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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.
31

Online Communities: Enterprise Networks, Open Education and Global Communication: 16. Workshop GeNeMe ’13 Gemeinschaften in Neuen Medien: TU Dresden, 07./08.10.2013

Köhler, Thomas, Kahnwald, Nina January 2013 (has links)
GeNeMe steht für Gemeinschaften in Neuen Medien, im englischen Sprachgebrauch bezeichnet als Web-based Communities oder Online Communities. Einen wichtigen Impuls erfuhren die wissenschaftliche Analyse und die wirtschaftliche Nutzung dieser Communities unter der Metapher des Web2.0. Internet-basierte Technologien wie z. B. Social Media Werkzeuge, aber auch (soziale) Intranet-Systeme und Wissensplattformen bestimmen mehr denn je Lernen, Forschen und Arbeiten in Wirtschaft, Wissenschaft und Bildung und insbesondere das private (Zusammen-) Leben. Dabei führt die zunehmende Mobilität moderner multimedialer Systeme (Smartphone, Tablet PC, etc.) zu neuen Nutzungsoptionen und kollaborativen Anwendungen - sei es im Bereich des Gaming, der Barrierefreiheit oder beim gemeinsamen Gestalten digitaler Produkte. Die GeNeMe ’13 richtet sich in gleichem Maße an Wissenschaftler und Praktiker, die sich über den aktuellen Stand der Arbeiten auf dem Gebiet der Gemeinschaften in Neuen Medien informieren möchten. Im 16. Jahr der Tagung geht es weiterhin um Fragen der (Ver-)Gemeinschaftung bei der Nutzung neuer Medien, virtueller Communities und des Social Web. Unabhängig von der sektoralen Zugehörigkeit der behandelten Szenarien zu Wirtschaft, Wissenschaft, Bildung und Unterhaltung geht es schwerpunktmäßig um folgende Themen: • Research Communities • Multi- and Rich Media Communication/Collaboration in mobilen Anwendungsszenarien und Kollaborative Barrierefreiheit • Global Communities, transnationale Kooperationen und - Netzwerke • Virtual and Massive Communities in Education Neben der methodischen und technologischen Perspektive interessiert das Verhältnis von individueller versus gemeinschaftlicher Aktivität, respektive Nutzung. Stärker als 2012 wurde auch die themenbezogene Praxis von Communities berücksichtigt. Der Sammelband zur Tagung „Gemeinschaften in Neuen Medien“ steht 2013 unter dem Rahmenthema „Online Communities: Enterprise Networks, Open Education and Global Communication“ und strukturiert sich in Beiträge zu den Themenfeldern Community Technologies, Community Topics und Community Didactics. Alle in den Proceedings publizierten Beiträge wurden mit Hilfe eines anonymisierten Begutachtungsverfahrens auf Basis von mindestens 2 Gutachten aus einem breiten Angebot interessanter und qualitativ hochwertiger Beiträge ausgewählt.:A EINGELADENE VORTRÄGE 1 A.1 Neue Technologien – Neue Anforderungen an die Forschungsmethoden im Bildungswesen 1 A.2 Bürgerbeteiligung beim Hochwasserkampf - Chancen und Risiken einer kollaborativen Internetplattform zur Koordination der Gefahrenabwehr 13 B COMMUNITY TECHNOLOGIES 23 B.1 Mobile Bildungsmedien für die berufliche Ausbildung lernerorientiert entwickeln 23 B.2 Akzeptanz und Nutzung von E-Books 35 B.3 Einsatz Mobiler Apps im E-Learning 47 B.4 SENSE: Combining Mashup and HSM technology by semantic means to improve usability and performance 61 B.5 Fishification – Visualizing Activity Streams Using the Aquarium Metaphor 73 B.6 Designing e-research: A framework for researcher’s social online knowledge 83 C COMMUNITY TOPICS 101 C.1 Der Einfluss der Länge von Beobachtungszeiträumen auf die Identifizierung von Subgruppen in Online Communities 101 C.2 Topic-Based Aggregation of Questions in Social Media 113 C.3 Zesare: Kompetenzbündelung zur Unterstützung Studierender beim Erwerb studienbegleitender Zertifizierungen an sächsischen Hochschulen – Ein Projektbericht 125 C.4 Die Medienkompetenz Jugendlicher im Umgang mit digitalen sozialen Netzwerken 137 C.5 Status Quo und Bedeutung der Meinungs-führerforschung für Online-Communities 149 C.6 Förderung der Anerkennung in agilen Softwareentwicklungsprozessen 185 C.7 Trauern in virtueller Gemeinschaft. Geteiltes Gefühl in Online Gemeinschaften 189 C.8 Personalmarketing auf Social Network Sites. Die Top-100-Arbeitgeber auf Facebook 209 D COMMUNITY DIDACTICS 225 D.1 Play real – Kollaboratives Mock-Trial-Training in der OpenSim-basierten Virtual Learning World 225 D.2 Empirische Befunde zur mediengestützten Weiterbildung an sächsischen Hochschulen 237 D.3 Lebenslanges „Lernen, Lehren und Forschen” mit brauchwiki.de! Der interdisziplinäre Einsatz einer Web 2.0-Anwendung in einem geisteswissenschaftlichen Kooperationsprojekt an der Universität Augsburg 249 D.4 Kooperative Lehr-/Lernkonzepte im Bereich – tutoriell begleitete, virtuelle, kollaborative Gruppenarbeit in multinationalen Lernergruppen 259 D.5 Entwicklung eines Werkzeugs zur onlinebasierten Bestimmung typenspezifischer Lernpräferenzen 263 D.6 Virtuelle Praxisgemeinschaften in der Hochschullehre: Das mobil-virtuelle Klassenzimmer 273 D.7 Kommunikation geht alle an! – Mitarbeiterkompetenzen für neue Kommunikationsaufgaben durch Social Media 281 D.8 Studierende als Zielgruppe von Open Online Courses: Potenziale und Herausforderungen am Beispiel des SOOC13 293 D.9 Massive Open Online Courses: Kategorisierung und Analyse des Teilnehmerverhaltens am Beispiel der OPCOs 2011 und 2012 305 E POSTERBEITRÄGE 319 E.1 CloudBooks - LOOP ein neues Autorentool 319 E.2 Does community matter? Social and cultural influences on acceptance and use of collaborative educational technologies 325 E.3 Recommending in an Enterprise Social Media Stream without Explicit User Feedback 337
32

