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Florence Dujardin

Exploring how social media can enhance the teaching of action research - 1 views

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    Action research has an extensive history of being used to improve teaching and learning in many different professional settings, for example, schools, colleges, universities health and social care services. Educational action research embodies a process that necessitates honesty and openness and which lends itself to the betterment of one's practice; in the current e-learning climate, where education is rapidly changing and the role and practice of the educator is evolving yet uncertain, action research has never been more valuable. This article explores and presents how social media have been used to enhance the teaching of action research and also how students gained an understanding, appreciation and an evolving experience of action research. Exploring the intricate relationships between action research, new technologies and the learning that took place during an Understanding Action Research module, this article is written from the perspective that the module team was interested in ensuring that students acquired a fully rounded understanding of action research in order to utilize it in the improvement of their own practice.
Florence Dujardin

An ethical theory of action research pedagogy - 0 views

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    The theory of action research (AR) pedagogy presented in this article is, at its core, ethical in nature. For teaching, learning, and evaluating AR, the theory's goal is to increase individuals' capacity to act on their own behalf and preventing themselves from becoming an authoritarian expert. Achieving such an increased individual capacity requires the integration and deployment of multiple dimensions of ethical principles and understanding their implications for the ethics of AR pedagogy. An integration of Ibn Miskawayh's Islamic philosophy of ethical pedagogy, Iris Young's theory of justice, Greenwood and Levin's criteria for ethical participation, and my own model of participatory action research evaluation that is central to the learning process constitutes the basis of this ethical theory of AR pedagogy
Ludmilla Smirnova

What is Action Research? - 0 views

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    Action research
Clint Rodenfels

The Invisible Achievement Gap: Education Outcomes of Students in Foster Care in Califor... - 0 views

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    PDF report on performance of foster youth in K-12 education in California. Long (116 pages). From the PND description of the report... California public school students in foster care tend to underperform their peers on standardized tests and comprise a distinct at-risk subgroup, a study by the Center for the Future of Teaching and Learning at WestEd finds. Based on an analysis of statewide data from the 2009-10 school year, the report, The Invisible Achievement Gap, Part 1 (116 pages, PDF), found that only 29 percent of California foster care students in grades 2 through 11 scored at "proficient" or "advanced" levels on the state standards test in English, compared with 40 percent of students of low socioeconomic status and 53 percent of all students in the state. Similar achievement gaps were found in mathematics, with 37 percent of foster care students in grades 2 through 7 testing at "proficient" or above, compared with 50 percent among low-SES students and 60 percent statewide; and between 12 and 13 percent testing at proficient or above in high school Algebra I and II, well below the 23 percent and 32 percent among low-SES students and statewide. Youth in foster care, who have the lowest rates of participation in California's statewide testing program, also are more likely to be African American, to be classified with a disability, to change schools during the academic year, and to be enrolled in the lowest-performing schools. Funded by the Stuart Foundation, the report also found that students in foster care have a single-year dropout rate of 8 percent - nearly three times the statewide rate of 3 percent and well above the 3 percent to 5 percent rate among other at-risk groups. In 2009-10, students in foster care also had the lowest high school graduation rate among at-risk groups, 58 percent, compared with 79 percent of low-SES students and 84 percent of all students in the state. "These findings help all of us understand that we have a long way to go
raajkumar22

