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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.
41

A National Study Comparing Baldrige Core Values and Concepts with AACN Indicators of Quality| Facilitating CCNE-Baccalaureate Colleges of Nursing Move toward More Effective Continuous Performance Improvement Practices

Mattin, Deborah C. 02 October 2015 (has links)
<p> The AACN has asked academic leaders to align the performance of their organizations to the prescribed standards within the <i>Essentials of Baccalaureate Education for Professional Nursing Practice</i> document and has provided indicators of quality suggestions for program enhancement as a means of promoting continuous performance improvement. However, the AACN has not prescribed a strategy that specifies the manner in which colleges should achieve these benchmarked standards, which has created uncertainty among administrators about whether the indicators of quality lead to improvements that are actually indicative of improved performance.</p><p> This dissertation used multiple linear regression research design to determine whether predictive relationships exist between the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) indicators of quality and the Baldrige core values and concepts of performance improvement within Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education accredited baccalaureate colleges of nursing.</p><p> The purpose of this study was to determine whether the behaviors associated with specific AACN indicators of quality reflect behaviors that the Baldrige core values and concepts have already proven to be successful in achieving continuous performance improvement. The results revealed nine AACN indicators of quality behaviors most likely to enhance performance improvement outcomes within baccalaureate colleges of nursing. They include; (1) Resources are budgeted for research, development, business operations, public relations, marketing, and human resources; (2) Establishing and upholding policies that reflect faculty and leadership development resources; (3) Student experiences include service learning opportunities; (4) Practice partnerships include collaborative practice initiatives; (5) Collecting data and making program changes that focus on the level of graduate satisfaction with their preparation for the profession; (6) Faculty have input into the governance of the college/school; (7) The majority of faculty have a presence in state, regional, national, and international professional activities; (8) Opportunities for baccalaureate graduate's employment with practice partnerships; and (9) Formal mentoring program for clinical preceptors.</p><p> The results underline the fact that continuous performance improvement within baccalaureate colleges of nursing is a deliberate and dynamic analysis-driven endeavor dependent on an organization's ability, willingness, and initiative to continually strive to narrow the chasm between actual and potential performance results.</p>
42

The socio-political construction of Fijian identity and knowledge: A postcolonial perspective

Bogitini, S. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
43

The Good Student: Subjectivities and Power in Secondary Schools

Greg.Thompson@murdoch.edu.au, Gregory Thompson January 2009 (has links)
Abstract: The good student: power, subjectivities and schooling Schooling has become one of the core, generalisable experiences of most young people in the Western world. This study examines the ways that students inhabit subjectivities in school through the normalising vision of the good student. The idea that schools exist to produce good students who become good citizens is one of the basic tenets of modernist educational philosophies that dominate the contemporary education world. This study takes a different position, arguing that the visions of the good student deployed in various ways in schools act to produce various ways of knowing the self that are ultimately concerned with behaviour and discipline rather than freer thought and action. Developing the postmodern theories of Foucault and Deleuze, this study argues that schools could be freer places than they are, but current practices act to teach students to know themselves in certain idealised ways through which they are located, and locate themselves, in hierarchical rationales of the good student. Part of the promise of schools lies in the ways that students become negotiators and producers of their subjectivities, albeit in narrow and limiting ways. By pushing the ontological understandings of the self beyond the modernist philosophies that currently dominate schools and schooling, this study problematises the ways that young people are made subjects in schools. Part of this modernist tradition is found in the institutional tendency to see students as fixed, measurable identities (beings) rather than dynamic, evolving performances (becomings). Schools and schooling largely appear to make sense to us because we think we understand what happens and what should happen in schools. The good student is framed within these aspects of cultural understanding. However, this commonsense attitude is based on a hegemonic understanding of the good, rather than the good student as a contingent multiplicity that is produced by an infinite set of discourses and experiences. I argue that this understanding of subjectivities and power is crucial if schools are to meet the needs of a rapidly changing and challenging world. This study utilises socially critical case study research across multiple sites to investigate those micropractices of power in schools that produce the normalising vision of the good student. Data from three school sites was gathered using a variety of techniques including interviews and focus group research.
44

