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The importance's of the physical analogue clock in mediating learning of analogue clock time in Grade 4 learnersMetelerkamp, Roger Gregory January 2014 (has links)
My research topic concerns how learners use the analogue clock (as a human tool) to make meaning of clock time. This study is informed by a Vygotskian socio-cultural framework to learning and development based on the concept that human activities take place in cultural contexts and is mediated by tools. In this qualitative study I report on the learners meaning making of analogue clock time using the physical clock. This study was carried out at a South African primary school through an intervention programme after school. The research employed a case study method. It involved a purposeful sample of 4 learners (n=38) from the grade four class group based on their response to a baseline assessment task. The selected sample of learners included learners across the ability spectrum to gain rich insight into how learners make meaning of analogue clock time. Data collection and analysis was done through an interpretive approach. The video-taped interviews and intervention programme was my main instrument of data collection. Other research instruments included document analysis of responses to baseline assessment tasks. These research tools yielded the data collected and also allowed for triangulation. My research topic explored how the learners make meaning of analogue clock time. In particular the two-way movement of how the learners use the physical tool namely the analogue clock to develop meaning and how the clock mediates clock knowledge in return. The findings of the study suggest that learners’ find it difficult to conceptualise analogue clock symbols and signs, in particular, in Afrikaans the half hour concept, in relation to the two hands. The physical analogue clock is also important to support and extend clock knowledge in solving time-related problems. This shows the power of the analogue clock to mediate meaning making of clock time in young learners. Because of its potential to improve teaching and learning analogue clock time in primary school it is therefore recommended that the analogue clock time be further researched in South Africa.
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Children as experimenters : elementary students' actions in an experimental context with magnetsMeyer, Karen January 1991 (has links)
In science education the nature and value of science laboratory activities have become the subject of critical debate. Some science educators argue that a better understanding of what students do while purposefully engaged with materials would provide some answers. The intent of this study is to explore elementary students' actions and the knowledge they use while designing and conducting experiments.
Four dyads each from grades 4 and 7 participated in three events. First, each pair was presented with a question (Which magnet is strongest?), two sets of magnets (one set at a time) and materials. The researcher observed and videotaped dyads' actions with materials until they made a conclusion for both magnet sets. Second, the researcher presented dyads with a selective set of materials to further explore their conceptions of magnetism. Finally, the pairs of students were interviewed while they watched the video of themselves experimenting during the first two events. The data were analyzed using an action theory perspective which emphasizes the cognitive nature of action.
Students' models of magnetism were constructed from the data. Students used more than one model to explain different effects they observed. The designs of student experiments were grounded in their operational knowledge of the materials. Dyads generated data from a series of experiments whereby they manipulated different materials in a variety of ways. Dyads who obtained variable data did not repeat experiments to confirm or disconfirm results; rather they used specific strategies to make conclusions. The designs and procedures of experiments of students from both grades were similar, likely due to their common knowledge of the materials and their limited experience with open-ended tasks. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
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Reflections on implementing a constructivist approach in teaching magnetism : a case study of a fifth grade classroomGammon, Janice Maureen January 1987 (has links)
Children have prior knowledge, or mini-theories about science topics presented at school before being formally taught that is constructed from their everyday experiences. Teachers generally do not take this knowledge into consideration in the planning of science units and are often confused about why their students fail to learn. Hewson (1983) suggests that students will experience conceptual change only if it is intelligible, plausible, and fruitful and that prior knowledge, which is often an alternate conception of a scientific idea, must be challenged or clarified.
Schon (1984) claims that teachers need to reflect on their actions in order to understand their own as well as their students' "constructed worlds". He suggests that teachers, when they reflect, become their own researchers. This case study examines how I, a teacher/researcher, adopted a constructlvlst perspective towards teaching a unit in magnetism and how the students responded. Vignettes of selected Incidents tell the story of the difficulties that my students had learning some of the concepts of magnetism and how I reacted to the knowledge that they were having difficulty.
