798 resultados para teaching staff formation
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This resource can also be used by professional staff who are seeking accreditation via the UK PSF for relevant aspects of their role, e.g. staff who support the use of technologies for learning and/or support the development of digital literacies.
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Approximately 85,000 part-time teaching staff working in further education (FE) and adult and community learning (ACL) are often seen as ‘a problem’. The intrinsic ‘part-timeness’ of these staff tends to marginalise them: they remain under-recognised and largely unsupported. Yet this picture is over-simplified. This article examines how part-time staff make creative use of professional autonomy and agency to mitigate problematic ‘casual employment’ conditions, reporting on results from Learning and Skills Development Agency-sponsored research (2002–2006) with 700 part-time staff in the learning and skills sector. The question of agency was reported as a key factor in part-time employment. Change is necessary for the professional agency of part-timers to be harnessed as the sector responds to ambitious sectoral ‘improvement’ agendas following the Foster Report and FE White Paper. Enhanced professionalisation for part-time staff needs greater recognition and inclusion in change agendas.
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Comunicación presentada en CIDUI 2010, Congreso Internacional Docencia Universitaria e Innovación, Barcelona, 30 junio-2 julio 2010.
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Among the factors that affect the convergence towards the European Higher Education Area, university teaching staff's motivation is fundamental, and consequently, it is crucial to empirically know what this motivation depends on. In this context, one of the most relevant changes in the teacher-student relationship is assessment. In fact, the transition from a static assessment -focused on only one temporal point (final exam)- to a dynamic assessment, will require changes in thought and action, both on the part of teachers and students. In this line, the objective of this paper is to analyze the determinants of teaching staff's predisposition to the continuous assessment method. Specifically, we consider the following explanatory dimensions: teaching method used (which measures their degree of involvement with the ongoing adaptation process), type of subject (core, compulsory and optional), and teacher's personal characteristics (professional status and gender). The empirical application carried out at the University of Alicante uses Logit Models with Random Coefficients to capture heterogeneity, and shows that "cooperative learning" is a clear-cut determinant of "continuous assessment" as well as "continuous assessment plus final examination". Also, a conspicuous result, which in turn becomes a thought-provoking finding, is that professional status is highly relevant as a teacher's engagement is closely related to prospects of stability. Consequently, the most relevant implications from the results revolve around the way academic institutions can propose and implement inducement for their teaching staff.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Tem aumentado o interesse pelo domínio da língua inglesa como ferramenta de comunicação para inclusão no mundo globalizado, bem como a oferta de seu ensino para crianças (CAMERON, 2001; PINTER, 2006). Neste texto, buscamos refletir acerca da formação do docente para atuar junto a esse público em especial. Trazemos sugestões de mudanças no processo vigente, que venham ao encontro das necessidades contemporâneas (SACRISTÁN, 2006; LIBÂNEO, 2006), mediante a visão de cinco professoras que lecionam língua inglesa para crianças em um município matogrossense. Os dados fazem parte de um estudo qualitativo e foram gerados por meio de entrevistas individuais e sessões reflexivas coletivas entre o grupo de docentes e a pesquisadora. Com base em seus dizeres, apresentamos os conhecimentos teórico-metodológicos adquiridos e os desejados, e algumas características peculiares a esses docentes (SPADA, 2004). São abordadas, também, algumas dificuldades encontradas e a importância da experiência para o desenvolvimento da docência. A formação é entendida como contínua, com caráter coletivo, colaborativo e reflexivo (PORTO, 2004; IMBERNÓN, 2005; PIMENTA e GHEDIN, 2005), possibilitando ao docente desenvolver ação investigativa de sua prática pedagógica.
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Objective To understand how the formal curriculum experience of an Australian undergraduate pharmacy program supports students’ professional identity formation. Methods A qualitative ethnographic study was conducted over four weeks using participant observation and examined the ‘typical’ student experience from the perspective of a pharmacist. A one-week period of observation was undertaken with each of the four year groups (that is, for years one to four) comprising the undergraduate curriculum. Data were collected through observation of the formal curriculum experience using field notes, a reflective journal and informal interviews with 38 pharmacy students. Data were analyzed thematically using an a priori analytical framework. Results Our findings showed that the observed curriculum was a conventional curricular experience which focused on the provision of technical knowledge and provided some opportunities for practical engagement. There were some opportunities for students to imagine themselves as pharmacists, for example, when the lecture content related to practice or teaching staff described their approach to practice problems. However, there were limited opportunities for students to observe pharmacist role models, experiment with being a pharmacist or evaluate their professional identities. While curricular learning activities were available for students to develop as pharmacists e.g. patient counseling, there was no contact with patients and pharmacist academic staff tended to role model as educators with little evidence of their pharmacist selves. Conclusion These findings suggest that the current conventional approach to the curriculum design may not be fully enabling learning experiences which support students in successfully negotiating their professional identities. Instead it appeared to reinforce their identities as students with a naïve understanding of professional practice, making their future transition to professional practice challenging.
