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Evaluation Of An English Language Teaching Program At A Public University Using Cipp ModelTunc, Ferda 01 January 2010 (has links) (PDF)
ABSTRACT
EVALUATION OF AN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING PROGRAM AT A PUBLIC UNIVERSITY USING CIPP MODEL
TUNÇ / , Ferda
M.S. Department of Educational Sciences
Supervisor: Assoc. Prof. Dr. Cennet Engin DEMiR
January 2010, 110 pages
This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of Ankara University Preparatory School program through the perspectives of instructors and students. To this end, the CIPP (context, input, process, and product) evaluation model developed by Stufflebeam (1971) was utilized. 406 students attending the preparatory school in the 2008-2009 academic year and 12 instructors teaching in the program participated in the study. The data were gathered through a self-reported student questionnaire and an interview schedule which was designed for the instructors. Besides, in order to obtain more detailed information about the preparatory school, written documents were examined. While the data based on the questionnaire were analyzed through descriptive and inferential statistics, content analysis was carried out to analyze the qualitative data. Multivariate Analysis of Variances with Pillai&rsquo / s Trace test was employed to investigate whether the significant differences among dependent variables across independent variables existed.
Results of the study indicated that the program at Ankara University Preparatory School partially served for its purpose. The findings revealed that some improvements in the physical conditions, content, materials and assessment dimensions of the program were required to make the program more effective.
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The Evaluation of the Whole Curriculum Projects of the Schools in the Nine-Year Compulsory Curriculum--Examples of the Elementary Schools at Kaohsiung CityShih, Meng-Ho 19 July 2002 (has links)
The Evaluation of the Whole Curriculum Projects of the Schools in the Nine-Year Compulsory Curriculum--Examples of the Elementary Schools at Kaohsiung City.
Meng-Ho Shih
Abstract
This study aims at evaluating the whole curriculum projects of the elementary schools which put Nine-Year Compulsory Curriculum into practice at Kaohsiung City.
The subjects of this study contain the whole curriculum projects of eighty-six elementary schools at Kaohsiung City in 90 academic years. The collective data are analyzed by qualitative and quantitative methods. And the methods of this study are the analysis of documents, the analysis of subjects and interviews. The results of this study include the following and here also propose some concrete suggestions according to the results.
1.Investigating the process that Bureau of
Education of Kaohsiung City examinates and
executes the whole curriculum projects of the
elementary schools.
2.Establishing the criterions of evaluating the
whole curriculum projects of the
elementary schools which put Nine-Year
Compulsory Curriculum into practice.
3.Evaluating the whole curriculum projects based
on Nine-Year Compulsory Curriculum Guideline.
4.Investigating the problems of learning
objectives and competence indicators within the
curriculum projects for the elementary schools.
5.Investigating the problems of the integrated
curriculum within the curriculum projects for
the elementary schools.
6.Investigating the version of textbooks which
each learning area use and the implementation
of the curriculum projects for the elementary
schools.
7.Proposing suggestions for improving the whole
curriculum projects and Nine-Year Compulsory
Curriculum to the authorities of education and
schools according the findings of this study.
Keywords¡GCurriculum Evaluation
Nine-Year Compulsory Curriculum
Curriculum Project
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Superintendents' perceptions of curriculum management auditsHinojosa, Eliu Misael. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (D. Ed.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2001. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references. Available also from UMI/Dissertation Abstracts International.
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An analysis of the prescribed and enacted curriculum of an engineering unit on helmet designGustafson, Katherine Alessandra 27 February 2012 (has links)
Using grounded theory, action research and ethnographic case study methodology this research explores the contrasting ways in which a prescribed curriculum is translated into an enacted curriculum. The current study looks at a 12 week secondary engineering unit (helmet design) which was designed with significant input from a university based team including content experts, learning scientists, master teachers, classroom teachers and school district administrators as part of a grant focused on the creation of a high school engineering course. The unit was enacted in a rural/suburban school by a group of average students by a teacher with high content knowledge in engineering. Five thrusts were identified for analysis including Assessment, Activities, Apparatus, Technology and Standards. Findings indicate much alignment with Apparatus, Standards and Technology thrusts and disparity within the Assessment and Activities thrusts. / text
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The exposure of in-service teachers to the notion of themselves as curriculum developers : an action research approach to the Promat Educational Studies (curriculum) course.Grant, Carolyn. January 1998 (has links)
This study was based on the Promat Educational Studies (Curriculum) course which
introduced curriculum concepts to a group of forty-two rural KwaZulu in-service
teachers, studying for the final year of their Primary Teachers' .Diploma in 1996.
The study was primarily interested in the responses of these teachers as they explored
-curriculum concepts and developed their own understandings of curriculum.
Research questions focused on the teachers' personal views of the notion of
curriculum and the suitability of various curriculum models that could be used in their
classrooms. Action research was proposed as a valuable tool for teachers to reflect on
their classroom practice in a systematic and participatory manner, with a view to
improvement in the process of teaching and learning. Action research was also used as
a teaching methodology in presenting the Educational Studies programme, thus
providing the teachers with an opportunity to experience action research. The
questions also focused on the views of teachers concerning their possible role in the
process of curriculum development, change and decision-making in schools.
Prior to the programme, data on teachers' notions of curriculum were obtained by
means of a questionnaire. Journal writing, lecturer diaries and classroom discussions
were used as a means of collecting data during the course of the programme.
Semi-structured interviews were conducted as a summative form of data collection
and triangulation.