Notes de programme : une histoire, des pratiques et de nouveaux usages numériques

Bernard, Justin 04 1900 (has links)
Depuis leur émergence au milieu du XIXe siècle, les notes de programme, contenant des informations parfois détaillées sur les œuvres qui s’apprêtent à être jouées, n’ont eu de cesse de s’adresser au public de concerts. Les besoins sont multiples, voire même divergents : donner des outils de compréhension intelligibles aux novices, qui découvrent la musique de compositeurs du passé ou de compositeurs actuels, et en même temps susciter la curiosité d’auditeurs déjà initiés, qui approfondissent ainsi leurs connaissances et leur culture personnelle. Il en va des notes de programme comme d’autres outils de vulgarisation musicale, partagés entre la volonté de rendre la musique classique accessible à tous et le devoir de rigueur musicologique auquel les connaisseurs sont en droit de s’attendre. Dans cette thèse, nous allions la théorie à la pratique. Outre les résultats d’une enquête réalisée en octobre 2017 dans le cadre de trois concerts produits par l’Orchestre symphonique de Montréal (ci-après, OSM) et qui porte notamment sur l’appréciation des notes de programme, nous présentons une série de courtes vidéos de vulgarisation que nous avons préparée pour l’OSM, au cours de la saison 2015-2016. La réalisation de ces nouveaux outils numériques s’appuie sur l’analyse d’un vaste corpus de notes de programme dont nous avons dégagé les tendances et les cas plus particuliers. Des résultats que nous avons obtenus, il ressort que le public de l’OSM, loin d’être homogène, est formé d’auditeurs aux attentes très diverses. Pour beaucoup, les notes de programme sont jugées adaptées à la situation du concert, mais elles génèrent aussi des réactions critiques : trop détaillées pour certains, ou bien pas assez approfondies pour d’autres. Bien qu’ils aient acquis des formations et des connaissances musicales diverses, les membres du public semblent du moins s’accorder sur leur intérêt pour la musique, expliquée par l’analyste. C’est à cet intérêt, correspondant aussi aux exigences de la discipline musicologique, que les notes de programme viennent répondre. La question reste de savoir comment décrire l’objet musical afin de répondre aux besoins de chacun. Dans cette thèse, nous cherchons à proposer une solution. / Since their appearance in the mid-nineteenth century, program notes, sometimes containing detailed information on the works that are about to be performed, have continued to meet audiences needs during concerts. They respond to a wide range of needs: providing intelligible comprehension tools for laymen and laywomen, who discover the music of the past and of the present, while arousing the curiosity of well-accustomed listeners, who increase their knowledge and cultivation. This goes for program notes as well as other music appreciation tools, torn between the desire to make classical music accessible to all and, on the other hand, the rigorous approach to musicology that is expected from connoisseurs. In this thesis, we combine both theory and practice. In addition to an inquiry, conducted in October 2017 as part of three concert nights at the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal (hereafter, OSM) – an inquiry which gives us an idea of how program notes are regarded by concert audiences –, we will display a series of short open educational videos that we produced for the OSM, during the 2015-2016 season. The work necessary for these new digital tools is partly based on the analysis of a large body of former program notes from which we have identified a number of trends and specific cases. The results of the inquiry show that the OSM’s audience, far from being homogeneous, is made up of listeners who bear very different expectations. According to many, the program notes are considered appropriate for one’s concert experience. However, they may also spring critical reactions among concertgoers: either too detailed, tedious for some, or somewhat dull for others. Although audience members have different musical backgrounds and scales of knowledge, both novices and connoisseurs seem to share a common interest in the music itself, which needs to be explained through means of analysis. This interest is being fulfilled by program notes, in line with the requirements of musicological research. The question remains: how can one describe a work of music in order to meet the needs of everyone? In this thesis, we try to find appropriate answers to this matter.
33

