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How can critical thinking skills be strengthened in media education?: a case study in a secondary schoolChin, Kwan-ying., 錢群英. January 2003 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Education / Master / Master of Education
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Enhancing learning by using technology in visual arts projectsLam, Lai-chu, April, 林麗珠 January 2004 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Education / Master / Master of Science in Information Technology in Education
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Using ICT to foster higher order thinking in learning mathematicsLo, Sun-chung., 羅新忠. January 2004 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Education / Master / Master of Science in Information Technology in Education
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Using KF as a facilitating tool for high order thinking in AL biologyKwok, Kai-yin, Bill., 郭啟賢. January 2004 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Education / Master / Master of Science in Information Technology in Education
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Švietimo įstaigų vadovų ir pedagogų veikla, taikant aktyviuosius mokymo metodus / Die Tatigkeit die Leiter der Bildungsanstalten im Anerziehung der aktiven UnterrichtsmetodenDasevičienė, Ramunė 17 June 2005 (has links)
Die Tatigkeit die Leiter der Bildungsanstalten im Anerziehung der aktiven Unterrichtsmetoden.
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Promoting Mathematical Understanding through Open-Ended Tasks; Experiences of an Eighth-Grade Gifted Geometry ClassTaylor, Carol H. 21 May 2008 (has links)
Promoting Mathematical Understanding Through Open-Ended Tasks; Experiences of an Eighth-Grade Gifted Geometry Class by Carol H. Taylor Gifted students of mathematics served through acceleration often lack the opportunities to engage in challenging, complex investigations involving higher-level thinking. This purpose of this study was to examine the ways mathematically gifted students think about and do mathematics creatively as indicators of deep understanding through collaborative work on four open-ended tasks with high-level cognitive demand. The study focused on the mathematical thinking involved in students’ construction of mathematical understanding through the social interaction of group problem solving. This case study used ethnographic methodology within a social constructivist frame with gifted education and sociocultural contextual influences. Participants were 15 gifted students in an 8th-grade gifted geometry class. Data collection included field notes, student artifacts, student journal entries, audio recordings, and reflections. Transcribed audio recordings were segmented (Tesch, 1990) into phases of interaction, coded by function, then coded by levels of exhibited mathematical thinking from observable cognitive actions (Dreyfus, Hershkowitz, & Schwarz, 2001; Williams, 2000; Wood, Williams, & McNeal, 2006), and analyzed for maintenance or decline of high-level cognitive demand (Stein, Smith, Henningsen, & Silver, 2000). Interpretive data analysis was connected to data analysis of transcribed recordings. Results indicated social interaction among students enabled them to talk through the mathematics to understand mathematical concepts and relationships, to construct more complex meaning, and exhibit mathematical creativity, inventiveness, flexibility, and originality. Students consistently exhibited these characteristics indicating mathematical thinking at the levels of building-with analyzing, building-with synthetic-analyzing, building-with evaluative-analyzing, constructing synthesizing, and occasionally constructing evaluating (Dreyfus et al., 2001; Williams, 2000; Wood et al., 2006). The results of the study support the claim of a relationship between mathematical giftedness and the ability to abstract and generalize (Sriraman, 2003), provide evidence that given the opportunity, students can construct deep mathematical understanding, and indicate the importance of social interaction in the construction of knowledge. This study adds to the body of knowledge needed in research on gifted education, problem solving, small-group interaction, mathematical thinking, and mathematical understanding, through empirically assessed classroom practice (Friedman-Nima et al., 2005; Good, Mulryan, & McCaslin, 1992; Hiebert & Carpenter, 1992; Lester & Kehle, 2003; Phillipson, 2007; Wood, Williams, & McNeal, 2006).
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Muzikos klausymosi veiklos optimizavimas 7–8 klasių mokinių kritinio mąstymo ugdymo aspektu / Optimization of Music Listening Activities in the Aspect of Critical Thinking Development in Forms 7-8Semičiovaitė, Samanta 11 June 2013 (has links)
Darbe aptariamas muzikos klausymosi veiklos teorinis aspektas, kritinio mąstymo samprata, muzikos klausymosi veiklos tobulinimo, skatinant kritinio mąstymo ugdymą, galimybės. Bakalauro darbo tikslas – ištirti muzikos klausymosi veiklos gerinimo galimybes, skatinant kritinį mąstymą. Darbo tikslui pasiekti išketi šie uždaviniai: išsiaiškinti muzikos klausymosi veiklos proceso esmę, išsiaiškinti muzikos suvokimo ir muzikinio mąstymo svarbą muzikiniame ugdyme, apžvelgti paauglystės laikotarpio psichologinius ir fiziologinius ypatumus, jų poveikį muzikos klausymuisi, išsiaiškinti kritinio mąstymo sampratą, išsiaiškinti muzikos klausymosi veiklos tobulinimo, skatinant kritinio mąstymo ugdymą, galimybes, ištirti kritinio mąstymo ugdymo apraiškas 7–8 klasių mokinių požiūrio į muzikos klausymosi veiklą tyrimo kontekste. Tyrimo objektas yra muzikos klausymosi veikla kritinio mąstymo ugdymo aspektu. Tyrimas atliktas Šiaulių progimnazijoje. Anketinės apklausos metodu siekta išsiaiškinti kritinio mąstymo ugdymo apraiškas 7–8 klasių mokinių požiūrio į muzikos klausymosi veiklą tyrimo kontekste. / This paper analyses with theoretical aspect of music listening activities, the concept of critical thinking, as well as the possibilities to improve music listening activities in order to develop critical thinking. The objective of this Bachelor thesis is to explore the possibilities of music listening activities in order to develop critical thinking. Aims, set to achieve this objective, are: to identify the essence of music listening process; to explore the importance of musical perception and cogitation in musical education, their influence on listening activities; to identify the concept of critical thinking; to identify the possibilities to improve music listening activities in order to develop critical thinking; to examine the manifestation of critical thinking development in the context of the research dealing with the attitude of 7-8-formers towards the music listening activities. The object of this research is musical listening activities in the aspect of the development of critical thinking. The research was conducted in Šiauliai progymnasium. A questionnaire was used to explore the manifestation of critical thinking development in the context of the research dealing with attitude of 7-8-formers towards the music listening activities.
