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Virtual Sports Stock ExchangeChen, Chi-Chih 01 January 2005 (has links)
The goal of this project is to create a web application to help people learn about the stock market. The Virtual Sports Stock Exchange (VSSX) simulates market trading based on the world of sports. It allows users to experiment with different economic models. Virtual Sports Stock Exchange (VSSX) uses HTML and Java Server Page to generate the output and calculations and it uses Java Servlet to interact with the Oracle 9i database.
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Reasons checked for choosing a home economics curriculum by a group of college freshman and senior women in home economicsScott, Mary Louise January 2011 (has links)
Digitized by Kansas State University Libraries
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Professional socialisation of family ecology and consumer science students at South African UniversitiesCornelissen, Judith Jean 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis(PhD)--University of Stellenbosch, 2006. / Professional socialisation can be described as a subconscious process whereby persons
internalise behavioural norms and standards and form a sense of identity and commitment
to a professional field. The primary goal of professional socialisation is considered to be
internalisation of the professional culture and the development of a professional identity. It
is learned through interaction with professionals and educators during a student’s
education. It is a continuous, life-long process of learning formal knowledge, skills and
rules, as well as informal and tacit knowledge, norms, values and loyalties within the
profession. An understanding of the professional socialisation process is vital to all persons
involved in postsecondary education, for it is the professional socialisation process that
allows education to achieve its goals.
This dissertation determined whether students of Family Ecology and Consumer Sciences
in South Africa are professionally socialised into developing a professional identity within
the Family Ecology and Consumer Sciences profession. The objectives of the research
included; to examine through a literature review the development of the profession and to
propose a new position for the profession in South Africa; to identify the factors that
influenced South African students when they decided on Family Ecology and Consumer
Science as a field of study and the factors that influenced them while they were obtaining
their degree at a South African university; to determine whether Family Ecology and
Consumer Science students evidence the developmental stages of the Cohen model of the
professional socialisation process; to determine Family Ecology and Consumer Science
professionals’ perceptions of their professional preparation environments; and to analyse
and compare Family Ecology and Consumer Science programmes at South African
universities.
A quantitative research methodology in the form of an analytical survey was undertaken
with the participation of students and staff at South African universities where Family
Ecology and Consumer Science programmes are offered by means of postal questionnaires. Three questionnaires were used in the research, namely; the Professional Socialisation
Influences (PSI) questionnaire; the Professional Socialisation Staging Scale (PS3)
questionnaire; and the Emphases, Process and Influences on the Professional Preparation
Programmes questionnaire. A conceptual framework was used to compare the Family
Ecology and Consumer Science professional preparation programmes presented at South
African universities..
Descriptive statistics and the factor analysis method were used to examine the objectives to
determine which factors influenced students to select Family Ecology and Consumer
Sciences and the factors that influenced them while they were studying for a degree at a
South African university. Descriptive statistics, ANOVA and Bonferroni Post-Hoc tests
were used to examine whether Family Ecology and Consumer Science students evidenced
the developmental stages of the Cohen model of the professional socialisation process.
Descriptive statistics were used to examine Family Ecology and Consumer Science
professionals’ perceptions of their professional preparation environments.
The main findings drawn from the study indicated that Family Ecology and Consumer
Sciences students, when selecting Family Ecology and Consumer Science as a profession,
were influenced by the ‘Service Ideal’ and ‘Entrepreneurial’ factors. Aspects that elicited
the highest percentage of positive responses from the respondents were; ‘desire to help
others’; ‘a desire to improve the quality of family living’; ‘a desire to help people learn to
do things’; and ‘entrepreneurial possibilities of the course’.
While studying for a degree in Family Ecology and Consumer Science, they were
influenced by the factors ‘Student Interaction’ and ‘Departmental Influences’. Aspects such
as; ‘career opportunities available’; ‘application of what I learned to my personal life’; and
‘employment opportunities available’; were those that had the biggest influence.