Vorwort der Herausgeber

Köhler, Thomas, Kahnwald, Nina January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
34

Development and evaluation of an interactive e-module on Central Limit Theorem

Holovchenko, Anastasiia 04 May 2023 (has links)
No description available.
35

公開大学モデルの形成に関する研究

鄭, 漢模 23 March 2023 (has links)
京都大学 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(教育学) / 甲第24351号 / 教博第281号 / 新制||教||214(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院教育学研究科教育科学専攻 / (主査)教授 飯吉 透, 教授 杉本 均, 教授 南部 広孝 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Philosophy (Education) / Kyoto University / DGAM
36

Open School Doors User Needs Analysis Report: Developing diverse school / parents’ communities through innovative partnerships.: (Intellectual Output 1)

Koehler, Thomas, Sperling, Lisa, Backhaus, Leonie, Zoakou, Anna, Kendall, Alex, Puttick, Mary‐Rose, Koskeris, Andreas, Garofalakis, John, Reimers, Christian, Rauscher, Laura 23 April 2024 (has links)
This report presents the first intellectual output (IO1) of the Open School Doors project. IO1 has been jointly produced by the whole project consortium. It summarizes the national policies and initiatives among the partnership concerning the parental engagement / involvement of migrant / refugee parents toward school life. To this end literature resources have been collected and then analysed, with the following aims: a) Profile the target group per country, i.e. outline what is the main audience, its specific cultural characteristics (if any), what has to be taken into consideration for the design of a Training Framework that will match both their learning and cultural needs, etc. b) Elaborate on certain cases of successful parental engagement / involvement, i.e. mainly EU, nationally or locally funded projects. The rationale behind the intensive search of such cases was to identify practices that really work but not to ‘reinvent the wheel’, and have a valid starting point for Open Schools Doors (OSD) Training Framework ‐ no doubt that the amplitude and variety of such programs are good indicators of each country policy and posture towards social inclusion and provision of equal opportunities to education. c) Identify the gaps in the current situation among the participant countries and design a Training Framework that will actively facilitate parents’ engagement / involvement to school life in a tangible and long‐term manner. Methodically authors started with desk research and apart from that empirical data was collected from focus groups which were organized with the view to validating what was theoretically concluded from literature resources by asking the main target audience of the project about the Training Framework specifications and features. To this end the last section summarizes findings of both theoretical research and focus groups, providing thus an overview of what is needed and on which directions OSD didactic approach should focus.:Abstract 6 Introduction and scope 7 1 Conceptualising Home School Interaction 9 1.1 Models of Parental Engagement 9 1.2 ‘Hard to reach’ parents or Hard to Reach Schools? 11 1.2.1 Intersectionality 13 1.2.2 Social Class and home ‐ school interaction 13 1.2.3 Ethnicity and home ‐ school interaction 15 1.2.4 Colonialism / Post‐colonialism 16 1.3 Home school interaction and technology 17 1.4 Infusing home ‐ school interaction with Literacies 20 1.4.1 Home ‐ school interaction as literacy work 20 1.5 Refugee Adults and Digital Literacy 22 1.6 Looking forward: Third Spaces and Multi‐Directional Parental Engagement 24 1.6.1 Multi‐directionality 25 1.6.2 Family Learning 26 1.6.3 Family learning and ‘Digital success stories’ ‐ ideas for future engagement? 