Findings suggested that teachers, prior to the Educational Studies programme, had a
limited notion of the concept of curriculum. They had a restricted view of teacher
professionality and understood their role as implementers of a received curriculum.
The programme broadened teachers' views on curriculum concepts and accompanying
theories and models. The exposure to curriculum theory increased teachers'
confidence in their ability to bring about change in their classrooms and schools. They
expressed feelings of empowerment and recognised the important role they could play
in the curriculum process.
What was significant, however, was that despite the fact that the teachers were able to
articulate these views within an "educationist context" (Keddie, 1971), they did not
realise these within the Educational Studies classroom. While they recognised and
embraced the potential of action research, their own actions as learners did not support
a fully-developed form of action research because of the power differentials and
situational constraints which they experienced. They were acutely aware of the
imperative to pass, which appeared to take precedence over democratic participation.
Findings suggested that INSET programmes which expose teachers to curriculum
theory and the fundamental notion of themselves as curriculum developers, are useful
for changing mindsets and are essential preconditions if teachers are to begin to take
ownership of change in classrooms. Whether they are able to do so successfully, is a
question for further research. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1998.
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Teacher identity and practice in the context of curriculum reform.Naidoo, Managie. 08 May 2013 (has links)
In the South African educational landscape curriculum transformation since Curriculum
2005 (C2005) to the now prevailing National Curriculum Statement (NCS) has been dramatic. In
fact in the Foundation Phase and in Grade 10 a revised Curriculum and Assessment Policy
(CAPS) document introduced in 2012 is presently being implemented. The continuous revision
of curriculum policies is the background to the purpose of this research study, which is to
understand how four experienced teachers of English Home Language (EHL) engage with
changes in EHL policy and the impact this has on their identity/identities as teachers. The
National Education Department often hopes that teachers are highly regulated by policies, and
will thus change their practices in accordance to curriculum policy. My research project seeks to
understand the complexity of the ways in which external regulations, embedded in the changing
curriculum, govern teachers’ practices and consequently impacts on the identity of
professionally qualified teachers. The study is framed by two critical questions: a) To what
extent are the practices of experienced teachers governed by external regulation (in the form of
the curriculum policy)? and b) To what extent does external regulation shape their identity as
teachers? To this end, lesson observation and unstructured interviews were the data collection
methods that were employed.
This research is located within the interpretive paradigm. Data is gleaned from the stories told
by four experienced teachers of English about their everyday classroom practices and the ways
in which they translate and implement EHL policy from changing curriculum documents, as well
as through observations of their teaching. These teachers work in four diverse South African
educational contexts. The analytical framework that is used in this study suggests that teacher
practice and identity is shaped by external regulations (such as policy requirements); internal
regulations which are the contextual factors such as institutional school culture as well as core
regulations such as their beliefs and values.
Teachers’ sense-making of changing policy entrenched in curriculum documents; their
translation of policy and its impact on teaching practices and consequent influence on a
teacher’s identity are important for the answering of the research question. The findings reveal
that these teachers find curriculum changes challenging and are reluctant to implement them
entirely. Instead they select and adapt from the document what can fit with minimal change into
their present repertoire of pedagogical practices. The impact of this on the identity of a teacher
is minimal as teachers’ definition of who they are and the role they play is strong. Therefore the
impact of curriculum changes on teacher identity appears to be minimal.
I discovered that the four teachers in this study are resilient beings who adapt an externally
regulated curriculum to fit their frame of classroom practices based on their beliefs of what
constitutes effective teaching. To ameliorate the disjuncture between policy and practice would
be an ideal situation. But realistically strongly regulated national policies will never be
implemented as policy makers intend. Perhaps the lesson is looser regulations are thus more
useful. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2012.
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Evaluation Of The Turkish Language Teaching Program For Foreigners At Minsk State Linguistic University In Belarus: A Case StudyYildiz, Umit 01 September 2004 (has links) (PDF)
The aim of this study is to evaluate the Turkish Language Teaching Program for Foreigners at Minsk State Linguistic University in Belarus. The study aims to answer the following two main questions: 1) what are the discrepancies between the current status and the desired outcomes of the Turkish program at MSLU? 2) What aspects of the Turkish program should be maintained, strengthened or added? In order to answer these questions, data were collected from students who were attending the program in the 2002-2003 academic year, instructors who were teaching in the program in the same academic year, the graduates of the program, former instructors of this program, the parents of the students who were currently attending the program, the authorities at the institution, the employers of the graduates of this program in Minsk.
Both qualitative and quantitative data were collected in the study. The quantitative data were collected through questionnaires. The qualitative data were collected through interviews and written document analysis.
The results of the data showed that the Turkish Language Program at Minsk State Linguistic University partially meets the needs and demands of all the involved parties. However, it was observed that enthusiasm and interest for the Turkish language among the current students, graduates and the University authorities were high. Some changes and additions could be made in the program to make it better suited to the needs and demands of its under goers and institution.
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A study of the implementation of the school-based curriculum project scheme in Hong Kong /Lo, Yiu-chun. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hong Kong, 1996. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Factors relation to teachers' perceptions of curricular implementation activities and the extent of curricular implementationKrey, Robert D., January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1968. / Typescript. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
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Perceived impact of curriculum management audit recommendations on increased student achievement /Cross, Kelly L. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ed. D.)--Boise State University, 2005. / Includes abstract and vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 188-193). Also available online via the ProQuest Digital Dissertations database.
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