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The Development of a Qualitative Rating Scale for School FacilitiesBliss, Dwayne Caroll 08 1900 (has links)
The problem of this study was to develop a scale for rating a school facility in terms of a proposed set of educational objectives.
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Atividades profissionais do engenheiro de produção: da formação universitária ao exercício profissional / Professional activities of the industrial engineer: from superior education to professional practiceNose, Michelle Mike 29 April 2003 (has links)
Atualmente, o ambiente empresarial encontra-se em constante transformação. Muitas das premissas consideradas há anos não são suficientes para adequar as empresas ao novo modelo de competitividade. Neste sentido, ao profissional também são impostas mudanças relacionadas à sua atuação dentro da sociedade. Porém, parece que essas imposições não são atendidas pelas instituições formadoras desse profissional, devido, muitas vezes, à lentidão na reformulação dos currículos. No caso do curso de Engenharia de Produção, essa realidade não é diferente. Assim, neste trabalho é dada ênfase aos aspectos relativos à situação do ensino de Engenharia de Produção, com o objetivo de identificar as atividades profissionais do engenheiro de produção, que podem servir como referência para o desenvolvimento de objetivos de ensino que contribuam para a melhoria curricular, de acordo com as reais necessidades da sociedade. / The present day corporate environment is under continuous transformation. Many deep-rooted assumptions are no longer adequate, as businesses struggle to adapt to a new competitiveness model. Individuals must just as well conform to the changes being imposed on their role by society. It seems, however, that these pressures are not being adequately addressed by the institutions responsible for the education of these professionals, due to an often slow curriculum reformulation. Such is the case for Industrial Engineering courses. The emphasis of this work is on the identification of activities a Industrial Engineer must typically perform, as references for the development of educational objectives aiming at curriculum improvement and the fulfillment of society\'s real needs.
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Atividades profissionais do engenheiro de produção: da formação universitária ao exercício profissional / Professional activities of the industrial engineer: from superior education to professional practiceMichelle Mike Nose 29 April 2003 (has links)
Atualmente, o ambiente empresarial encontra-se em constante transformação. Muitas das premissas consideradas há anos não são suficientes para adequar as empresas ao novo modelo de competitividade. Neste sentido, ao profissional também são impostas mudanças relacionadas à sua atuação dentro da sociedade. Porém, parece que essas imposições não são atendidas pelas instituições formadoras desse profissional, devido, muitas vezes, à lentidão na reformulação dos currículos. No caso do curso de Engenharia de Produção, essa realidade não é diferente. Assim, neste trabalho é dada ênfase aos aspectos relativos à situação do ensino de Engenharia de Produção, com o objetivo de identificar as atividades profissionais do engenheiro de produção, que podem servir como referência para o desenvolvimento de objetivos de ensino que contribuam para a melhoria curricular, de acordo com as reais necessidades da sociedade. / The present day corporate environment is under continuous transformation. Many deep-rooted assumptions are no longer adequate, as businesses struggle to adapt to a new competitiveness model. Individuals must just as well conform to the changes being imposed on their role by society. It seems, however, that these pressures are not being adequately addressed by the institutions responsible for the education of these professionals, due to an often slow curriculum reformulation. Such is the case for Industrial Engineering courses. The emphasis of this work is on the identification of activities a Industrial Engineer must typically perform, as references for the development of educational objectives aiming at curriculum improvement and the fulfillment of society\'s real needs.
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Authentic Purposeful Design Within Moral Spaces of Teaching at BYUFerrin, Thomas Lane 01 April 2018 (has links)
This thesis is an exploration of the role of a new course design method in the teaching practice of faculty at Brigham Young University (BYU). This method, used by teaching and learning consultants at BYU, is termed authentic purposeful design. It encourages faculty to succinctly define what their course will help students become, use principles of backward design to align all course elements to that purpose, and teach the course with its core purpose in mind. The course design and teaching methods of 3 faculty members who used authentic purposeful design were studied using a qualitative research approach. Themes emerged regarding various values and forces involved as teachers strive for excellence, as well as the roles and dynamics that authentic purposeful design can have in relation to those efforts. The study also revealed ways that the formulation and use of authentic purposeful design could be altered for greater utility by consultants at BYU and other institutions of higher education.
