Spelling suggestions: "subject:"continuing educationization"" "subject:"continuing education.action""
1 |
Receptivity of UW-Madison faculty members to adopting policies and practices of the institution to reflect an open education orientationVan Dyk, Jane. January 1976 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1976. / Typescript. Vita. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves [134]-144).
|
2 |
A construction of twelve lifelong learners' perspectives an in-depth, naturalistic study of self-integration of learning /Hunt, Marvin L. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 2006. / Title from title screen (site viewed June 8, 2007). PDF text: ix, 275 p. : ill. ; 1.17Mb. UMI publication number: AAT 3239363. Includes bibliographical references. Also available in microfilm and microfiche formats.
|
3 |
Alternative approaches to staff development in adult literacy: Analysis of a study circle support groupDixon, Joan 01 January 1995 (has links)
Although the need for staff development in adult literacy is no longer questioned, there is still an open debate regarding how to design effective approaches, how to coordinate the relationship between research and practice, and how to define the knowledge base that constitutes adult literacy education. This study examines these issues from the perspective of community-based literacy programs where literacy is defined by functions and uses in the social context of actual communities rather than in terms of discrete reading and writing skills. The vehicle for collecting information was a study circle support group comprised of practitioners from a community-based literacy program in Massachusetts. The purpose of this study is to identify guiding principles for designing staff development for community-based literacy programs through analyzing how practitioners identify important issues and articulate theory within their own descriptions and analysis of daily practice. Staff development principles were identified through analyzing the study circle process in terms of how the group defined its task, used different forms of talk, approached the use of expert texts and dealt with changing constraints of time. Findings reveal that practitioners need a forum to define their own staff development task and discuss how to blend theory and strategies with expectations, input and abilities of students inside a changing learning environment. When practitioners discuss their practice, they combine many forms of talk including story telling, hypothesis forming, self-observation, problem solving, strategy analysis, meaning making and topic discussion. This multi-faceted way of talking results in a rich, contextualized analysis of real-life problems that is different from the generalized theories and skills of traditional staff development. The following guidelines resulted from this study. Staff development should (1) build theory from practice, (2) focus on problem posing and solving, (3) be based on authentic experience, (4) be embedded in the social context of actual programs, (5) be on-going and flexible to incorporate emerging issues, (6) have program development as its goal, (7) be connected to a larger system that is working for structural change.
|
4 |
The University of Hong Kong, School of Professional and Continuing Education (SPACE) : branch building : a life long learning center in Central /Leung, Yau-chi, Franklin. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (M. Arch.)--University of Hong Kong, 2000. / Includes special report study entitled: The computer workstation as the determinant in learning space. Added title page title: HKU Space Branch Building-a Lifelong Learning Centre in Central. Includes bibliographical references.
|
5 |
The application of project management to continuing education in higher education /Brett, Kevin John. Unknown Date (has links)
Thesis (MAppSc (Project Management)) --University of South Australia, 1994
|
6 |
The University of Hong Kong, School of Professional and Continuing Education (SPACE) branch building : a life long learning center in Central /Leung, Yau-chi, Franklin. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (M.Arch.)--University of Hong Kong, 2000. / Includes special report study entitled : The computer workstation as the determinant in learning space. Added title page title : HKU Space Branch Building - a Lifelong Learning Centre in Central. Includes bibliographical references. Also available in print.
|
7 |
Lifelong education and social policy : ideals and realitiesKastner, Andrea Frances January 1988 (has links)
Many claims have been made about the potential of Lifelong Education, when implemented as a social policy, to bring about a more just society. However, the assumptions underlying these and similar claims have seldom been critically scrutinized. For this reason, there is in the literature a concern that the concept of the "learning society" simply means lifelong schooling and is the rhetoric of social control. In this view, the potential of Lifelong Education as a transformative force for the development of a participator}' democracy and a more equitable distribution of resources remains a Utopian vision.
In this work, an analysis of the assumptions, it was expected, would bring to light the ideological position embedded in Lifelong Education as a social policy tool.
