we are to help students learn, we must first be aware of how they experience those aspects of the world about which they are learning. Different ways of reading this book The first three chapters of this book establish the broad theoretical framework for informed learning; and the remaining chapters consider the out workings of this in a range of contexts. If you want to browse the general directions of this book, read the narratives at the start of each chapter. If you want to see how the book might influence your practice, read the narratives and the reflective questions at the end of each chapter. If you want to help your students become informed learners in their discipline or profession, focus on chapters one, two, three and five. If you are looking for help with students engaged in information practices such as internet searching or essay writing, focus on chapters one, three and four. If you are interested in informed learning in the community or workplace, focus on chapters one, two, three and six. If you want to help your research students become informed learners, focus on chapters one, two, three, seven and eight. If you are working with colleagues to promote information literacy education and are looking for ideas, read chapter nine. If you are interested in researching informed learning read chapter ten