Teaching virtue and practical reason the Aristotelian classroom /

Gossett, Amy D. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Indiana University, 2004. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 66-01, Section: A, page: 0324. Chairs: Jean C. Robinson; Russell L. Hanson. Title from dissertation home page (viewed Oct. 12, 2006).
45

On what Socrates hoped to achieve in the Agora : the Socratic act of turning our attention to the truth

Pantelides, Fotini January 2016 (has links)
This thesis wants to say that Socrates was a teacher of his fellows. He engaged with them through dialogue because he cared for their wellbeing, or as he might have put it: for the state of their souls. He was an intellectual and he had an intellectualist view of people and reality. He felt that right-mindedness was reasonable; and thus he believed that learning and developing understanding brought people closer to being virtuous; to goodness; and so to mental health. Socrates was a philosopher, and he considered this to be the most prudent and exalted approach to life. He taught his fellows how to be philosophers, and he urged them as best he could to take up the philosophical stance. His form of care for others was ‘intellectualist’. He cared ‘for the souls of others’ and for his own with intellectual involvement because he believed that this was the most appropriate way. He had a view of the human soul that produced intellectualist views of what wellbeing is and how it is achieved. He himself was a humble and able thinker, and was fully devoted to being virtuous and to helping his fellows to do the same. This thesis addresses the question of what Socrates did in the agora (his aims) and how he went about doing it (his methodology). Our answer might seem obvious. One might wonder what is new about saying that Socrates was a philosopher, and that he cared for the souls of his fellows and that he urged them to become virtuous. Perhaps nothing of this is new. Nevertheless, we find that making this ‘simple’ statement about Socrates is not that simple at all. We find that in Socratic scholarship there exist a plethora of contrasting voices that make it rather difficult to formulate even such a basic description of what Socrates did. We do not wish to create a novel and different reading of Socrates. We do not think that this is even possible after civilization has been interpreting Socrates for millennia. We do not see innovation for its own sake as desirable. We prefer clear understanding to the eager ‘originality’. Therefore rather, our aim with this work is to defend and clarify a very basic picture of Socrates as an educator. We see this work as clearing away clutter so as to begin our life-long study of Socratic thought and action: by laying a foundation with which we can read Socratic works and discern their meaning.
46

Formas de conhecer em educação especial : Discurso médico e vida ordinária na escola

Lima, André Luís de Souza January 2018 (has links)
A dissertação, a partir de oito pequenos ensaios, busca questionar a pertinência e a preeminência do discurso médico em relação ao saber do professor e ao trabalho em sala de aula, propondo a discussão dos seus efeitos e aventando uma alternativa epistêmica e discursiva fundamentada na experiência do ordinário. O escritor francês Georges Perec – no pequeno ensaio Aproximações do quê? e na obra A vida, modo de usar – alerta sobre o potencial das descrições da vida ordinária e exibe tal atitude de interrogar o habitual e vê-lo como portador de informações sobre nós mesmos. No âmbito do pensamento filosófico, o trabalho tardio de Wittgenstein refere-se ao desejo por generalidades e desprezo pelo caso particular como estando na base de obscuridades filosóficas. Além disso, os argumentos contrários à tese de que sentenças a respeito de eventos mentais são redutíveis a sentenças sobre estados neurofisiológicos também nos conduziram ao que é ordinário, comum, habitual. Para perfazer esse argumento, servimo-nos do acervo gerado por um curso de extensão universitária para professores de atendimento educacional especializado e de sala de aula regular envolvidos com alunos considerados público-alvo da educação especial. O principal dispositivo dessa formação era construir narrativas sobre a vida escolar, escritas e recebidas como se fossem cartas. Uma vez acionado o artefato ordinário da carta – e evocada, por meio dela, uma potência do cotidiano, do senso comum como forma de saber –, algo distinto das maneiras tradicionais de conceber o que é conhecimento na educação especial e nos processos inclusivos parece deixar-se perceber, refundando, talvez, os termos do compromisso com a prática pedagógica. Escapar ao reducionismo do pensamento naturalista, do qual participa o ideal médico, passa por outra forma de construir conhecimento em educação e pelo fortalecimento da figura do professor. Estão em jogo diferentes perspectivas epistemológicas cujos desdobramentos são também éticos e políticos. / This master thesis, assembled from eight little essays, seeks to question the relevance and the supremacy of the medical discourse in relation to educator’s knowledge and practice at the classroom, proposing a discussion about its effects and an analysis of an epistemic and discursive alternative founded in the experience of commonness. The French writer Georges Perec – in his little essay Approches de quoi? and in his major work La vie, mode d’emploi (Life: A User’s Manual) – warn us about the potential of everyday life descriptions and show us the gesture of interrogating the habitual, the ordinary, seeing it as the vehicle of information about ourselves. Amidst philosophical thought, the late work of Ludwig Wittgenstein refers to our desire for generalities and our disregard to particular cases as aspects that can overshadow our own philosophical investigations. Besides that, the contrary arguments usually employed to disqualify the thesis that sentences and propositions about mental events are reducible to sentences about neurophysiological states would also led us to a recognition of commonness and the everyday life. To conclude this argument, we resort to the collection that resulted from an academic extension course given to special education teachers that, in their jobs, were involved with students considered the aim of special education. The main device of this academic extension course was to construct narratives about the school life, written and received, as they were letters. Once the common artifact of the letter was put into motion – evoking with it the potential of the everyday life and the commonsense as a form of knowledge – something very distinct from the traditional ways of understanding the status of knowledge in special education and on the inclusive processes seemed to let itself be noted, refunding perhaps the own terms and foundations through pedagogic practices is compromised. To escape from the naturalistic and reductionist thinking – in which is subscribed the medical ideal – involves the recognition of another form of achieving knowledge in education and the fortification of the role of the educator. Are at stake different epistemological perspectives whose unfolding’s are also ethical and political.
47