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Australian schools: social purposes, social justice and social cohesionDavy, Vanlyn January 2008 (has links)
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / In this dissertation, Van Davy makes a case for a cohesive system of schools which can serve the public — both the national interest and individual interests — while directly addressing the current national schooling system’s failure: * to replace, for the entire student cohort...high levels of student boredom with high interest and engaging curriculum and pedagogy; * to replace, for low SES and indigenous students...low levels of learning outcomes, low enrolment levels in senior schooling, and only brief experience of curriculum choice with a curriculum paradigm providing intrinsic value, understanding of pathways from disempowerment to empowerment, curriculum choice from the earliest years, and schooling outcomes which, over time, equal those of the national cohort of students * to replace a citizenry divided in its support for public, church-based, and exclusionary schools with a community united in its support for a socially agreed set of social purposes for schooling and a new curriculum paradigm, one half of which is generated by this set of social purposes * to address a major political issue: social cohesion The proposed new and cohesive system of schools is envisaged to meet the needs - both Common Good and Individual Good - of the citizenry. It will grow from an earlier and pre-requisite national social agreement around a set of political goals which together sketch a preferred future society - these political goals in the hands of education specialists will generate an "essential" curriculum as one of two elements in a new two-tiered curriculum to be followed from the earliest until the latest years of schooling. The second element, occupying the other half of the curriculum from the earliest to the latest years of schooling, will be an elective curriculum designed to encourage all students to pursue their own interests in as much depth as desired. Studies of sectarian studies will be included in the elective curriculum. Davy’s analysis ranges across a number of disciplines, fusing together a number of viewpoints: historical, political theory, educational performance, and educational theory. It searches Australia’s schooling outcomes, identifies low SES and Aboriginal outcomes as major areas of failure, and challenges a number of widely accepted schooling practices. In the process, Davy discovers OECD and ACER data, but little official interest or analysis, concerning widespread boredom amongst Australia’s students. He argues that, in respect of both low SES students and student boredom, system responsibilities such as the nature of Australia’s curriculum, could be just as implicated as concerns for “teacher quality.” Davy’s interest extends beyond the purely educational. He examines the purposes that public and non-public school authorities articulate, as well as reasons parents give for enrolling their children in schools. From this research Davy identifies several issues and suggests that very considerable “choice” in schooling could be found in a different curriculum paradigm, and that both public and non-public schools are deficient when measured against widely-accepted concerns for religious freedom, social cohesion, and fundamental democratic principles. For Davy, a major political issue confronting Australia is the national imperative of “social cohesion.” He searches Australia’s schooling history for evidence of any social agreement around the social purposes of schooling, including more recent attempts to formulate “essential" and “new basics” and “national” curriculum. He concludes that while many educators, and the OECD, refer to the need for a pre-requisite set of social purposes that outline a preferred future society, the politics of schooling has not permitted this to eventuate and, given the absence of this management fundamental, “it is not surprising that schooling systems are shaped by internal logics (ideologies, religions, personalities, internal politics, quest for advantage and/or privilege) rather than wider concerns for the shape of the globe’s and nation’s future, and the advancement of the twins: Common Good and Individual Good.” With these problems laid bare — low SES and indigenous outcomes, student boredom, and social cohesion — Davy addresses all three simultaneously. He draws confidence from contemporary political theorists proposing political processes which engage the public in a “deliberative democracy.” He constructs a surrogate “foundation of agreed principles” which, he deduces, the processes of deliberative democracy might lead the Australian people to construct, then outlines a step-by-step means by which these principles can generate an essential curriculum for all Australian children, while encouraging a full range of choice within an elective stream. The political processes of open collaboration throughout civil society which produces the social agreement may produce a new political context. This new, less adversarial and more trusting political context is seen to be fertile ground for the replacement of Australia’s fractured schooling system with a cohesive schooling system for the Australian public — an Australian schooling system — to be managed nationally.