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Australia is a vast land and access to quality higher education is challenging for many Australians that live outside the larger metropolitan areas. In 2010, the School of Education at an Australian university (Curtin University in Western Australia) moved to flexible delivery of a fully online Bachelor of Education degree for their rural students. The new model of delivery allows access for students from any location provided they have a computer and an internet connection.A number of teaching staff had previously used an asynchronous environment to deliver learning modules housed within a learning management system (LMS) but had not used synchronous software with their students. To enhance the learning environment and to provide high quality learning experiences to students learning at a distance, the adoption of synchronous software (Elluminate Live) was introduced. This software is a real-time virtual classroom environment that allows for communication through Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) and video conferencing, alongside a large number of collaboration tools to engage learners.This research paper reports on the integration of a live e-learning solution into the current Learning Management System (LMS) environment. Staff were interviewed about their perceptions and a questionnaire was administered to a sample of students to identify their experience with the synchronous software in order to inform future practice.
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Dans les dernières décennies, l’augmentation de l’immigration et sa diversification a mené le gouvernement québécois à s’adapter à cette nouvelle réalité de différentes manières. Dans cette optique, en 1998, le ministère de l'Éducation du Québec a mis sur pied la Politique d'intégration scolaire et d'éducation interculturelle de laquelle a découlé un Plan d’action qui propose différentes pistes afin de concrétiser les principes et orientations de cette même politique. Dans le but de soutenir le personnel du réseau scolaire québécois dans l’implantation de cette nouvelle vision, des sessions de formation interculturelle ont été créées à l'intention des enseignants, des professionnels non enseignants ainsi que des directions scolaires. L’étude des enjeux de la diversité ethnoculturelle dans les établissements scolaires via les formations interculturelles a permis de mettre en lumière la vision des intervenants scolaires ayant assisté à ces sessions. Leurs perceptions ont pu être mises en relation avec les diverses stratégies proposées par les chercheurs-formateurs afin d’analyser plus en profondeur la dynamique entre la diversité ethnoculturelle et les institutions scolaires. Divers enjeux sont ressortis des entrevues et formations et seront discutés: la pérennité de l'identité québécoise, l'éthique de l'enseignant ainsi que la complexité de la réflexion amorcée par les intervenants scolaires. Nous montrons comment la rencontre avec l'Autre force la réflexion sur le Soi quotidiennement notamment à travers le discours interculturel qu’entretiennent les intervenants scolaires, les différentes valeurs en présence dans leur milieu professionnel et la réflexivité préconisée par les formateurs.
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The importance of reflection in higher education, and across disciplinary fields is widely recognised; it is generally included in university graduate attributes, professional standards and program objectives. Furthermore, reflection is commonly embedded into assessment requirements in higher education subjects, often without necessary scaffolding or clear expectations for students. Despite the rhetoric around the importance of reflection for ongoing learning, there is scant literature on any systematic, developmental approach to teaching reflective learning across higher education programs/courses. Given that professional or academic reflection is not intuitive, and requires specific pedagogic intervention to do well, a program/course-wide approach is essential. Over the last 18 months, teaching staff from five QUT faculties: Business, Creative Industries, Education, Health and Law, have been involved in an ALTC-funded project to develop a systematic, cross-faculty approach to teaching and assessing reflection in higher education. This forum will present a reflective model that staff have used in their teaching and they will also share their ideas and approaches to reflective teaching and assessment with colleagues from QUT and other universities. A poster format will enable forum participants to talk informally with the presenters about how the approaches and resources they have developed for units have contributed to the development of the reflective model which can be applied across faculties. Participants will also be able to explore the web resources which have been developed as part of the project.
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Nurses play a pivotal role in responding to the changing needs of community health care. Therefore, nursing education must be relevant, responsive, and evidence based. We report a case study of curriculum development in a community nursing unit embedded within an undergraduate nursing degree. We used action research to develop, deliver, evaluate, and redesign the curriculum. Feedback was obtained through self-reflection, expert opinion from community stakeholders, formal student evaluation, and critical review. Changes made, especially in curriculum delivery, led to improved learner focus and more clearly linked theory and practice. The redesigned unit improved performance, measured with the university's student evaluation of feedback instrument (increased from 0.3 to 0.5 points below to 0.1 to 0.5 points above faculty mean in all domains), and was well received by teaching staff. The process confirmed that improved pedagogy can increase student engagement with content and perception of a unit as relevant to future practice.