Experiência, filosofia e educação em John Dewey: as muralhas sociais e a unidade da experiência

Cavallari Filho, Roberto [UNESP] 06 August 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Made available in DSpace on 2014-06-11T19:28:18Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2007-08-06Bitstream added on 2014-06-13T20:57:48Z : No. of bitstreams: 1 cavallarifilho_r_me_mar.pdf: 408781 bytes, checksum: 99224190f5e4dd088326de1ff24ed7e1 (MD5) / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) / John Dewey buscou revolucionar a educação escolar por meio de uma reconstrução filosófica e cultural. Ele procurou resolver um problema secular da filosofia: dualidades estabelecidas tanto com o idealismo quanto com o empirismo. E articulou a filosofia da educação em outros termos lógicos, estéticos e morais, priorizando a relação entre filosofia e realidade social. A filosofia de Dewey está amparada no conceito de experiência. Experiência significa mudança, mas teremos uma mudança simplesmente mecânica ou física, avisa Dewey, se não atentarmos aos significados das nossas ações, que emergem do ambiente. Quando estabelecemos uma relação significativa com o ambiente, é sinal de que a experiência se tornou reflexiva. A educação escolar consiste em expandir, enriquecer, fazer crescer os significados da vida. O professor deve se ater ao desenvolvimento individual de cada aluno. Ao professor cabe analisar igualmente o ambiente e as suas direções. Isso implica não apenas a análise e escolha dos melhores métodos de ensino e aprendizagem, mas leva o professor a atentar à sua própria experiência. A sua influência nos hábitos dos alunos suscita problemas de ordem moral e intelectual, impondo o conhecimento moral como uma resposta à separação entre uma formação centrada na aquisição de conhecimentos empíricos e técnicos das ciências exatas, físicas e biológicas e uma formação humanista e racional das ciências humanas, mais voltada para o trabalho conceitual. O método individual deweyano que leva em conta a experiência do professor faz do ensino uma arte. Em face dessa perspectiva pragmatista, concluímos que é possível pensar atualmente a experiência reflexiva deweyana diante do empobrecimento da experiência, contrariando as críticas ao seu pensamento. No presente, é latente a preocupação com o empobrecimento da experiência que transcende... / In our interpretative perspective, John Dewey worked in the field of Philosophy and Education, in the first half of the XX Century, with the term experience, to whom it was the continuity of the relation between an agent and his environment, which both would come out physiologically, emotionally, and intellectually modified. This is what we call unity of experience in Dewey thought. It is a respond to the diagnosis of the impoverishment of experience inside the critical tradition of John Dewey. He highlighted the importance of growing in the relation between giving meaning and communicated them to a community. The meaning of the term experience and the possibility to reflect and communicate our experiences, nowadays, has become a glowing problem to contemporary debate in philosophy and philosophy of education. Such problem mirrors the tension regarding the harms that the Modern project of knowledge imposed to actual life: the experience reduced itself to the empiric and the knowledge that mirrored the experience has reduced itself to the scientific knowledge and technologies. These characteristics represent the criticism from Critical Theory tradition of the Frankfurt School in what became so called impoverishment of experience. The existential emptiness is part of the scenario that Modernity helped to construct. The philosopher Max Horkheimer arose from such tradition of the diagnosis of the impoverishment of experience and imposed to the Deweyan Pragmatism one of the hardest criticism of the XX Century, by approaching positivism and pragmatism. Dewey, sad Horkheimer, contributed to the impoverishment of experience by reflecting in his philosophy a social dualism. We are looking forward to respond to Horkheimer criticism and to bring Dewey s philosophy to help us to think our educational problems in the present. Nowadays, there are at least two researches that continue the Deweyan project... (Complete abstract, click electronic access below)
48