The unit in magnetism was taught to my class of thirty-two students (10/11 year olds) at an elementary school in a community in British Columbia using a constructivlst teaching sequence developed by Driver (1986).The lessons in magnetism were video-taped and both the students and I kept a journal. To elicit students' ideas about magnetism a diagnostic test was given at the beginning of the unit. A continuing record of students' ideas was kept throughout the study and at the end a post diagnostic test was given to see which, if any, alternate conceptions persisted.
It was found that teaching with a constructivist approach had its' difficulties. Reflecting, for myself and my students, took practice and taking students' ideas Into consideration, both in the planning and teaching stages, may have taken more time than many teachers have available. However, the knowledge that I gained about my students' beliefs, through the process of reflecting, was valuable in planning lessons that both challenged and clarified the students' alternate conceptions.
Teachers are recommended to take their students' ideas into consideration in lesson planning and to use activities that will encourage conceptual change. However, teachers should consider the time factor and the difficulties in reflecting before using a constructivist approach in teaching science. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
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Grade six students understanding of metaphor in informational textFaulkner, Leigh A. 11 1900 (has links)
Metaphor research has become widespread. However, students’ understanding of metaphor in
informational text has received little study. With increased use of informational trade books in the
classroom, research in this area is needed. Fifty-five grade six students with Canadian English as their
first language participated in the study. Their understanding of metaphors in excerpts from three
recently published informational trade books was examined by the use of the reading think aloud
technique and multiple choice activities. One think aloud was completed by each student in both
individual and dyadic conditions. Multiple choice activities were completed individually after reading,
but with the text available. The think-aloud protocols were examined using specific-trait analysis,
holistic scoring, and miscue analysis. The multiple choice activities were scored against anticipated
adult-like understanding and the results were subjected to standard statistical tests. Level of
understanding of metaphors varied widely among students, with the overall average being about
65%. Contrary to prediction, understanding was significantly higher in the individual condition
compared to the dyadic condition. Although part of this difference could be attributed to differences
in passage difficulty, the anticipated scaffolding effect of reading with a partner was not found. The
reading think aloud was a rich source of information about both the meaning students constructed
and the meaning-construction process. The study suggested that the think aloud could be used in
the classroom as an effective learning device, particularly in that it allowed less-capable readers to
participate as equal partners in what might otherwise have been a frustrating reading task. Overall,
there emerged a picture of students at various points along the path to full adult mastery of metaphor,
with some students already demonstrating an adult level of understanding. Level of text
understanding was consistent with level of metaphor understanding. The only metaphor-type effect
identified was for metaphors with copula-verb syntactic-frame structure. Abstractness of the words in
the metaphors did not affect meaning construction; however, conventionality of the metaphorical
expressions did influence understanding. / Education, Faculty of / Language and Literacy Education (LLED), Department of / Graduate
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An energy education teaching unit for the fifth gradeThompson, Lynn A. 01 January 1981 (has links)
No description available.
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Food science in the junior high school foods classWilliams, Katherine W. 01 January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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A teachers' guide to integrating middle-grade science into language artsCarder, Lou Anne 01 January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
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Integrating language arts and social studies through the use of literatureSmith, Janet L. 01 January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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The development and construction of a model environmental study areaPatalano, Samuel Joseph 01 January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
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Keeping our habitat healthy: A thematic unit for teaching environmental awareness for grades 3-5Shetler, Pamela A. 01 January 1995 (has links)
There are many curriculum guides that address environmental education. Classroom teachers do not have the time to obtain and search all of these guides. This curriculum was developed by searching numerous manuals for appropriate lessons, developing a cohesive unit, and field testing the lessons on students in two classrooms. The project, as a whole, offers teachers a thematic, multi-disciplinary, hands-on, literature based method of developing students' appreciation and understanding of the world in which they live.
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