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An Analysis of the Background Variables of Negro High School Youth in the Texas Cooperative Youth StudyScott, Lottie Ed 08 1900 (has links)
The purpose of the Texas Cooperative Youth Study was to gather basic data on the problems and interests of youth from youth themselves, their teachers, and their parents in the stages of early, middle, and late adolescence. The study was made to determine interests, attitudes, and concerns of youth in relation to home and family life; to determine whether homemaking education in the school takes into account these concerns and attitudes; and to find out whether interest in homemaking education is related to selected background and sociological variables.
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Medium of instruction and students' learning approaches in the subjecteconomics at the post-secondary levelChan, Chi-lok., 陳志樂. January 2004 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Education / Master / Master of Education
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The social construction of gender in the practical artsEyre, Linda 05 1900 (has links)
This dissertation is a contribution to understanding the relationship between schooling and gender inequality. The study explores how gender as a social relation is organized and embedded in the daily experiences of classroom life and in the discourses of people who dwell there. The study deals with how classroom encounters contribute to the reproduction or transformation of gender categories and how students' and teachers' discursive practices build and support patriarchal structures. The study is grounded in critical education theory, feminist theory, and ethnographic research.
The specific site for the study is the knowledge area described as the Practical Arts, namely home economics and technical studies. The research is limited to a single Grade 8, coeducational, home economics and technical studies program in an inner-city, multi-ethnic, secondary school in western Canada. Evidence is based on participant observation of classrooms, for one school year, with one group of students as they proceed through a combined home economics and technical studies program. Evidence is also obtained through interviews with students and teachers. The study illustrates how classroom practices support the patriarchal structures of division of labour, violence against women, and sexuality. The study shows how the students' and teachers' discursive practices produce girls and women, and less powerful boys, in subordinate positions and as objects of regulation. As well, students' previous experiences in domestic and technical work, and classroom discourse, produce and support the division of labour. The study shows how the conditions of teachers' work, their authoritarian, product oriented approach, and their powerful, institutional discourses grounded in biological and psychological development and equality of educational opportunity, prevent them from challenging patriarchal structures. Although the study shows how students and teachers are actively engaged in the production rather than the transformation of traditional gender relations, it also shows how patriarchy is incomplete: there were divisions within gender categories and there were many contradictions. The study shows how power relations are not static - they are constantly in process of negotiation, thereby opening possibilities for social change.
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Teacher learning in a community of practice : case study of teachers of economic and management sciences.Maistry, Suriamurthee Moonsamy. January 2005 (has links)
Conceptualising teacher learning in terms of participation in a teacher learning
community is a relatively new phenomenon in South Africa. This study explores the
usefulness of applying a social practice theory of learning to a community of novice
Economic and Management Sciences teacher learners involved in the Teaching
Economics and Management Sciences (TEMS) teacher development project. It examines
the influence of contextual constraints, teachers' biographies and professional career
trajectories on teachers' ability to participate in a learning community. By drawing on
Wenger's theory of learning in a community of practice and Wenger et al's stages of
community development framework, it also illuminates and theorises the potential that a
community of practice framework has for teacher development.
Wenger's framework offered important insights that informed and shaped the
development of the TEMS programme. It also provided a useful tool for analysing
teacher learning as constituting four components, namely, meaning, practice, identity and
community. The complex relationship that exists between these different components of
learning is examined. The study offers a critique of the feasibility and appropriateness of
using Wenger's framework for analysing a teacher learning community.
Methodologically, the tenets of symbolic interactionist ethnography were employed in
the collection of data for this study. An exposition of the complexity and challenge of
adopting the dual role of researcher as observer and participant is presented. An analysis
is also provided of the methodological challenge of gaining access and acceptance in a
South African education research context.