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Promotion of critical thinking in school physical science.Stott, Angela Elizabeth. January 2008 (has links)
This dissertation describes an action research study aimed at promoting critical thinking
in learners while learning physical science within the South African national curriculum.
The data were primarily qualitative in nature, and were collected primarily through
participant observation, composed of audio- and video- recorded lessons, interviews,
questionnaires, journal entries and written material. Data collection, analysis and
interpretation were done in the inductive, cyclic manner of action research. This process
was guided by research questions about task characteristics, their position in the teaching
sequence, the role of the learning environment, and the need to adjust tasks to fit the
needs of different learners, so as to effectively promote critical thinking. A pragmatic
approach was used.
It was found that it is possible, using particular strategies and tasks, to promote critical
thinking while meeting the curriculum outcomes, although the intense syllabus pressure
of the curriculum makes this challenging. Task design characteristics and positioning in
the teaching sequence, and conditions of the learning environment, were found to affect
a task’s effectiveness at promoting critical thinking. Various teaching strategies can
improve attainability by a wider range of learners.
An instructional model, The Ladder Approach, emerged as being most likely to promote
success. This was found to be successful when evaluated against criteria of active
engagement and interest by learners, attainability with effort, display of critical thinking
traits, and compatibility with the South African curriculum. In this model, an interesting
problem is posed at the start of a section, after which direct instruction and learner
engagement with the problem run parallel to one another, linked by scaffolding tools
which are engaged in individually and collaboratively. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2008.
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A framework of critical thinking skills for teaching and learning physiotherapy.Ramklass, Serela Samita. January 2000 (has links)
The use of critical thinking is called for in the practise of physiotherapy and has been
cited as a learning outcome in the design of the physiotherapy curriculum. Further, the
South African Draft White Paper on Higher Education (July,1997) is committed to
endow graduates with skills that build the foundation for lifelong learning and
included in such skills is that of critical thinking. Although welcomed by the
profession, the introduction of critical thinking within the programmes may be
premature because of the lack of debate and subsequent understanding about the
critical thinking skills necessary for the practise of physiotherapy. Hence critical
thinking remains implicit within the context of physiotherapy. Physiotherapy
educators are assessing the skill implicitly within the process of clinical reasoning and
decision making, without articulating what critical thinking really is, in the context of
physiotherapy clinical reasoning. Further one needs to identify the repertoire of
component skills that one should possess, in order to be an accomplished critical
thinker.
Data obtained from interviews with level co-ordinators, and an examination of the
course plans within one department at one institution, provided an insight into how
critical thinking is understood within the profession. Further, it identified if, and how,
critical thinking was currently incorporated into the physiotherapy curriculum. In an
attempt to develop a deeper understanding and a guiding framework for critical
thinking in Physiotherapy, a workshop was conducted amongst qualified
physiotherapists. They were required to model the clinical reasoning and decision
making processes that they employ in the clinical area, in the process of working
through the clinical problem that was presented. The data that emerged was
qualitatively analysed and categorised. This was for the purpose of generating
meaning, and for the development of a framework of critical thinking skills, that may
be used in conjunction with the process of clinical reasoning to enhance one's clinical
judgement.
Critical factors emerged from analysis of the data. These included the preponderance
of the product over the process method for teaching and assessing, the implicit nature
of teaching and assessing for critical thinking in physiotherapy, and the similarities
and differences in perception and conception about the meaning of critical thinking
and its associated skills. The findings of this study contribute to the understanding and
development of critical thinking within the specific context of physiotherapy and
inform the development of the physiotherapy curriculum towards the realisation of its
intended goals. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2000.
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Critical thinking skills development among the diploma nursing students in a case-based curriculum.de El-Kantar, Lina Abi Faker. January 2001 (has links)
Faculty members in many schools of nursing have been urged to include critical thinking in all aspects of the nursing curriculum. The faculty at the Institutes of Nursing in the United Arab Emirates, have adopted in the academic year I998 a case-based curriculum that teaches nursing courses by using case studies, which represent a terrific and non-threatening method to use to teach and learn either critical thinking skills or clinical decision-making (Robinson, 1998; Glendon and Ulrich, 1992, 1997). The development of critical thinking skills in a case-based
curriculum was investigated. A randomly selected, cross-sectional sample of nursing students at the Abu Dhabi Institute of Nursing (N= 88) was studied. Three groups (n=30) from each level of a three-level-diploma nursing program were measured for development of critical thinking skills using the Test of Everyday Reasoning (TER). Relationships were investigated between TER scores, the level of the program and other socio-demographic and academic achievement determinants. Critical thinking ability did not change significantly among the three levels during the educational experience in a case-based curriculum; however, the participants in the highest level of the program were able to get a higher mean TER scores from the other two levels. One of the conclusions that
could be drawn from this study was that critical thinking might not change as an associated factor with a case-based curriculum at this premature phase of its implementation until some time after the graduates of this program become practicing nurses where clinical decision-making would be in action. The other conclusions focused on the necessity of unfolding the utilized cases in the curriculum and on determining whether the construct of critical thinking has been incorporated in them. / Thesis (M.Cur.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2001.
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