• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 48
  • 44
  • 39
  • 9
  • 8
  • 5
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 197
  • 197
  • 83
  • 39
  • 33
  • 32
  • 29
  • 24
  • 24
  • 20
  • 20
  • 17
  • 16
  • 16
  • 15
  • 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.
161

Výuka náboženství v českých školách - pragmatický přístup / Teaching Religion in Czech schools - a pragmatic approach

Miškejová, Veronika January 2020 (has links)
World religions should be taught at the secondary level of education. In this, a pragmatic approach is superior to the traditional approach, because it shows not just the history of this topic, but it also lets students experience the everyday life of those who believe. It is not in any way a method to convert anybody to this or that faith or tradition. It is a pedagogic method for critical thinking and both making and challenging interpretations of the facts before each student. In my thesis I showed my own method and I made my own version of a better textbook that utilizes the basic points of pragmatic pedagogy. I studied the works of John Dewey, John Gatto, Neil Postman and Charles Weingartner. And I propose a method that takes no more than 4 lessons, if needed, which is the most time teachers can give to such topic. I looked at the educational programs of the Czech Republic and found that world religions are a very small portion of the subject Education in citizenship. Since John Dewey was an atheist, it is not common for people to think of religion as a topic to teach with his methodology. Most of the social sciences are still taught as history lessons and not as the fun and interesting lessons they can be. I think it is not just the natural sciences that should have their laboratories at...
162

Burke, Dewey, and the Experience of Aristotle's Epideictic: An Examination of Rhetorical Elements Found in the Funerals of Lincoln, Kennedy, and Reagan

Farnworth, Xanthe Kristine Allen 29 June 2010 (has links) (PDF)
This article examines the role of epideictic rhetoric as a tool for promoting civic virtue in the public realm through the application of Kenneth Burke's theory of identification and John Dewey's explanation of an aesthetic experience. Long the jurisdiction of Aristotle's logical arguments, civic discussion usually works within the realm of forensic or deliberative persuasion. However, scholarship in the last fifty years suggests there is an unexplored dimension of Aristotle's discussion of epideictic and emotion that needs to be examined in an attempt to identify its usefulness as a tool for examining human experience and practical behavior in the political realm. I attempt to add to the discussion by exploring the presidential funerals of Abraham Lincoln, John F. Kennedy, and Ronald Reagan as opportunities for a nation to display a hero's virtues as extensions of society's virtues. Virtues often define what a nation considers good which, in turn, influences the nature of the discussion and often determines political action.
163

När språket utgör ett hinder i matematikinlärningen : En fenomenologisk intervjustudie om hur lärare i årskurs f-3 beskriver arbetet med språklig sårbarhet i matematikundervinsningen

Anvret, Emma, Ejdre, Emma January 2024 (has links)
Syftet med studien är att undersöka hur lärare i årskurs F-3 resonerar kring arbetet med elever i språklig sårbarhet i matematikämnet. Denna studie är relevant då forskning visar att kommunikation och samspel är en viktig del i lärandet av matematik. Elever i språklig sårbarhet kan ha svårt att delta i moment som bygger på detta och lärare kan ha svårt att överkomma denna svårighet. Vi har genomfört semistrukturerade intervjuer med fem tillfrågade lärare. Lärarna är verksamma på fyra olika skolor i mellersta Sverige med olika lång erfarenhet. Studien har sin grund i det fenomenologiska perspektivet och det insamlade materialet är transkriberat och analyserat utifrån fenomenologisk analysmetod. Resultatet visar att språklig sårbarhet påverkar elever i matematikundervisningen i olika sammanhang. Lärare beskriver att de använder olika typer av arbetssätt för att stötta elever i språklig sårbarhet och använder olika typer av strategier för att uppmärksamma hinder. Slutsatsen för denna studie är att det är en fördel att vara klasslärare när det kommer till att hantera språklig sårbarhet i matematikundervisningen.
164

Art as Negation: A Defense of Conceptual Art as Art

Weis, Kristin K. 26 April 2016 (has links)
No description available.
165

Parent and Teacher Engagement as Predictors of Literacy and Social Emotional Development of Preschool Children Enrolled in Head Start: A Mixed Method Case Study

Howard-Brahaney, Michelle Lea January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
166

John Dewey's Ideas on Authority and Their Significance for Contemporary Korean Schools

