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An Evaluation of Instructional Aids Available for Use in Teaching Automobile Mechanics and the Development of Additional Instructional Aids Suitable for Use in Teaching Automobile Mechanics in Industrial Arts at the Secondary LevelBelknap, Alfred Rudy 06 1900 (has links)
The purposes of this study are sixfold. They are as follows: 1. To study the various recommended courses of study for automobile mechanics and to ascertain the units of learning that are most commonly taught. 2. To obtain the various instructional aids that are available from the automotive industry to industrial arts teachers for use in teaching automobile mechanics at the secondary school level. 3. To develop suitable criteria for use in evaluating those instructional aids that are available. 4. To evaluate the instructional aids available in order to determine their probable effectiveness and practicability in teaching automobile mechanics. 5. To determine if there are instructional aids that can be developed and used by the instructor that are not available from commercial sources. 6. If there are instructional aids that can be developed but which are not available, one of the purposes of this study is to prepare plans and specifications for the construction of such aids.
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A Survey of the Impact of Senate Bill 408 on a Selected Group of Texas SchoolsKirkman, Marvin William 08 1900 (has links)
The purposes of this study were (1) to review the development of SB 408, and (2) to analyze the impact of this action upon a selected group of public schools. The study involved a survey of the influence that provisions of SB 408 have had on the school program in terms of the following: (a) policy, (b) economy, (c) instructional program, and (d) management.
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Exploring the Relationships Between Faculty Beliefs and Technology PreferencesFaulkner, Christopher G. 05 1900 (has links)
All too often faculty are asked to implement technology into their teaching without the knowledge necessary to use the technology effectively. Due to the evolution of technology in everyday settings, students have come to expect to be engaged through technological means. This often creates undue stress on faculty members. The purpose of this study is to investigate technology integration by exploring the relationships between a faculty member’s technology preferences and educational beliefs. Through a mixed method, this study attempts to address the question of why faculty use the types of technology they do. More importantly, this study investigates if a faculty member’s educational beliefs have any influence on the technology they choose to use. Thirty-two medical, clinical, and healthcare faculty members participated in the study. They responded to a Teaching Perspectives Inventory (TPI) survey and a Technology Preferences survey with open-ended questions. Data analysis revealed multiple statistically significant findings between different beliefs and different types of technology. The results indicated that personal epistemic beliefs influence the types of technology faculty use. The technology choices faculty make are largely related to tools they are comfortable with and ones they believe effectively fit their teaching materials. The study also found statistically significant differences between age, gender, and reported technology use. It is suggested faculty development programs should consider faculty members’ educational beliefs and personal preferences when supporting faculty with their uses of technologies.
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Leerdereienskappe as 'n faktor in mediaseleksie05 November 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. (Media Studies) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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Effect on Superficial Variability of Examples on Learning Applied ProbabilityJin, Tiantian January 2018 (has links)
Learning through examples is a central and widely used instructional device for teaching mathematically-based subjects such as statistical probability. However, the applications of the superficial variability of examples remain controversial. This dissertation investigates how the superficial variability of multiple examples influences students' learning and transfer of probability problem-solving. Moreover, the author discovers whether content difficulty affects the influence of examples' superficial variability. Three conditions were developed and compared: consistent-surface condition (CS), varied-surface-within-rule condition (VSWR), and varied-surface-between-rule condition (VSBR). For the purpose of exploration and methodology improvement for the dissertation study, two pilot studies were conducted. However, conflicting results were shown in those two studies. In the first pilot study, students in CS condition performed the worst. In the second pilot study, students in VSBR condition performed the worst. These conflicting results encouraged the author, even more, to conduct the dissertation study with a larger sample size and improved methodology. In this dissertation study, the author found that students' performance on the posttests in VSBR was significantly worse than in the other two conditions, which was consistent with the second pilot study, and that their performance in CS and VSWR condition was not different. Contrary to expectation, the strength of the pattern of the effect of the superficial variability of examples did not vary between the easy and difficult types of problems. Moreover, the pattern was the same when the difficulty variable was not included. These results suggested that examples' superficial consistency between different problem types promotes more effective learning than superficial variation between different problem types. The consistency can be one single cover story used multiple times for each type of problem or the same battery of varied cover stories used repeatedly for different types of problem. Moreover, the pattern of the influence of superficial variability of examples is robust among types of the problem at varying difficulty levels.
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The effects of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) on teaching and management of curriculum-related activities : a case study of secondary schools in the Groot Letaba Circuit,Mopani District in the Limpopo ProvinceMathevula, Mlunghisi Derick January 2015 (has links)
Thesis (MPA.) --University of Limpopo, 2015 / This study seeks to investigate the availability and effects of Information Communications
Technology (ICT) on teachers’ ability to perform their duties in terms of teaching and of
managing other curriculum-related activities in Groot Letaba Secondary Schools of the
Mopani District, Limpopo Province.