The study examines how the essential tension in teacher professional development,
namely, that of curriculum development and deepening subject matter knowledge is
managed in a teacher learning community of novice Economic and Management
Sciences teachers. It reveals the potential that a learning community framework has for
teacher learning through different levels of participation, and points to the importance of
the input of an outside expert, particularly during the early stages of development of a
community of teacher learners who lack subject content knowledge. It argues that
teacher learning communities present a fruitful and viable alternative to the current
'deficit' models of teacher development that typify the present South African teacher
development scenario, as teacher learning communities suggest a conceptual
reorientation of the discourse on teacher development. / Theses (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2005.
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Leerderbehoeftes as 'n determinant vir 'n relevante huishoudkundekurrikulumBriers, Susanna Aletta 18 March 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. (Curriculum Science) / The demands for the renewal of education in South Africa and the poor performance of black learners in the Standerd 10 final examination in Home Economics gave rise to the empirical study on the needs of black learners. These needs were used as a co-determinant for the design of a future subject curriculum. A literature study was conducted on curriculum designs and design models which resulted in a recommended design model. The qualitative research paradigm was used for the empirical study. Data were collected through interviews supplemented by document-analysis. The research focused on the needs of the learners concerning: The relevance of the subject, i.e to what extent the subject is related to the learners' everyday life experiences and interest. The subject content as it could be applied in the daily lives of learners as well as the future world of work. Teaching methods, which include methods that contribute towards maximum learning and which accomodate learners' differences. Evaluation as an integral part of the implementation of the curriculum. Identified learner needs were taken into consideration in compiling guidelines on the different elements of a future curriculum design for Home Economics where both the learners' needs and the requirements of the subject will be accomodated.
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The development of isiZulu as an academic language for the teaching of fundamental concepts in economicsMakhatini, Freedom Nkanyiso January 2011 (has links)
This thesis looks at language as the medium of all our ideas and sentiments. The thesis represents a position statement regarding the development of isiZulu as an academic language. The field of Economics is used to merely illustrate and support the points that are being made in this work. It is argued that each language is viewed as the means of expression of the cultural heritage of its people, and it remains a reflection of cultural groups who speak that particular language. It is a fact that indigenous African Languages have been, for obvious reasons, blatantly understudied during the apartheid years in South Africa (Rudwick 2004). Languages have market value and the desirability of English as the most important global language today has an effect in most Black learners in South Africa. The study examined the development of indigenous African languages, isiZulu in particular, in Zululand University where ninety percent of students and lecturers are isiZulu first language speakers, and came to a conclusion that there is an urgent need for Black South African students to learn academic subjects through their mother tongues. This would help them in thorough understanding and interpretation of analytic text presented in a foreign language such as English. The study advocates that isiZulu, which is the mother-tongue of many students at the University of Zululand, should be a language for upward mobility to these students, but as the situation stands, isiZulu becomes a neglected or marginalised language since it is not the normal medium of instruction and it is not used for effective communication in their education system.
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The development of isiZulu as an academic language for the teaching of fundamental concepts in economicsMakhatini, Freedom Nkanyiso January 2011 (has links)
This thesis looks at language as the medium of all our ideas and sentiments. The thesis represents a position statement regarding the development of isiZulu as an academic language. The field of Economics is used to merely illustrate and support the points that are being made in this work. It is argued that each language is viewed as the means of expression of the cultural heritage of its people, and it remains a reflection of cultural groups who speak that particular language. It is a fact that indigenous African Languages have been, for obvious reasons, blatantly understudied during the apartheid years in South Africa (Rudwick 2004). Languages have market value and the desirability of English as the most important global language today has an effect in most Black learners in South Africa. The study examined the development of indigenous African languages, isiZulu in particular, in Zululand University where ninety percent of students and lecturers are isiZulu first language speakers, and came to a conclusion that there is an urgent need for Black South African students to learn academic subjects through their mother tongues. This would help them in thorough understanding and interpretation of analytic text presented in a foreign language such as English. The study advocates that isiZulu, which is the mother-tongue of many students at the University of Zululand, should be a language for upward mobility to these students, but as the situation stands, isiZulu becomes a neglected or marginalised language since it is not the normal medium of instruction and it is not used for effective communication in their education system.
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