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Genre analysis of research grant proposalsFeng, Haiying 11 1900 (has links)
Research grant proposals are a very important genre in many academic disciplines,
and a window into which we are able to observe academic engagements and
interactions. However, there has been little textual analysis of the genre and research
on how successful scholars approach the writing task. Drawing on the social
constructionist genre scholarship, this study collected and analyzed nine successful
SSHRC (Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada) research grant
proposals from nine professors in the field of education at a Canadian university. The
proposals were examined in terms of three important textual features: generic structure,
referential behavior, hedges and boosters. Semi-structured discourse-based interviews
with the nine professors as insider informants were also conducted. The main findings
of the study include the following: (1) A three-move scheme was developed in this
study as reflecting the generic structure of research grant proposal summaries. In
analyzing the main text of research grant proposals, I first recognized the ICMC
pattern (Introduction-Context-Methodology-Communication of Results) as the overall
structure; ten moves as the constitutive functional components were then identified
under this pattern. (2) Non-integral (where the name of the cited author does not
appear in the actual citing sentence), non-reporting (where no reporting verb such as
show, establish, suggest is employed to introduce the cited work), and generalization
(where the proposition is attributed to two or more sources) forms of citations were
found to be predominantly used in the research grant proposals. Self-citation was also
used with a high frequency in this genre. 3) The use of boosters was found to exceed
the use of hedges, and the distribution of hedges and boosters were found uneven
across the rhetorical sections. Interviews with the nine professors further reveal how
communicative purposes, institutional practice, and reader-writer relationship
co-constructed the format as well as the stylistic features of grant writing. The study
provides genre analysts as well as novice grant writers some useful insights into the
research grant proposal writing. / Education, Faculty of / Language and Literacy Education (LLED), Department of / Graduate
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Lived experience in the initial period of adaptation: a longitudinal multi-case study of the experience of recent immigrant students at a Canadian secondary schoolMansfield, Earl Alfred 11 1900 (has links)
While educators have recognized that students from other countries often
face traumatic experiences in their initial period of adaptation to the
receiving country's schools and society, little attention has been devoted to
understanding the nature or educational significance of these experiences.
Traditionally, educators have equated adaptation difficulties with host
language deficits, while other, possibly more consequential dimensions of the
adaptation experience have gone unrecognized, and have not been represented in
educational policy and funding decisions. Accordingly, this study is directed
toward providing a more comprehensive understanding of the adaptation
experiences of adolescent students who have recently arrived in Canada from
other countries, and addresses a critical need for understanding these
experiences from the perspectives of the students themselves.
Inquiry is advanced within a descriptive, exploratory, and explanatory
study which predominantly utilizes a phenomenological, qualitative
methodology. The study's principal methodology builds upon Edmund Husserl's
philosophical foundation by incorporating the existential perspectives of
Maurice Merleau-Ponty, the life-world social dimensions of Alfred Schutz, and
the historical-contextual and interpretive elements of Max van Manen's
hermeneutic phenomenology. Fieldwork occurred over a six month period in a
suburban Canadian secondary school. Study findings and recommendations derive
from analysis of interviews, observations, and self-reports of three male and
three female grade 10 students who arrived in Canada not more than 20 months
prior to the outset of the study.
Initial adaptation experiences of study participants point to three
principal findings. The study's finding that despite adaptation challenges,
students from abroad often achieve at or above receiving society norms within
a short period after arrival, suggests that educators should consider how
successful academic patterns of newcomers might be adopted by receiving
society members. Participant experience indicates that host language
acquisition is but one dimension of a multidimensional adaptation experience,
and that it is seldom the student's most critical adaptation concern, even in
terms of host communication skills. Participants experienced establishing friendships as their most critical and difficult adaptation concern, and
looked to friendship to provide uncertainty reduction, access to and inclusion
in the receiving society. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
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The Canadian Czech diaspora : bilingual and multilingual language inheritance and affiliationsDejmek, Andrea Theresa. January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Chinese immigrant parents' educational expectations and school participation experienceMa, Li, 1972- January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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The history of the practical education courses in Canadian secondary schools.White, Orville E. January 1951 (has links)
No description available.
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Thomas and matthew Arnold : their significance for Canadian education.McLeish, John A. B. January 1948 (has links)
No description available.
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College for employed adults : a survey of the facilities in Canada for the formal college education of employed adults and a study of the characteristics and achievement of undergraduates in the evening division of the Faculty of arts, science and commerce of Sir George Williams College.Sheffield, Edward F., 1912- January 1941 (has links)
No description available.
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The concept of the post-industrial society and its relationship to the stated goals of Canadian education /Gold, Sylvia. January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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Teachers' and counsellors' knowledge and experience related to attention deficit hyperactivity disorderWilde, Jaime, University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Education January 2006 (has links)
This study was designed to assess teachers' and counsellors' knowledge and experiences
related to ADHD and the use of stimulant medication. The sample population was
comprised of elementary, middle school, and high school teachers and counsellors from
two school districts in southwestern Canada. A descriptive, cross-sectional design using a
self-administered questionnaire was used to obtain information. Results revealed that the
teachers and counsellors responding to the questionnaire have limited knowledge about
ADHD and the use of stimulant medication, although a large majority of them have
experience with students with ADHD and are involved in the diagnosing and assessment
process of ADHD. These results suggest that there is a need for in-service training
regarding the diagnosis and characteristics of ADHD, different intervention strategies,
and assessment of the effectiveness of these strategies. Teachers and counsellors need to
become more familiar with empirical research and to base their practice on it, rather than
on popular opinion. Finally, further collaboration is needed between teachers and
counsellors and allied professionals, such as physicians and psychologists. / x, 77 leaves ; 29 cm.
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Like ships passing in the day : the interface between religion and international development in the programmes, publications and curricula of Canadian academic institutions.Willis, Owen. January 2005 (has links)
Although matters of faith, religion and spirituality are central to the lives of millions of people in the global South. and many faith based organizations are actively involved in development. few northern academics in the field of international development make explicit reference to religion's role in development. and, if they do, the subject is often subsumed under another category, such as culture. This study seeks to shed light on the interface between religion and international development in Canadian academic institutions: to what extent is the influence -- for good or ill-- of religion or development acknowledged in their programmes, publications, and curricula? This is accomplished by means of an analysis of references to religion in the Canadian Journal of Development Studies (CJDS) and Canadian Development Reports as well as in the course offerings of International Development Studies (IDS) departments at Canadian universities. Findings show that only about 1% of article titles and 2% per cent of abstracts mention the subject of religion in its broadest definition over the twenfy five year history of the CJDS. Of 2,684 IDS courses offered (including courses cross-listed with Religious Studies departments), some 3% mention religion in their titles, and 8% in course descriptions. However, upon closer examination, only a handful of courses directly analyze the relationship between religion and development. Findings from this research are further interrogated in surveys and interviews with key informants, in order to uncover some of the reasons for what is perceived to be a lacuna in IDS teaching and research. Various recommendations are advanced: positivistic biases in academia need to be acknowledged, more research should be devoted towards an area currently understudied, and northern academics must be challenged to consider the religious reality of southern life, for, in Robert Chambers' words, "Whose reality counts?" Clearly the religious dimension of global life needs to be afforded a sharper focus in the programmes, publications and curricula of IDS departments at Canadian academic institutions. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2005.
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