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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.
431

Teaching with a focus on self-esteem: An in-depth phenomenological interviewing study

Tulgan, Ronna Lynn 01 January 1992 (has links)
The purpose of this dissertation is to examine, explore, and describe the phenomenon of teaching with a focus on self-esteem, or teaching with a focus on the affective or psychological domain of development. This phenomenon is called humanistic education which is rooted in humanistic psychology, an American school of psychology that evolved in the middle of this century. Humanistic education is on the rise in educational institutions across the country because of a positive relationship between self-esteem and constructive learning and because of the growing self-esteem needs of our nation's children. This study sought to gain a grounded understanding of the experience and significance assigned to the experience of teaching with a focus on self-esteem by learning from fifteen teachers who actually do teach with such a focus. The qualitative method of in-depth phenomenological interviewing was employed. The data is presented in the form of narrated profiles of selected participants and in the form of key themes that comprise the phenomenon.
432

Preschool teachers' perceptions of the content and sources of their teaching knowledge

McLanahan, Janet Fowle 01 January 1992 (has links)
The purpose of the study was to examine beginning preschool teachers' conceptions of teaching young children and their perceptions of the origins of these ideas. The participants were six preschool teachers employed during their first two years after graduating with A.S. degrees in early childhood education from five different two-year colleges. This qualitative multi-case study used observations, videotapes, and in-depth interviews to collect data about the experiences of the six teachers. The Ethnograph (Seidel, 1988) software program was employed to manage the data. An adapted model of pedagogical content knowledge, as described in the literature on teacher knowledge (Shulman, 1986; Grossman 1990), was used to organize the data along a learning-to-teach continuum, as described in the teacher socialization literature (Feiman-Nemser, 1983; Zeichner & Gore, 1990). This continuum begins with early experiences, progresses through formal teacher education, and continues throughout a teacher's career. The major findings of the study indicate earlier experiences provided the teachers with predispositions toward particular curriculum content and interactional styles. Their conceptualization of what and how to teach to young children was developed and enriched during formal teacher education with coursework contributing primarily to curricular knowledge. Practicum experiences, including opportunities to bring on-campus learnings into settings for young children, were a major source of the development of instructional strategies. A combination of coursework and direct experiences with children of varying ages and in various contexts contributed to the teachers' overall understanding of children. The teachers reported learning from colleagues, trying things out, and "just being with children" as rich sources of practical knowledge (Elbaz, 1981) during their early years of professional experience. Both explicit and implicit connections were made between how knowledge was gained during these induction years and the content and process of their formal teacher education programs, as well as with their prior experiences. This study, in contrast to previous studies of preschool teachers, provides descriptive data of the substance and process of five early childhood teacher education programs from the perspectives of their graduates. Insights were thus gained into the aspects of the teacher preparation experiences the teachers found have made valuable contributions to their present work.
433

Developmental differences in preschoolers' comprehension of WH-questions

Bell, Gregory Ernest January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
434

Teacher-Child Relationship Quality: Understanding the Impact of Teacher Beliefs and Behaviors

McNally, Shelley Ann January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
435

Three to five-year-old remembering: One window into the construction of knowledge

Perry, Gail Powell 01 January 1994 (has links)
Young children grow cognitively competent through joint processes of guided participation and appropriation wherein children use past interpretations of experiences in their lives to make sense of new events (Rogoff, 1990). While young children are deemed competent meaning-makers when supported by their everyday social contexts (Fivush and Hudson, 1991, Rogoff, 1990) in the early years of schooling, traditional classroom discourse styles do not facilitate the child's ability to access their personal meaning. Based on findings from three pilot studies, it was hypothesized that four features of the social context--the teacher's valuing of their personal meaning, encouraging children to personalize their narrative, use of informal conversational discourse, and encouraging peer contribution--would enhance children's meaning-making. In order to examine the relationship of these social context features on the process of meaning making, memories were collected from children in a four step memory book activity. Thirty-six teachers from five different socioeconomic settings conducted the memory book activity with 199 children wherein the children verbally reported on and made pictures of a self chosen event from their past. Transcripts, developed from the videotapes of the memory book activity, were rated for coherence and completeness of the memories, and the degree to which the four context features were in evidence. Multiple linear regression analysis was used to determine whether there was a relationship between the children's ability to access and communicate their memory and the four independent variables. The results indicate that the teachers valuing and commitment to children's personal knowledge is a significant predictor of coherent and complete memories. In this study, meaning-making and guided participation can be described as social and collaborative in nature, and proceeds in a four stage process.
436

Revealing What Urban Early Childhood Teachers Think About Mathematics and How They Teach It: Implications for Practice