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Evaluation of Event Episode Analysis SystemLee, Ming-yu 26 July 2008 (has links)
Knowledge-based assets play a very important role in the Information Age, and its increasingly influence on organizational competition makes Knowledge Management a hot issue in business research.Content analysis of documents is a core function of knowledge management. In previous research, many techniques have been developed to generate textual summary and/or generating ontology-based episodic knowledge from multipl documents. However, not much research has been done to compare different ways of organizing and presenting knowledge.
Since different knowledge presentations may result in different effects on the user, the purpose of this thesis is to develop a method for investigating different document summary and presentation systems. In this research, we have developed an effect measurement method based on the extended Bloom¡¦s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives.More specifically, we proposes evaluation criteria based on memory and cognition of the user.
A field experiment was conducted to compare graphical and textual systems. Results indicate that the ontology-based system has significantly superior performance in concept memorizing and procedural memorizing. On the other hand, the textual summary-based system performed better in remembering facts.
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Australian schools: social purposes, social justice and social cohesionDavy, Vanlyn January 2008 (has links)
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / In this dissertation, Van Davy makes a case for a cohesive system of schools which can serve the public — both the national interest and individual interests — while directly addressing the current national schooling system’s failure: * to replace, for the entire student cohort...high levels of student boredom with high interest and engaging curriculum and pedagogy; * to replace, for low SES and indigenous students...low levels of learning outcomes, low enrolment levels in senior schooling, and only brief experience of curriculum choice with a curriculum paradigm providing intrinsic value, understanding of pathways from disempowerment to empowerment, curriculum choice from the earliest years, and schooling outcomes which, over time, equal those of the national cohort of students * to replace a citizenry divided in its support for public, church-based, and exclusionary schools with a community united in its support for a socially agreed set of social purposes for schooling and a new curriculum paradigm, one half of which is generated by this set of social purposes * to address a major political issue: social cohesion The proposed new and cohesive system of schools is envisaged to meet the needs - both Common Good and Individual Good - of the citizenry. It will grow from an earlier and pre-requisite national social agreement around a set of political goals which together sketch a preferred future society - these political goals in the hands of education specialists will generate an "essential" curriculum as one of two elements in a new two-tiered curriculum to be followed from the earliest until the latest years of schooling. The second element, occupying the other half of the curriculum from the earliest to the latest years of schooling, will be an elective curriculum designed to encourage all students to pursue their own interests in as much depth as desired. Studies of sectarian studies will be included in the elective curriculum. Davy’s analysis ranges across a number of disciplines, fusing together a number of viewpoints: historical, political theory, educational performance, and educational theory. It searches Australia’s schooling outcomes, identifies low SES and Aboriginal outcomes as major areas of failure, and challenges a number of widely accepted schooling practices. In the process, Davy discovers OECD and ACER data, but little official interest or analysis, concerning widespread boredom amongst Australia’s students. He argues that, in respect of both low SES students and student boredom, system responsibilities such as the nature of Australia’s curriculum, could be just as implicated as concerns for “teacher quality.” Davy’s interest extends beyond the purely educational. He examines the purposes that public and non-public school authorities articulate, as well as reasons parents give for enrolling their children in schools. From this research Davy identifies several issues and suggests that very considerable “choice” in schooling could be found in a different curriculum paradigm, and that both public and non-public schools are deficient when measured against widely-accepted concerns for religious freedom, social cohesion, and fundamental democratic principles. For Davy, a major political issue confronting Australia is the national imperative of “social cohesion.” He searches Australia’s schooling history for evidence of any social agreement around the social purposes of schooling, including more recent attempts to formulate “essential" and “new basics” and “national” curriculum. He concludes that while many educators, and the OECD, refer to the need for a pre-requisite set of social purposes that outline a preferred future society, the politics of schooling has not permitted this to eventuate and, given the absence of this management fundamental, “it is not surprising that schooling systems are shaped by internal logics (ideologies, religions, personalities, internal politics, quest for advantage and/or privilege) rather than wider concerns for the shape of the globe’s and nation’s future, and the advancement of the twins: Common Good and Individual Good.” With these problems laid bare — low SES and indigenous outcomes, student boredom, and social cohesion — Davy addresses all three simultaneously. He draws confidence from contemporary political theorists proposing political processes which engage the public in a “deliberative democracy.” He constructs a surrogate “foundation of agreed principles” which, he deduces, the processes of deliberative democracy might lead the Australian people to construct, then outlines a step-by-step means by which these principles can generate an essential curriculum for all Australian children, while encouraging a full range of choice within an elective stream. The political processes of open collaboration throughout civil society which produces the social agreement may produce a new political context. This new, less adversarial and more trusting political context is seen to be fertile ground for the replacement of Australia’s fractured schooling system with a cohesive schooling system for the Australian public — an Australian schooling system — to be managed nationally.