This research therefore, offers a systematic critical analysis of the expected outcomes of Lifelong Education policies. This required the development of a theoretical framework which built upon: 1.) Paulston's model of social change; 2.) Rawls' and others' concepts of justice and equality; and 3.) perspectives on the role of education in society outlined by Aronowitz and Giroux. This framework was employed to analyze 1.) selected publications of UNESCO on Lifelong Education, 2.) Canadian Association for Adult Education and Canadian Commission for UNESCO documents, and 3.) contemporary Canadian federal and provincial education policies. The findings of this analysis were compared with various models of social policy.
Five principle findings emerged from the study. First, the literature, for the most part, reflects a view of society characterized by homogeneit3' and consensus. The model of social change is evolutional, and avoids the structural conflict perspectives. Second, a number of assumptions are made concerning some elements of a theory of justice, but no unified comprehensive theory of justice supports the literature's claims. Third, adopted in the literature is an ideal view of the role of Lifelong Education as a means of producing change in society. The absence of a critical perspective leaves Lifelong Education in the role of reproducing inequalities in society, vulnerable to application as a mechanism of manipulation rather than emancipation. Fourth, the social policy models implied by the literature are not models which are significantly redistributive in their aims. Finally, projected normative outcomes such as "the good society", "improved quality of life", and "a more just society" lack precise definition thereby leaving unexpressed the ideological position on which they are premised. This deprives the field the means of evaluating these policies.
It is argued that if the role of educators in the development of democratic active participation of citizens in the collective formation of public policy is to be taken seriously, the ideological position of Lifelong Education must be more carefully defined and developed so that citizens can reflect on its principles, compare them with alternate ideological positions, and make their choices from this more informed position. / Education, Faculty of / Educational Studies (EDST), Department of / Graduate
|
8 |
Stories out of school: Literacies of the academy, the community, and the home.Moneyhun, Clyde Andrew. January 1996 (has links)
An ethnographic study of the Pima County Adult Education Family Literacy Program in Tucson, Arizona, reveals ideological and pedagogical tensions and contradictions within it. Some elements of the Program are "accommodationist," aimed at helping students fit into an unjust status quo as they find it. Other elements are "liberatory," aimed at empowering students to transform the status quo. Recommendations are made aimed at steering the Program in more liberatory directions without sacrificing its crucial role in preparing students for further education and work. The Program during 1994-95 was a collaboration among Pima County Adult Education, Head Start, Sunnyside and Tucson Unified School Districts, and the National Center for Family Literacy. It involved nearly a hundred families, mostly young mothers with preschool children, at five elementary school sites. Students were predominantly Hispanic, many recent immigrants from Mexico, with low income and minimal levels of education. Adult students received ESL and/or GED education while their children were enrolled in Head Start at the same sites. Other features of the Program included parenting skills education, vocational education, and volunteer work by the adult students at school sites. A review of literature places the Program in the complex environment of adult literacy education generally and, more specifically, the national family literacy movement in the United States. Competing definitions of literacy (nominal, functional, cultural, critical) are examined, as well as two prevailing philosophies in family literacy programs: a "deficit model" of language use by disadvantaged people, and a "transmission model" of school literacy from parent to child. All theoretical principles are related to the PCAE Family Literacy Program. The research methodology is reflexive ethnography, in which the researcher tries to account for his personal interaction with the phenomena studied and incorporates it into every aspect of the ethnography, from collection to presentation to interpretation of data. The last chapter is a personal essay in the form of a literacy narrative that attempts to relate the autobiography of the ethnographer to the lives of the ethnographic subjects.
|
9 |
âN E-ONDERWYSGEBASEERDE BENADERING TOT DIE IMPLEMENTERING VAN DIE NASIONALE KURRIKULUMVERKLARING VIR FISIESE WETENSKAPPE â âN DIDAKTIESE PERSPEKTIEFvan Breda, Jacobus 11 November 2011 (has links)
Since the South African government decided in 1997 to replace traditional education
with outcomes-based education, curriculum transformation has as yet for various
reasons not realised in the Physical Sciences classroom, thus resulting in poor marks in
Physical Sciences. This study was prompted by the above realities and the fact that
education reform in South Africa cannot occur in isolation from globalisation and the
demands of 21st-century teaching-and-learning.