A quantitative research approach was applied to conduct this research and a structured
questionnaire was used to collect primary data from participants in twelve Groot Letaba
Circuit secondary schools. Secondary data was collected from a variety of electronic and
printed media and official documents from the Department of Basic Education’s records.
The findings reveal that, with the exception of a TV, photocopier and laptop/desktop
computer, there is a scarcity of ICT resources at schools for ICT integration, and that the
teaching and curriculum administration functions of most teachers have been impacted
negatively by a lack of ICT equipment and/or insufficient use of these ICT resources for
those schools who have them. In addition, while some teachers had received some form of ICT training, it was evident that such training has had minimal impact on the abilities of
teachers to use ICT in their teaching or their curriculum administration work. The findings
also reveal that there is a host of factors that negatively influence teachers’ readiness for, andconfidence in, using ICT. These need to be dealt with by the various stakeholders including,and especially, the Department of Education and the school management and private partners.
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An instructional systems design model for selecting and developing authentic English materials for Syiah Kuala University pre-departure scholarsYusuf, Qismullah 12 February 1993 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to apply instructional system theory to the
process of developing authentic English as a foreign language (ESL) materials
for Indonesian pre-departure scholars. The researcher established a theoretical
framework for the process through an intensive review of instructional system
literature and selected an applied process model for adaptation to developing
authentic ESL materials. The Stiehl-Schmall ISD model was adapted and later
validated using a modified Delphi process. Seventeen panelists, randomly
selected from the area of instructional systems design, ESL, and Indonesian
EFL practitioners, were involved in the validation process.
Feedback from panelists was analyzed and it was determined that the
model was applicable for Indonesian intensive English programs. It was also
found that the model, as adapted, was considered practical and useful by EFL
practitioners, though many of them were not knowledgeable in instructional
systems design. Indonesian EFL practitioners expected the development of the
model to substantially improve the quality, effectiveness, efficiency, and
relevancy of authentic English used in Indonesian intensive English programs. / Graduation date: 1993
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A descriptive study of commercially produced instructional learning packages : for art and aesthetic education for preschool, kindergarten, and elementary children / Commercially produced instructional learning packages for art and aesthetic education.Copeland, Betty Jo Denney 03 June 2011 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine if commercially produced art and aesthetic education packages are quality products and if art and aesthetic education packages meet selected goals for art education. This study was limited to packages developed for preschool, kindergarten, and elementary children.To initiate the study, various avenues were explored in order to discover sources of commercially produced art and aesthetic education packages. A list of 72 publishers and suppliers of art and aesthetic education packages was compiled. From this list, a sample of 14 packages was selected.The first portion of the study pertained to the individual analysis of each package. To assess the packages comprising the sample, "An Instrument for the Assessment of Instructional Materials," developed by Maurice Eash (1972) was selected as the evaluation instrument. This instrument is divided into five sections: (a) objectives, (b) organization of material, (c) methodology, (d) evaluation, and (e) overall assessment.The second portion of the study pertained to the relationship of the package to the goals for art education. Various art educators have listed goals for art education; moreover, the goals listed by the National Art Education Commission on Art Education (1977) were selected as the goals to be used in this study.A group of trained evaluators assessed the individual packages. The findings revealed that only two packages received mean and median scores of 5.0 or higher on a rating scale of 1 through 7. This included the assessment of all five areas included in the evaluation instrument. The other 12 packages received mean and median scores of 2.5 or less on a rating scale of 1 through 7.In comparing the.packages to the goals for art education, two packages met all of the goals for art education. These two packages were the same ones which received the highest ratings on the evaluation instrument. Two other packages met two of the goals for art education. All of the other packages met only one of the goals for art education. The majority of the packages met one of two goals, either "art education as a means of developing creative and flexible forms of thinking" or "art education as a means of helping students understand and appreciate art."
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Using mobile phones as interactive learning toolsVan Wyk, Mari. January 2012 (has links)
Thesis (MTech. degree in Business Information Systems.)--Tshwane University of Technology, 2012. / This mini-dissertation describes opportunities to use mobile phones as interactive learning tools. Anecdotal evidence shows that almost all undergraduate students at the Tshwane University of Technology have mobile phones, while on the contrary, only a small percentage have access to a personal computer, let alone access to resources. Interaction between the lecturer and the students is low, communication after lecturing hours is difficult and access to additional or just-in-time learning material is limited to hand-outs given during a formal class period. The challenge is that interaction between lecturers and students is limited to formal learning spaces and times, e.g., lecture rooms and laboratories. Nevertheless, learning is not confined to formal spaces and times. In this mini-dissertation the focus is, on how a mobile phone can be used to provide access to learning material, provide last minute or just-in-time information and improve the communication between lecturer and student, outside of the formal class time and space.
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The impact of a word processor as a tool in the remediation of learning disabled elementary school children /Bobrow, Barbara Creighton. January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
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