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A Study of the Lueders Secondary School to Determine the Extent to Which it Meets Criteria for Educational Objectives and Youth InterestsBragg, C. O. 08 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this investigation is to make a study of the Lueders secondary school to determine the extent to which it is meeting educational objectives and the interests of its pupils.
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An Evaluation of the Educational Objectives of Grandview, Alvarado, and Surrounding Rural SchoolsMartin, Lois Baker 08 1900 (has links)
The problem constituting the basis of this study is one having to do with an investigation of educational objectives. Specifically, it relates to an examination of teachers' objectives in a strictly limited area of Texas and a comparison of these objectives with those advanced by professional educators and published in literature dealing with educational practices and principles.
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Democratic citizenship education: implication for teaching and learning in post colonial MozambiqueGuirrugo da Maia, Ivenilde Race 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MEd)--Stellenbosch University, 2014. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study deals with an analysis of Mozambican education policy documents, linking this
analysis to theories of democratic citizenship education. It suggests that, for Mozambican
people to become active citizens who are able to face and challenge their social problems, a
deliberative democratic citizenship education has to be adopted in their schools. In such
deliberation the citizens should participate equally and freely in different debates and
activities, without feeling intimidated by those in power. If such deliberative democratic
citizenship education does not exist in schools, the citizens may not be able to recognise their
rights and find solutions for the problems in society. The ideas of philosophers of deliberative
democratic citizenship education, such as Amy Gutmann and David Thompson, Seyla
Benhabib and Iris Marion Young, are used to think about democratic citizenship education in
Mozambique. This analysis assists in answering the following research question: ‘Can the
education policies in schools contribute to promoting democratic citizenship education in the
Mozambican society? If not, what should be done?’ Furthermore, interpretive methodology
and analytical inquiry are applied as methods to interpret and understand the education policy
documents and to undertake a critical analysis of the concept of democratic citizenship
education, as well as of education policy documents.
The analysis of Mozambican education policy documents illustrates clearly that the
government is concerned about the eradication of illiteracy, by increasing access to
education, equality and quality of education, and the preparation of citizens who know their
basic rights and can contribute to the development of their communities and democracy. The
results demonstrate that the government is achieving some of the goals related to access to
education. For instance, the government increased the number of primary schools from 7 013
in 1999 to 11 859 in 2008. However, more still needs to be done with respect to the quality of
education.
Furthermore, the study demonstrates that Mozambican education policies lack democratic
citizenship education. For instance, the education policies were analysed in three distinct
periods, namely post-independence, post-civil war and the period of the Millennium
Development Goals. The policies are indicated to be inadequate to cultivate democratic
citizens in Mozambican society, particularly because there is a need to boost a deliberative
democratic citizenship education in schools. For example, in the first period, citizens did not
have an opportunity to deliberate and be autonomous citizens in the educative process.
Everything was done by the government. In the second period the government allowed the participation of other organisations, communities and institutions in the educative process,
but there is no specification of how those citizens participated in the process of decision
making. In the third period the government became concerned about important aspects and
values of democratic citizenship education that should be taught directly in school. In this
context the government introduced Civic and Moral Education and themes to be discussed in
the classroom, which potentially will enable citizens to be critical.
