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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

The furnishing and arrangement of a classroom for high school art

Eoff, Bobbie Marie January 2011 (has links)
Typescript, etc. / Digitized by Kansas State University Libraries
12

Effects of classroom spatial arrangement on student behavior /

Ankney, Robert F. January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
13

Reconceptualising space in a grade 6 classroom

Nkosi, Nkosikhona Sean January 2016 (has links)
A Research Report submitted to the Wits School of Education, Faculty of Humanities, University of Witwatersrand in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Education by combination of coursework and research. Johannesburg, March 2016 / Despite all events unfolding in space, mainstream research often overlooks the influence of space in teaching and learning. There is some research, however, showing how space makes various educational experiences available. This research adds to a growing body of spatial research in education. The research reconceptualised space in a grade 6 English classroom in order to explore ways of working with space. The research sought to understand (1) spatial relations in the classroom, (2) the redesign of space and (3) the experiences of living in a reconceptualised space. In this case study thirty one grade 6 learners and a teacher collaboratively redesigned their classroom space. Observations were recorded over a six week period. Four Community of Enquiries and interviews were conducted with participants. Using Lefebvre’s (1991) spatial theory and Foucault’s (1977) work on knowledge, power and discourse the data was analysed systematically paying special attention to learners perceptions and behaviours prior to and following the reconstitution. The findings show how relations between participants are governed by time and manifest in the spatial layout of the classroom. Prior to the reconstitution the normalisation of theft and strong gendered boundaries created antagonistic relations amongst participants. Learners also expressed a strong desire to belong in the classroom and the broader schooling community. Having reconstituted the space, space also reconstituted the participants. In the redesigned space learners’ agency and voice was amplified and the space became more conducive to learning. The benefits of the reconceptualisation were learners entering into stronger communal relations with peers and increased participation from learners and broader take up on the school of the grade 6 class’ ideas. The challenges of the reconceptualisation were the alienation of other grade 6 learners and teachers finding learners’ voice and increased agency more challenging to manage. Systematic work with space presents a range of insights into the social relations in classrooms that are often otherwise invisible. / MT2017
14

Administering the Use of Instructional Space in Texas State-Supported Colleges and Universities

Craig, Robert E. 08 1900 (has links)
The problem of this study is to determine the administrative practices for securing the optimum use of instructional space in colleges. This necessitates the development of an instrument to evaluate these practices.
15

Teacher interactions within the physical environment : how teachers alter their space and/or routines because of classroom character /

Lang, Dale Christopher. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2002. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 68-73).
16

Small Spaces, Big Moments: Understanding the Spatialized Lived Experiences of Youth and Adults in Restricted Educational Programs

Newhouse, Katherine S. January 2020 (has links)
The current way of “doing” inclusive education in many US public schools includes re-imagining the spaces where a young person is receiving their educational services. Still, many schools and programs are set up to provide specialized educational services in a specific place. Most often, this place is outside of the general education classroom and deemed to have rehabilitative properties. Therefore, research that draws on the lived experiences of people in restricted educational programs is needed to understand more clearly how policies of inclusion and exclusion are not only enacted, but lived by the people inhabiting those spaces. By designing a qualitative study that is an ethnographic narrative inquiry, this project describes restricted educational programs from the perspectives of the people who occupy them. This study draws on the words and experiences of participants within restricted educational programs to explore what a concerted focus on the spatial dimension illuminates about these spaces and youth learning. Taking an iterative approach this study used ethnographic methods such as, participant observation and open-ended and semi-structured interviewing to inquire alongside educators who work with young people with disabilities and young people who are court involved in restrictive educational programs. The methodological choice to collect data at two separate restricted educational programs, one in-school and one after school was intentional to investigate the nature of the label “restrictive” and its spatial properties. The research demonstrates that spaces are dynamic and fluid but often limited by the socio-spatial location such as, during or after school. Often it is the adults within each respective space who engage in practices of teaching and learning which either limit youth or provide youth with more expansive curricular possibilities. More consistently youth engage in practices, which add to the dynamic nature of how spaces are socially produced. From this an understanding of the project of inclusive education emerges which demands concerted attention be paid to the spatial dimension of inquiry, one that requires educators, more broadly, to participate in reflexive practices related to understanding their own socio-spatial position along with the socio-spatial position of the youth with whom they are constructing spaces.
17

The Relationship of the Seating Choice of College Students to Academic Achievement and Certain Personality Factors

Moxey, Kenneth Sheldon, 1925- 08 1900 (has links)
The overall purpose of the investigation was to determine the existence and extent of several relationships regarding the college student's seating position in the classroom.The design also included provisions for determining the relationships between the student's choice of seat and their academic achievement, academic ability, self-concept, self-acceptance, self-actual1zlng values, self regard, self-acceptance, initial expression of interest in the course, initial estimate of difficulty expected in the course, and initial estimate of his final grade in the course.
18

Millennial students' and faculty's perceptions of a new generation of learning classrooms

García, Linda Lorraine, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2007. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
19

Millennial students' and faculty's perceptions of a new generation of learning classrooms

García, Linda Lorraine, 1979- 29 August 2008 (has links)
Today's higher education institutions are experiencing a different type of student population from previous years. They are known as gadget fanatics, social networkers, Internet enthusiasts, optimists, multitaskers, and inductive learners. Their viewpoints and aptitudes about technology and the Internet differ from others who rarely use it (Oblinger, 2003; Frand 2000). This population will present many challenges to American postsecondary institutions. Facilities, faculty, and curriculum will not be prepared to address their habits and expectations. They are called the Millennials. In an effort to start addressing the educational needs of the Millennial student population, postsecondary institutions must transition from the "old generation of learning" to the "new generation of learning" (Milliron, 2006). The purpose of the study is to explore the Millennial students' and faculty's perceptions of a new generation of learning classrooms. There were five research questions for this study: (1) What are the perceptions of a new generation of learning classrooms by Millennial students? (2) How do Millennial students relate to a new generation of learning classrooms? (3) What are the perceptions of a new generation of learning classrooms by faculty? (4) How do faculty relate to a new generation of learning classrooms? and (5) How Millennial students' and faculty's perceptions on the new generational of learning classrooms compare? Since this was a qualitative study, the Interactive Qualitative Analysis (Northcutt & McCoy, 2004) was the research design utilized to collect and analyze data that answered the research questions. A purposive sample for this study included a total of 47 participants: 26 Millennial students and 21 faculty members. One component of the research design involved focus groups for the Millennial students and faculty. Both groups identified the following themes, which were used to create an interview protocol: technology, appearance, teaching style, learning environment, writing/work space, classroom mood, climate, emotions, group assignments, and social networking. Analysis of the interview text included axial and theoretical coding. This contributed to the development of a mind map for the Millennial students and faculty. Comparisons of these two composite mindmaps reveal their perceptions of the new generation of learning classrooms.

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