27 2 The European dimension 29 2.1 European policies on parental involvement 29 2.2 Facts and figures 30 2.3 European and international experiences: interesting cases of parental involvement projects / practices beyond the consortium partner countries 33 2.3.1 Empowerment of Roma: An interesting practice followed in Croatia 33 2.3.2 Toddler: Towards Opportunities for Disadvantaged and Diverse Learners on Early Childhood‐Road ‐ an EU project 34 2.3.3 ASPIRA Parents for Educational Excellence Program (APEX): An ongoing parental involvement project 37 2.3.4 Involve Parents – Improve School – COMENIUS Multilateral Project 38 2.3.5 Language courses for people of a migrant background: An interesting practice from Sweden 41 2.3.6 More chances with parents: An interesting practice from the Netherlands 42 3 National Experiences 46 3.1 Austria 46 3.1.1 National initiatives, projects and articles in the area of parental engagement/involvement of migrant/ refugee parents 48 3.1.2 Recent initiatives and programmes to further language development 49 3.1.3 Political support for initiatives to engage immigrant parents 50 3.1.4 Lessons learnt 52 3.2 Germany 58 3.2.1 Parental involvement among migrants in German education research 58 3.2.2 Projects on parental involvement 59 3.2.3 Research results on (intercultural) parental work 63 3.2.4 Summary 65 3.3 Greece 67 3.3.1 Good practices and research about migrants’ parental engagement 67 3.3.2 Interventions and projects with migrants’ parents in Greece 72 3.3.3 Summarizing Comments 78 3.4 UK 78 3.4.1 Home school interaction and migrant parents 78 3.4.2 Home School Interaction and Roma families 80 3.4.3 Good practice – cultural acknowledgement 82 3.4.4 ‘Good practice at the grassroots’ 84 4 Focus Groups 85 4.1 Organization and scope 85 4.2 Overview about methodical aspects 86 4.3 Trans European focus group 87 4.4 Focus groups in Austria 90 4.5 Focus groups Germany 93 4.5.1 Focus groups Germany 93 4.5.2 Focus Group “German Parental Association” 93 4.5.3 Focus Group “Teacher Training Programme TU Dresden” 95 4.6 Focus groups Greece 99 4.6.1 Organization 99 4.6.2 Analysis and main findings 102 4.7 Focus groups UK 107 4.7.1 Issues and Themes Emerging from Focus Group Discussions 107 5 Conclusions and recommendations for the design of Open Schools Doors training framework 135 5.1 Leadership 135 5.2 Underpinning principles 136 5.3 Priorities for Teacher development: 139 Bibliography 142 Publications recommended for further reading 151 Appendix 152 A.1 Interview Guide 152 A.2 Feedback Template 154 A.3 Attendance List Template 155
37

An analysis of early childhood development programmes in South Africa

Bridgemohan, Radhika Rani 11 1900 (has links)
This study constitutes an attempt to describe and analyse the quality of selected early childhood development programmes in South Africa, and provide criteria by which the quality of programmes could be assessed. The need for, and importance of, providing quality early childhood development programmes is highlighted. The influence of educational pf:lilosophies on programmes is recognised, hence the total development of the child and educational philosophies related thereto are discussed. Factors and components within programmes that contribute to high quality are explored. Moreover, criteria by means of which quality early childhood development programmes may be assessed, are provided. In this regard criteria for the formulation of aims, selection and the organisation of content, assessment, role of the teacher and parent involvement in programmes are suggested. It is against these criteria that selected early childhood development programmes in South Africa are described and analysed. programmes conclude the study. / Curriculum and Instructional Studies / M. Ed. (Didactics)
38