Kim, Sang Hyun 17 March 2011 (has links)
No description available.
167

Institutions and Process

Lake, Danielle Lee 06 September 2006 (has links)
No description available.
168

Inquiry and the social : an empirical study of the construction of knowledge in architectural designing

Berthold, Henning Alexander January 2013 (has links)
This thesis is a study of inquiry. Drawing upon the work of American pragmatist John Dewey, this work seeks to contribute to our understanding of the construction of knowledge within the social system of communities of inquiry. The process of inquiry that is traced in this work is one effected in the course of architectural designing. An ethnographically informed study of an architectural masterplan project is used to illustrate Dewey's ideas and how they are played out in design practice. This thesis is understood to correspond with the growing interest of the students of organisational learning and knowledge management in knowledge creation and the underlying social processes. It is further seen as a response to the claim that the key processes of knowledge creation remain largely an enigma. Agreement has been established with Dewey that knowledge is not just an end in itself but a form of action, a medium of change and social transformation. The formation of knowledge, however, within the operation of inquiry is not a matter that “naturally” runs its course. The process of inquiry as studied both in theory and practice has shown just how much its results, which by definition constitute knowledge, are shaped by the institution and control of a problem. A problem is a social construct and the product of the purposeful selection and arrangement of pieces of information. Inquiry is therefore considered a process of controlled knowledge formation. That which counts as knowledge in the realm of social phenomena has been shown to be a matter not so much of agreement between actions and their consequences but agreement in terms of intellectual acceptance. What “satisfies” as a solution (such as the final masterplan) has therefore been shown to be not necessarily a question of its logical status.
169

Unraveling Conflicting Interpretations: A Reexamination of the 1916 Report on Social Studies

Jorgensen, C. Gregg 01 May 2010 (has links)
This study examines the 1916 Report on Social Studies in order to determine how it has been interpreted and regarded over time. The underlying question involved is "Which interpretation, or interpretations, most embodies the intent, goals, and purpose of the 1916 Committee"? Key members of the 1916 committee have been identified for extended research and analysis. One additional individual frequently quoted throughout the Report, John Dewey, has been included in this research on the 1916 committee. The design, format, and content of the 1916 Report on Social Studies was closely examined. This study dissected the three individual reports by time, intent, topic, and authority. The wide variety of interpretations offered by the scholars identified for this study was examined within an organizational framework utilized to discuss and analyze the broad spectrum of interpretations that exist. This examination of the report encompassed the existing theories, the meaning and intent of the 1916 committee, as well as the social and political aspects and impacts of the era. The overarching intent of this study was to make sense of the various scholarly interpretations and offer insights as to whether or not a consensus of opinion among scholars existed. This study explored if, in fact, there was one dominant interpretation, or whether or not different interpretations were possible for the 1916 Report on Social Studies. That is, was there an opportunity for this study to employ a new lens through which to view the 1916 Report on Social Studies?
170

Svensk ungdomspolitik över tid, en komparativ analys : En studie kring forskningens inflytande på ungdomspolitiken och vem som ansvarar för ungdomspolitikens genomförande

Rüdiger, Jytte January 2012 (has links)
Who is responsible for youth policy implementation? This thesis attempts to deepen our understanding of Swedish and Nordic youth policy. Youth policy is cross-sectoral and includes all the decisions and measures affecting the conditions of young people. National youth policy therefore concerns young people's life situations in a number of different areas, such as work, housing, education, health, leisure and influence. The purpose of the study is to increase the knowledge of youth policy work the last century by understanding the impact of youth research concerning adults' role in youth policy implementation.   A mixed method approach has been applied to the study: interviews, documents and youth theory have been analysed. The results show that youth research had a major impact on the Swedish youth policy. It also shows that the state has an important role in the implementation of youth policies. To create a youth policy that meets the democratic mandate, it is necessary to create a systematic approach and guidelines for municipalities. The study has clearly shown that the state's role in the democratic mandate differ significantly over time and that adults' role in the implementation is of great importance. The study draws attention to the perception of adults over time and how adults are increasingly seen as a barrier to young people's democratic schooling, and on what grounds this opinion rests. It is proposed that views on the democratic mandate will be extended from a municipal focus to the state where youth policy have a broader focus that takes account of national welfare goals based on a policy all municipalities has to be involved in.

Page generated in 0.0426 seconds