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Books > Social sciences > Education > Higher & further education
This book traces back how male students are currently disadvantaged
in school by instruction in an overwhelmingly female environment
devoid of male role models, who can inspire the love of learning in
male students. Further, teachers are unduly influenced by biases
related to compliant behaviors which result in conflating
assessments of student academic achievement with compliance.
Therefore, males' marks prevent to many from qualifying for courses
leading to leading as well as achieving sufficiently high marks in
those courses.
The use of technology has a profound influence in educational
settings and has experienced significant paradigm shifts with the
advents of e-learning and m-learning. As an expected consequence of
the evolution of e-learning and m-learning and improvements in the
capability of online networked technologies, educators from the
fields of distance education and open and distance learning benefit
from ubiquitous learning technologies and environments. With the
rising import of flexibility and personalization of online learning
programs, this new learning format is needed to accommodate
shifting student needs. Managing and Designing Online Courses in
Ubiquitous Learning Environments is a critical scholarly resource
that provides empirical and theoretical research focused on the
effective construction and management of advanced online
educational environments. Highlighting a variety of topics such as
heutagogy, technology integration, and educational resources, this
book is essential for educators, curriculum developers, higher
education staff, practitioners, academicians, instructional
designers, administrators, policymakers, and researchers.
Global challenges, in a chaotic context, are ever in play, emerging
and receding in time. At the present moment, the global challenges
of the COVID-19 pandemic have resulted in several years of
mass-scale challenges and lost learning and socialization from K-12
to higher education for many. The pandemic has been a high
consequence and continuing event. Universities and colleges have
been under unprecedented budgetary strain. Despite all the immense
and irreparable human losses, humanity is moving forward with
lessons from the past several years. The Handbook of Research on
Revisioning and Reconstructing Higher Education After Global Crises
explores how global higher education will recover from the global
pandemic at the micro-, meso-, and macro-levels, and how they will
re-establish their relevance for teaching and learning, research
and innovation, and social contributions. Covering topics such as
campus life, online library services, and Indigenous students, this
major reference work is an essential resource for educators and
administrators of higher education, government officials, students
of higher education, librarians, researchers, and academicians.
Echoes from a Child's Soul: Awakening the Moral Imagination of
Children presents remarkable poetry inspired by aesthetic education
methodology created by children that were labelled academically,
socially, and/or emotionally at-risk. Many children deemed average
or below-grade level composed poetry beyond their years revealing
moral imagination. Art psychology and aesthetic methodology merge
to portray the power of awakening children's voices once silenced.
The children's poetry heralds critical and empathic messages for
our future. This book proposes an overwhelming need for change in
America's public-school education system so that no child is
ignored, silenced, deemed less than, or marginalized.
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Teaching Inside the Walls
(Hardcover)
Gary J. Rose; Foreword by Layton Cameron; Cover design or artwork by Maghuyop John
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R699
R629
Discovery Miles 6 290
Save R70 (10%)
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Index; 1946
(Hardcover)
University of Massachusetts at Amherst
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R829
Discovery Miles 8 290
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Over the past 50 years the Department of Science Teaching at the
Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel was actively involved in
all the components related to curriculum development,
implementation, and research in science, mathematics, and computer
science education: both learning and teaching. These initiatives
are well designed and effective examples of long-term developmental
and comprehensive models of reforms in the way science and
mathematics are learned and taught. The 16 chapters of the book are
divided into two key parts. The first part is on curriculum
development in the sciences and mathematics. The second describes
the implementation of these areas and its related professional
development. Following these chapters, two commentaries are written
by two imminent researchers in science and mathematics teaching and
learning: Professor Alan Schonfeld from UC Berkeley, USA, and
Professor Ilka Parchman from IPN at the University of Kiel,
Germany. The book as a whole, as well as its individual chapters,
are intended for a wide audience of curriculum developers, teacher
educators, researchers on learning and teaching of science and
mathematics and policy makers at the university level interested in
advancing models of academic departments working under a common
philosophy, yet under full academic freedom. Contributors are:
Abraham Arcavi, Michal Armoni, Ron Blonder, Miriam Carmeli, Jason
Cooper, Rachel Rosanne Eidelman, Ruhama Even, Bat-Sheva Eylon, Alex
Friedlander, Nurit Hadas, Rina Hershkowitz, Avi Hofstein, Ronnie
Karsenty, Boris Koichu, Dorothy Langley, Ohad Levkovich, Smadar
Levy, Rachel Mamlok-Naaman, Nir Orion, Zahava Scherz, Alan
Schoenfeld, Yael Shwartz, Michal Tabach, Anat Yarden and Edit
Yerushalmi.
Advances in technology and media have fundamentally changed the way
people perceive research, how research studies are conducted, and
the ways data are analyzed/how the findings are presented. Emerging
internet-enabled technological tools have enhanced and transformed
research in education and the way educators must adapt to conduct
future studies. Advancing Educational Research With Emerging
Technology provides innovative insights into cutting-edge and
long-standing digital tools in educational research and addresses
theoretical, methodological, and ethical dimensions in doing
research in the digital world. The content within this publication
examines such topics as computational linguistics, individualized
learning, and mobile technologies. The design of this publication
is suited for students, professors, higher education faculty,
deans, academicians, researchers, and practitioners looking to
expand their research through the use of a broad range of digital
tools and resources.
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