Hare, Addie Y. V. McGriff 12 1900 (has links)
Hersh (1986) states, "One's conception of what mathematics is affects one's conception of how it should be presented. One's manner of presenting it is an indication of what one believes to be most essential in it." In this research study, three hundred ninety-seven urban early childhood teachers were given a survey that examined their attitudes toward mathematics and mathematics teaching, their views of mathematics, views of teaching mathematics, and views of children learning mathematics. The purpose of this study was to identify the attitudes and beliefs of early childhood teachers in two urban school districts to determine if mathematics reform efforts made a difference in teachers' attitudes and beliefs about mathematics and its teaching. Questionnaires were mailed directly to teachers in one school district and principals distributed questionnaires in the other. Summary scores were calculated for parts of the instrument. The researcher performed descriptive statistics, comparative analysis, and conducted frequency distributions, t-tests, ANOVA, and Pearson Correlations. Findings revealed that teachers with 30 or more years of teaching experience had more positive attitudes toward mathematics than teachers with 1-3 years of experience. African American teachers had more positive attitudes toward mathematics and its teaching than other ethnic groups. Teachers who held a minor or major in mathematics had more positive attitudes toward mathematics and its teaching than teachers without a minor or major in mathematics. Teachers in District-A favored constructivist learning while teachers in District-B favored rote learning. Both school districts' teachers favored the problem-solving approach to teaching mathematics. If instruction is to be transformed, reformers need to understand teachers' beliefs about mathematics. Beliefs, which are essential for teachers' development, seldom change without significant intervention (Lappan and Theule-Lubienski, 1994). Therefore, school districts must be informed about the changes necessary for the reform of mathematics teaching and identify and implement through staff developments and other measures what they perceive mathematics to be and how it should be taught.
437

STEM Learning with Young Children: Inquiry Teaching with Ramps and Pathways

Counsel, Shelly, Escalada, Lawerence, Geiken, Rosemary, Sander, Melissa, Uhlenburg, Jill, Van Meeteren, Beth Dykstra, Yoshizawa, Sonia, Zan, Betty 28 December 2015 (has links)
This teacher's guide provides the background information, STEM concepts, and strategies needed to successfully implement an early STEM curriculum (Ramps and Pathways) with young children, ages 3-8. R&P actively engages young children in designing and building ramp structures using wooden cove molding, releasing marbles on the structures, and observing what happens. Children use logical-mathematical thinking and problem-solving skills as they explore science concepts related to motion, force, and energy. / https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu_books/1136/thumbnail.jpg
438

Inquiry in Early Childhood Teacher Education: Reflections on Practice

Broderick, Jane Tingle, Hong, Seong Bock 01 January 2005 (has links)
As teacher educators we work to make inquiry methodology explicit to help teacher candidates construct the link between theory and practice. Bringing inquiry learning into the early childhood curriculum method courses raises the potential for inquiry teaching practice for teacher candidates and models a constructivist practice in a higher education setting. Of the numerous curriculum studies available, few focus on methods of inquiry to guide adult learners’ to construct inquiry- teaching practices that they can transfer to their work with children. To improve the quality of our teaching in an Early Childhood Teacher Education program we researched and developed several tools to facilitate the transfer from teacher candidates own learning experiences to their teaching practice. We relied on the literature regarding the Reggio Emilia approach of inquiry learning and teaching based on documentation, as well as Creativity theory to help us develop a method to relate concepts with materials in a cycle of inquiry. Through our Cycle of Inquiry and the introduction of Concept Materials we promote representation which is a critical aspect of constructing knowledge about what it means to teach. We find that this differs from merely modeling hands-on activities in that it promotes higher level reasoning and creativity throughout the early childhood curriculum, as teacher candidates learn to reflect on and question the big ideas—thinking and learning—they observe in play to develop practice that extends learning along a conceptual continuum of inquiry. This data accumulated over the course of two years at East Tennessee State University and the University of Michigan-Dearborn through our process of developing and implementing curriculum for teacher educators that models action research and teacher as researcher.
439

Introducing the Cycle of Inquiry System: A Reflective Inquiry Practice for Early Childhood Teacher Development

Broderick, Jane Tingle, Hong, Seong Bock 01 January 2011 (has links)
The Cycle of Inquiry (COI) is a tool for emergent curriculum planning and for professional development of early childhood teachers and teacher education students. The COI includes a sequence of five organizational forms connecting analysis of documentation data with intentional planning for long-term emergent inquiry inspired by the Reggio Emilia Approach. The authors discuss and analyze the COI System through examination and analysis of the work of a student in a university early childhood teacher preparation program. Through this case study, the authors explore (1) whether a preservice teacher can learn to use the COI form-driven process to plan and facilitate emergent curriculum and (2) whether a mentor can scaffold and assess the development of an inservice or preservice teacher using the teacher’s COI documentation. The authors also describe ongoing research into use of the COI System and outline potential directions for future research.
440

Strategies to Engaging Young Children in Early Childhood Classrooms

Zhao, Hongxia, Trivette, Carol M. 14 July 2017 (has links)
No description available.

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