The overarching aim of the study thus was to propose guidelines for an ICT-integrated
approach to teaching and for a learning environment that can lead to the successful
implementation of the Physical Sciences curriculum in the classroom. In order to
achieve this aim, the research had, on the one hand, to focus on those aspects against
which successful curriculum implementation can be measured and, on the other, be
directed at the contribution which the use of digital technology could make in curriculum
implementation.
The above led to a comprehensive literature study during which Physical Sciences
curriculum documents and other teaching-and-learning literature were investigated
within the context of UGO, constructivism as well as effective principles of learning.
Ultimately eleven so-called âimplementation principlesâ were identified (see 2.7.1).
Thereafter it was established how different ICT usages can be practically and feasibly
used in order to contribute to the realisation of the implementation principles in the
Physical Sciences classroom.
Due to the fact that todayâs learners belong to the Y generation, with their unique needs,
as well as the fact that over 80% of all South African learners are taught Science in a
language that is not their home language (see 1.2.2.2), much attention was paid to
these aspects in this study. A quantitative research design was used and data were collected by means of a
questionnaire, as measuring instrument. Although multi-choice and binary-type
questions were also used, the questionnaire mainly consisted of five-point Likert-type
questions (see 4.10). The questions in the various sections of the questionnaire dealt
with âdaily ICT applicationsâ, learnersâ home environment, language of teaching-andlearning,
the availability and use of ICT in the school environment, learnersâ experience
of the ICT Laboratory (see 1.2.3) as learning environment as well as their experience of
ICT applications in the Laboratory. The test sample consisted of 110 Physical Sciences
learners who visited the ICT Laboratory regularly. The Statistical Processing unit of the
ICT services at the University of the Free State processed the questionnaires by means
of the SPSS computer package.
The information gleaned from the literature study as well as the empirical research
enabled the researcher, from a didactical perspective, to propose guidelines for an e-
Education-based approach to the implementation of the National Curriculum Statement
for Physical Sciences (see 6.4).
The study emphasises the essential role of the teacher in identifying suitable ICT
applications that can be used to the benefit of teaching-and-learning within a 21stcentury
learning environment and in service of the implementation of a Physical
Sciences curriculum.
|
10 |
Pre-Service School Counselor's Perception of Professional Identity Development During InternshipCoyle, Maria 21 December 2016 (has links)
<p> The purpose of this qualitative study was to explore pre-service school counselor’s perception of identity development. The main research question of this study was, how is professional identity development described by pre-service school counselors? Three sub-questions were posed as well. What are internal factors described by pre-service school counselor that influence their professional identity development? What are external factors described by pre-service school counselors that influence their professional identity development? What are other factors described by pre-service school counselors that influence their professional identity development?</p><p> Seven pre-service school counselors from two campuses of one private, accredited university participated in this research. The pre-service school counselor participants were given a demographic survey and interviewed. In this study, the interviews followed a protocol and lasted between thirty-five to forty-five minutes. During this time, the participants shared their perceptions of pre-service school counselor professional identity development. The interviews were transcribed and analyzed using a basic, interpretive qualitative method. </p><p> Documentation in the form of four syllabi were collected across the two campuses of the university of study. Three of the four syllabi were the same. Given the small sample the two differing syllabi were compared. They differed on all factors except one, the use of experience to inform becoming a professional school counselor. This theme matched several of the interview findings. </p><p> Eighteen themes comprised the results of the interview research. Each was supported with rich data from the interviews. Four major findings emerged from the eighteen themes. The recommendations for school counselor preparation programs emerged from the four major findings. They were, the incorporation of processing experiences during class time, including coursework specifically related to school counseling; Practicum and Internship are solely school counselor focused; and instilling clear mission of the role of the school counselor into the school counseling preparation program. Areas for future research; such as replicating this study at a non-accredited institution, utilizing a longitudinal study, and exploring perceptions of professional identity development from other perspectives involved in school counselor preparation; are presented in this study.</p>
|
Page generated in 0.3699 seconds