This situation shows that, in public schools, teachers should educate learners through
classroom deliberations. It implies that teachers need to create conditions for the teaching and
learning process so that all citizens, independent of their origin, class, sex and race, can
participate and work together in deliberation. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie handel oor ’n analise van Mosambiekse onderwysbeleidsdokumente, en
verbind hierdie analise aan teorieë van demokratiese burgerskapsonderwys. Dit stel voor dat
vir Mosambiekers om aktiewe burgers te word wat die vermoë het om hulle sosiale probleme
te konfronteer en uit te daag, ’n beraadslagende demokratiese burgerskapsonderwys in hulle
skole nodig is. In sulke beraadslaging moet burgers op ’n gelyke voet en vrylik aan debatte of
aktiwiteite deelneem, sonder dat hulle deur die maghebbers geïntimideer word. Indien so ’n
beraadslagende demokratiese burgerskapsonderwys nie in die skole bestaan nie, sal burgers
moontlik nie hulle regte herken nie en ook nie oplossings vir die samelewing se probleme kan
vind nie. Die idees van filosowe van beraadslagende demokratiese burgerskapsonderwys soos
Amy Gutmann en David Thompson, Seyla Benhabib en Iris Marion Young is gebruik om
demokratiese burgerskapsonderwys in Mosambiek te oorweeg. Hierdie analise dra daartoe by
om die volgende navorsingsvraag te beantwoord: ‘Kan die onderwysbeleide in skole ’n
bydrae maak tot die bevordering van demokratiese burgerskapsonderwys in die Mosambiekse
samelewing? Indien nie, wat moet gedoen word?’ Verder is verklarende metodologie en
analitiese ondersoek as metodes gebruik om die onderwysbeleidsdokumente te interpreteer en
te verstaan en om ’n kritiese analise van die konsep van demokratiese burgerskapsonderwys,
sowel as van die onderwysbeleidsdokumente, te onderneem.
Die analise van Mosambiekse onderwysbeleidsdokumente toon duidelik dat die regering
ernstig is oor die uitwissing van ongeletterdheid, met toenemende toegang tot onderwys,
gelyke en kwaliteitopvoeding, en die voorbereiding van burgers wat bewus is van hulle
basiese regte en ’n bydrae kan maak tot die ontwikkeling van hulle gemeenskappe en die
demokrasie. Die resultate toon dat die regering sommige van sy doelwitte behaal met
betrekking tot toegang tot onderwys. Byvoorbeeld, die regering het die aantal laerskole
vermeerder van 7 013 in 1999 tot 11 859 in 2008. Meer moet egter nog gedoen word met
betrekking tot die kwaliteit van onderwys.
Die studie demonstreer verder dat Mosambiekse onderwysbeleide ’n gebrek aan
demokratiese burgerskapsonderwys toon. Die onderwysbeleide is byvoorbeeld in drie
afsonderlike tydperke geanaliseer, naamlik ná onafhanklikheid, ná die burgeroorlog en in die
tydperk van die Millennium Ontwikkelingsdoelwitte. Die beleide is duidelik onvoldoende om
demokratiese burgers in die Mosambiekse samelewing daar te stel, veral omdat daar nog ’n
behoefte daaraan is om ’n beraadslagende demokratiese burgerskapsonderwys in skole ’n
hupstoot te gee. Byvoorbeeld, in die eerste tydperk is burgers nie die geleentheid gegun om te beraadslaag en as outonome burgers in die onderwysproses op te tree nie. Alles is deur die
regering gedoen. In die tweede tydperk het die regering deelname deur ander organisasies,
gemeenskappe en instansies in die onderwysproses toegelaat. Maar daar is geen aanduiding
van hoe hierdie burgers in die besluitnemingsproses deelgeneem het nie. In die derde tydperk
was die regering besorgd oor belangrike aspekte en waardes van demokratiese
burgerskapsonderwys wat direk in die skool onderrig moet word. In hierdie konteks het die
regering Burgerleer en Sedeleer en temas wat in die klaskamer bespreek moet word, ingevoer
wat burgers potensieel sal help om krities te wees.
Hierdie situasie toon dat onderwysers in staatskole leerders in klaskamerberaadslaging moet
opvoed. Dit impliseer dat onderwysers vir die onderrig- en leerproses toestande moet skep
waarin alle burgers, ongeag hulle oorsprong, klas, geslag en ras, kan deelneem en saam kan
beraadslaag.
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