Formas de conhecer em educação especial : Discurso médico e vida ordinária na escola

Lima, André Luís de Souza January 2018 (has links)
A dissertação, a partir de oito pequenos ensaios, busca questionar a pertinência e a preeminência do discurso médico em relação ao saber do professor e ao trabalho em sala de aula, propondo a discussão dos seus efeitos e aventando uma alternativa epistêmica e discursiva fundamentada na experiência do ordinário. O escritor francês Georges Perec – no pequeno ensaio Aproximações do quê? e na obra A vida, modo de usar – alerta sobre o potencial das descrições da vida ordinária e exibe tal atitude de interrogar o habitual e vê-lo como portador de informações sobre nós mesmos. No âmbito do pensamento filosófico, o trabalho tardio de Wittgenstein refere-se ao desejo por generalidades e desprezo pelo caso particular como estando na base de obscuridades filosóficas. Além disso, os argumentos contrários à tese de que sentenças a respeito de eventos mentais são redutíveis a sentenças sobre estados neurofisiológicos também nos conduziram ao que é ordinário, comum, habitual. Para perfazer esse argumento, servimo-nos do acervo gerado por um curso de extensão universitária para professores de atendimento educacional especializado e de sala de aula regular envolvidos com alunos considerados público-alvo da educação especial. O principal dispositivo dessa formação era construir narrativas sobre a vida escolar, escritas e recebidas como se fossem cartas. Uma vez acionado o artefato ordinário da carta – e evocada, por meio dela, uma potência do cotidiano, do senso comum como forma de saber –, algo distinto das maneiras tradicionais de conceber o que é conhecimento na educação especial e nos processos inclusivos parece deixar-se perceber, refundando, talvez, os termos do compromisso com a prática pedagógica. Escapar ao reducionismo do pensamento naturalista, do qual participa o ideal médico, passa por outra forma de construir conhecimento em educação e pelo fortalecimento da figura do professor. Estão em jogo diferentes perspectivas epistemológicas cujos desdobramentos são também éticos e políticos. / This master thesis, assembled from eight little essays, seeks to question the relevance and the supremacy of the medical discourse in relation to educator’s knowledge and practice at the classroom, proposing a discussion about its effects and an analysis of an epistemic and discursive alternative founded in the experience of commonness. The French writer Georges Perec – in his little essay Approches de quoi? and in his major work La vie, mode d’emploi (Life: A User’s Manual) – warn us about the potential of everyday life descriptions and show us the gesture of interrogating the habitual, the ordinary, seeing it as the vehicle of information about ourselves. Amidst philosophical thought, the late work of Ludwig Wittgenstein refers to our desire for generalities and our disregard to particular cases as aspects that can overshadow our own philosophical investigations. Besides that, the contrary arguments usually employed to disqualify the thesis that sentences and propositions about mental events are reducible to sentences about neurophysiological states would also led us to a recognition of commonness and the everyday life. To conclude this argument, we resort to the collection that resulted from an academic extension course given to special education teachers that, in their jobs, were involved with students considered the aim of special education. The main device of this academic extension course was to construct narratives about the school life, written and received, as they were letters. Once the common artifact of the letter was put into motion – evoking with it the potential of the everyday life and the commonsense as a form of knowledge – something very distinct from the traditional ways of understanding the status of knowledge in special education and on the inclusive processes seemed to let itself be noted, refunding perhaps the own terms and foundations through pedagogic practices is compromised. To escape from the naturalistic and reductionist thinking – in which is subscribed the medical ideal – involves the recognition of another form of achieving knowledge in education and the fortification of the role of the educator. Are at stake different epistemological perspectives whose unfolding’s are also ethical and political.
49