One of the Best SEO Agency- HTBS for website - 0 views

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    When it comes to your online presence, leave nothing to chance. HTBS is an industry leader in Best SEO Agency HTBS. More than just a service provider, HTBS is an agency of experts committed to helping you reach your highest potential in the digital market. Get advice on SEO strategy, web design, content creation and more-all tailored to your specific needs. With HTBS, you can look forward to a comprehensive solution that will help you drive traffic, gain visibility and establish a strong digital presence. Don't get left behind in the race-trust a team of expert professionals at HTBS and let them elevate your online success. 10 Steps to SEO Success SEO is a process. It takes time and plenty of research to find what connects with your audience in order to achieve success in the organic search results. That's why our SEO process starts with you. You know your business best and your goals will act as the driving force behind your Best SEO strategy. So before we start any work, our team takes the time to get to know you and your business. By learning more about your audience, business model and competition, our team can work more effectively to develop a customized search engine optimization strategy tailored to your exact needs. 1. Your Goals Our experienced marketing consultants work with you to define your digital marketing goals, developing an initial platform to start strategizing your SEO plan. 2. Site Audit By combing through your website, we gain a better understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of your current position. Using an extensive range of SEO tools, we identify and prioritize the elements of your website that will provide the most benefit. 3. Competitive Analysis Auditing your competitors' actions is a proven way to distinguish your unique value proposition. This also helps our SEO team highlight your business' strengths while staying in tune with the competitive landscape of your industry. 4. Keyword Research This criti
alfurbush

Center for Media Literacy - 0 views

shared by alfurbush on 18 Jan 13 - Cached
  • Media Literacy: A System for Learning AnyTime, AnyWhere... This just introduced Trilogy offers a complete package for applying CML's framework for media literacy to all curricular subjects anytime, anywhere! Media Literacy: A System for Learning has three parts: Change Management, Deconstruction, and Critical Construction. Each part includes a corresponding e-book, Professional Development module, and Tools for Implementation. This Trilogy is an ideal resource for administrators and staff who want to implement a comprehensive and systematic media literacy program in their district or school with a research-based framework. Read the e-books here: Change Management and Deconstruction/Construction. Other Trilogy resources can be found in the online store.
  • Recipe for Action: Deconstructing Food Advertising.  NOW AVAILABLE! This new curriculum ties
Clint Rodenfels

25 Ways to Reduce the Cost of College - 0 views

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    PDF report from the Center for College Affordability and Productivity. Goes into significant detail on the various "ways," many of which are institutional or policy level actions.
Dugg Lowe

How to Write a Persuasive Essay - 2 views

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    A persuasive essay is very similar to an argumentative essay in that information is presented to attempt to persuade the reader that a certain point of view is more legitimate than another. Another element of a persuasive essay will try to convince the reader to take a certain action or to modify a behavior they are already performing.
Elizabeth Koh

Paper vs. computer screen - The Boston Globe - 12 views

  • A Norwegian researcher, Anne Mangen, recently weighed in with an interesting paper in the Journal of Research in Reading, asserting that screen reading and page reading are radically different. “The feeling of literally being in touch with the text is lost when your actions - clicking with the mouse, pointing on touch screens, or scrolling with keys or on touch pads - take place at a distance from the digital text, which is, somehow, somewhere inside the computer, the e-book, or the mobile phone,’’ Mangen writes.
  • Her conclusion: “Materiality matters. . . . One main effect of the intangibility of the digital text is that of making us read in a shallower, less focused way.’
  • Reading digital text will always differ from reading text that is not digital (i.e., that has a physical, tangible materiality), no matter how reader-friendly and ‘paper-like’ the digital reading device (e.g., Kindle etc.),’’ she answered
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • She says the e-reader experience introduces “a degree of unpredictability and instability’’ that influences reading, even if we are not aware of it.
  • When Kindle-like readers cost less than $50 and the e-Ink technology is not just very good, but excellent, there may be more “screening,’’ and less reading, in our future.
Florence Dujardin

Unrestricted student blogging: Implications for active learning in a virtual text-based... - 0 views

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    Realizing the potential for web-based communication provides a challenge for educators. The purpose here is to report students' behavioural and cognitive strategies for active learning when using an unrestricted blog in an academic context. This provides insight into how students are making sense of the incorporation of Web 2.0 technology into higher education. An analytical framework was created to investigate the willingness and competence of students to engage in the social and virtual construction of knowledge. The analysis indicated that, while the students appear to have wanted to complete the task efficiently, the process of critically constructing knowledge was not pursued with vigour. The main implication is therefore that students need to either prepare themselves or be prepared by educators to combine their informal experience of communication technology with academic requirements for actively constructing knowledge in virtual environments.
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