A study of the provision of distance education for the upgrading and improvement of the qualifications of teachers in the province of Kwazulu-Natal

Bagwandeen, Dowlat Ramdas 11 1900 (has links)
This research is predicated in the firm conviction that the quality of education is dependent upon the quality of teachers. Teachers as the bedrock of education must participate actively and conscientiously in their intellectual growth through various forms of INSET discussed in the research. From an international comparative perspective DE as a strategy of INSET is deemed as the most functional, if not prudent and efficacious educational experience for the upgrading and improvement of the qualifications of teachers. In this research the origin of DE in terms of its antecedents and evolution, the raison d'etre and the advantages and limitations of DE are adumbrated in order to focus on the complexity and diversity of DE. As part of the conceptual and theoretical framework various terms used synonymously with DE are considered. A syntagma of principles providing a utilitarian and pragmatic connotation for DE is then postulated. Selected theories relevant to DE provide the synthesis for theoretical perspectives. The typology of DE institutions comprising autonomous, dedicated providers of DE and those that are mixed or hybrid or dual mode systems is analyzed. In koeping with the theme of educational borrowing fundamental to comparative education studies provision of DE by the UKOU and AU for developed countries, IGNOU and the ZINTEC model for developing countries is discussed. National examples are UNISA, Vista University and SACTE. The provincial institutions discussed are the former SCE, NCE, UCFE and the newly formed SACOL. General and specific recommendations for the provision of DE programmes for the upgrading and improvement of the qualifications of teachers in the Province of KwaZulu-Natal are adumbrated. By way of conclusion, it is iterated that the provision of DE for the upgrading and improvement of the qualifications of teachers is irrefragably xxvii the quintessential factor in the new generation of teacher education and a pivotal element for INSET. / Educational Studies / D. Ed. (Comparative Education)
39

Wissensgemeinschaften 2015

26 October 2015 (has links) (PDF)
Unter dem gemeinsamen Dach „Wissensgemeinschaften“ werden nun zwei Tagungen mit sich gegenseitig ergänzenden thematischen Schwerpunkten zusammengebracht, die Lern- und Wissensprozesse im Spannungsfeld zwischen Organisation, Technologie und (Unternehmens-)Kultur verhandeln. Während die Konferenz „Gemeinschaften in neuen Medien (GeNeMe)“ organisationale und technische Perspektiven im Kontext von Virtual Enterprises, Communities & Social Networks thematisiert, liefert die zweijährlich stattfindende Konferenz „Professionelles Wissensmanagement (ProWM)“ der Fachgruppe Wissensmanagement in der Gesellschaft für Informatik (fgwm) einen breiten integrativen Überblick über die organisatorischen, kulturellen, sozialen und technischen Aspekte des Wissensmanagements.
40

E-learning a jeho používání z pohledu výuky společenských věd. / E-learning and Its Use in Tuition of Social Sciences

Růžanská, Hana January 2015 (has links)
This doctoral thesis provides a comprehensive treatise of contemporary modern methods of education including e-learning. In its preface the author presents its content, purpose, basis and objectives and sets the main goal of the thesis, namely an intention to analyse and evaluate the latest trends in e-learning, modern forms of education and use of information technology in organisation of studies. Sub-objectives of this dissertation relate to the structure of its prime objective and correspond with its individual chapters in which it presents the history of e-learning within the history of science and institutional education, evaluates the position of e-learning and other modern forms of education in the scope of political and legislative priorities of the European Union and of the Czech Republic and presents several core strategic and legislative documents covering this area also in connection with the concept of lifelong learning. The key theoretical part of the thesis contains a detailed overview of main theoretical issues related to e-learning and other modern forms of education in contemporary local and international literature. This part describes e-learning as a part of the concept of lifelong learning, provides basic definitions of e-learning as well as an analysis of related terms,...

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