Complicating, considering, connecting: Rhizomatic philosophizing in music education

January 2013 (has links)
abstract: This philosophical inquiry explores the work of philosophers Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari and posits applications to music education. Through the concepts of multiplicities, becoming, bodies without organs, smooth spaces, maps, and nomads, Deleuze and Guattari challenge prior and current understandings of existence. In their writings on art, education, and how might one live, they assert a world consisting of variability and motion. Drawing on Deleuze and Guattari's emphasis on time and difference, I posit the following questions: Who and when are we? Where are we? When is music? When is education? Throughout this document, their philosophical figuration of a rhizome serves as a recurring theme, highlighting the possibilities of complexity, diverse connections, and continual processes. I explore the question "When and where are we?" by combining the work of Deleuze and Guattari with that of other authors. Drawing on these ideas, I posit an ontology of humans as inseparably cognitive, embodied, emotional, social, and striving multiplicities. Investigating the question "Where are we?" using Deleuze and Guattari's writings as well as that of contemporary place philosophers and other writers reveals that humans exist at the continually changing confluence of local and global places. In order to engage with the questions "When is music?" and "When is education?" I inquire into how humans as cognitive, embodied, emotional, social, and striving multiplicities emplaced in a glocalized world experience music and education. In the final chapters, a philosophy of music education consisting of the ongoing, interconnected processes of complicating, considering, and connecting is proposed. Complicating involves continually questioning how humans' multiple inseparable qualities and places integrate during musical and educative experiences. Considering includes imagining the multiple directions in which connections might occur as well as contemplating the quality of potential connections. Connecting involves assisting students in forming variegated connections between themselves, their multiple qualities, and their glocal environments. Considering a rhizomatic philosophy of music education includes continually engaging in the integrated processes of complicating, considering, and connecting. Through such ongoing practices, music educators can promote flourishing in the lives of students and the experiences of their multiple communities. / Dissertation/Thesis / Ph.D. Music Education 2013
50

Hannah Arendt e a separação entre política e educação / Hannah Arendt and the dissociation between politics and education

Manuela Chaves Simões Ferreira 28 May 2007 (has links)
Trabalho de pesquisa teórica que parte de conceitos e idéias de Hannah Arendt em seu artigo intitulado \"Reflexões sobre Little Rock\". Neste artigo é proposta a separação entre educação e política a fim de garantir a preservação da autoridade na escola. Nesta dissertação descreve-se a ascensão da esfera social e a substituição da ação pelo conformismo, fenômeno que coincide com uma crise de autoridade no mundo moderno. Em seguida, examina-se o que Arendt entende por política através da configuração desta esfera da vida humana, comparando-se a Antiguidade e a Era Moderna, momento em que a autoridade desaparece da política. Estabelece-se a relação destes fenômenos à crise da educação e propõe-se a separação da educação e da política. Retoma-se o papel da educação nas democracias e conclui-se que se o objetivo da educação nas democracias é preparar as novas gerações para conservar e renovar o mundo, a autoridade e o contato com a tradição devem ser mantidos na escola. / This theorist research starts from the concepts and ideas of Hanna Arendt article named \"Reflections on Little Rock. This article proposes the dissociation between education and politics, in order to guarantee the preservation of the authority at the school. In this Master Thesis it is described the ascension of the social sphere and the substitution of action instead of compliance, phenomenon that comes together with the crisis of the authority in the Modern World. After that, it is investigated what Arendt understands about politics through the configuration of this human life sphere, comparing the Old Ages with the Modern Ages, period when the authority disappears from the politics. It is established the relation of these phenomena with the crisis of education and it is proposed the dissociation of education and politics. This Thesis recovers the role of education in the democracies and it concludes that the education target is to prepare the new generation to maintain and renovate the world. The authority and the contact with the tradition must be kept at school.

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