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The teaching of Islamic studies in MauritiusHeera, Abdool Moonib 11 1900 (has links)
As a teacher-researcher, I have endeavoured to evaluate and reflect on the teaching of
Islamic Studies at Form V level. This Action Research investigated the effectiveness of
using Remedial Strategies as instructional methods to increase class participation in
Islamic Studies classes at Form V level, in a Private Secondary School, The Islamic
Cultural College, Port-Louis; in a State Secondary School, Port-Louis State Secondary
School, Colline Monneron, Port-Louis; and in a Profit-Making Institution, The Doha
Academy, Eau-Coulee, Curepipe.
Data was collected mainly from questionnaires sent to the students and analyzed. The
study also covers the findings and analysis from the questionnaires and some
recommendations to improve classroom practices to promote students’ participation in
Islamic Studies classes have been proposed.
Overall, this research aims at contributing to an enhanced learning experience for the
students of Islamic Studies and for me as a teacher-practitioner. The Remedial Strategies
imply a shift of onus from the teacher to the student. This transfer is what is envisaged
most by all contemporary thinkers in education because this is what guarantees concrete
and productive learning in the classroom. / Religious Studies and Arabic / M. A. (Islamic Studies)
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The teaching of Islamic studies in MauritiusHeera, Abdool Moonib 11 1900 (has links)
As a teacher-researcher, I have endeavoured to evaluate and reflect on the teaching of
Islamic Studies at Form V level. This Action Research investigated the effectiveness of
using Remedial Strategies as instructional methods to increase class participation in
Islamic Studies classes at Form V level, in a Private Secondary School, The Islamic
Cultural College, Port-Louis; in a State Secondary School, Port-Louis State Secondary
School, Colline Monneron, Port-Louis; and in a Profit-Making Institution, The Doha
Academy, Eau-Coulee, Curepipe.
Data was collected mainly from questionnaires sent to the students and analyzed. The
study also covers the findings and analysis from the questionnaires and some
recommendations to improve classroom practices to promote students’ participation in
Islamic Studies classes have been proposed.
Overall, this research aims at contributing to an enhanced learning experience for the
students of Islamic Studies and for me as a teacher-practitioner. The Remedial Strategies
imply a shift of onus from the teacher to the student. This transfer is what is envisaged
most by all contemporary thinkers in education because this is what guarantees concrete
and productive learning in the classroom. / Religious Studies and Arabic / M. A. (Islamic Studies)
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Biotechnology Education: An Investigation of Corporate and Communal Science in the ClassroomMcLaughlin, John 24 July 2006 (has links)
It is impossible to imagine our schools or community without framing such a view around a corporate structure. Money, capital, and economic stakeholders are all around us, building a corporate landscape that all members of the community must travel through in the course of their everyday lives. To suggest that education should be void of any type of economic influence would be to deny that a very important thread of our communities' tapestry exists.
As we look at the way that these education intentions move outside our own communities and connect us to other communities and the world, we see corporate education economics framed in either a global or communal perspective. A corporate science education perspective tends to treat science with strict positivism, and technology with hard determinism. Communal theories of science education view science as post-positivistic and technology with a softer determinism; as a result social implications emerge, and the science becomes more socially constructed. It supports the personal capital of all students, regardless of their view of science or technology. It allows students to "border cross" more easily so they can "scaffold" new science information onto previous learning.
This research consists of exploring how biotechnology education emerged within the state, how the resources intersected within a biotechnology conference and how teachers conceptualized biotechnology practices in their own classrooms. The researcher pieced together a sketch of the history of how biotechnology curriculum arose in high school biology classes. The researcher also explored the hybrid nature of biotechnology resources such as an educational conference where teachers attend workshops and lectures. The practices of two teachers in a public high school and one in a private school setting were also analyzed. / Ph. D.
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