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MEDIA COMPETENCIES IN ELEMENTARY TEACHER-EDUCATION PROGRAMS IN PUBLIC AND PRIVATE FOUR YEAR AND UPPER-DIVISION COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES IN FLORIDAUnknown Date (has links)
This study was developed to determine if Florida's four year and upper-division colleges and universities developed seven media competencies in their elementary teacher education methods courses. The curriculum areas studied were social studies, language arts and reading, mathematics, science and special education. The seven media competencies used were: (1) to determine appropriate media to achieve objectives; (2) to produce both print and non-print media; (3) to utilize media in appropriate learning activities; (4) to evaluate the effectiveness of media; (5) to operate current media equipment in each curriculum area; (6) to list sources (producers and publishers) of media curriculum materials; and (7) to develop individualized learning packages. The study had as secondary goals to determine the learning experiences used to develop the seven media competencies, the types of media facilities available to support teacher education programs, and an overall scope of media education. / This study drew upon on Gary Lare's 1974 dissertation Media Education in Elementary Teacher Programs at Selected Teacher-Education Institutions. In his dissertation he developed and validated seven media competencies that should be included in elementary teacher education programs. The instrument used in gathering the data for this study was Lare's questionnaire with minor modifications. / The population surveyed in this study was elementary education methods professors teaching in 26 public and private four year and upper-division colleges and universities in Florida. The institutions surveyed were categorized into small and large institutions. All the small institutions were private colleges and universities and the large institutions were all public supported, with exception of one. / The data were gathered by writing the Chairpersons of the Education Departments in all 26 institutions in Florida for names of methods professors in each curriculum area to be studied. A questionnaire was sent to each professor named by the chairperson. Sixty-six percent of the methods professors returned the questionnaire. / The conclusions for this study were: (1) The elementary teacher education methods professors surveyed were not developing all of the seven media competencies to the same degree. The majority of the methods professors developed the first three competencies {(1) 68%, (2) 80%, (3) 78%} while the last four {(4) 47%, (5) 44%, (6) 44%, and (7) 51%} were developed less often. (2) Methods courses were the major learning experience used by methods professors in both large and small institutions to develop the media competencies. It was also found that the majority of professors in large institutions developed the media competencies through field experiences, student developed lessons during a methods class and during student teaching. In small institutions the competencies were developed through student developed lessons during a methods class and student teaching. (3) Large institutions (96%) provided better instructional material center facilities with a wide variety of instructional materials for their elementary teacher education majors than small institutions (61%). (4) More large institutions (94%) provided a material production facility for their elementary education majors to produce media materials than small institutions (48%). (5) Very few large or small institutions' elementary teacher education programs required their majors to take as part of their program, a general media course (25%), a course that contained part general media subject matter (32%) or some other arrangement other than a course to develop these skills (24%). / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 41-05, Section: A, page: 1902. / Thesis (Educat.D.)--The Florida State University, 1980.
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VALIDATION OF LEARNING HIERARCHIES FOR INSTRUCTIONAL DEVELOPMENT (ASSESSMENT, TASK ANALYSIS, INSTRUCTIONAL DESIGN)Unknown Date (has links)
The adequacy of using a posttesting method of learning hierarchy validation was investigated. Validation decisions based upon posttest data were compared to the decisions generated from validation with instruction. Five learning hierarchies were employed in the study from the areas of mathematics, science, and social studies. Data were obtained from students in grades ranging from 2 through 10, with 30 to 70 students for each hierarchy and validation method. Student mastery data were summarized to indicate acceptance or rejection of each hypothesized hierarchical pair. / Decision correlations and overall comparisons were analyzed based upon the percentage of participants failing the lower skill and passing the higher skill of each hypothesized element pair. Using a practical criterion of (GREATERTHEQ) 10% in the fail-pass category indicating rejection of the hypothesized element pair, the posttest-only method and the instruction-test method were in agreement on 27 of 34 decisions. When non-significant percentages were removed, the two methods were in agreement on 30 of 34 decisions. The phi correlation coefficient for decisions of the two methods was 0.70 (p < .01). An examination of the percentage fail-pass data utilizing the Wilcoxon Signed-Ranks Test for Matched-Pairs further indicated no significant difference between the two methods (p < .01). / The results provide support for using the posttesting method as a short-cut approximation to validation with instruction. In the context of validation decisions made during the development of instructional materials, the posttesting approach appears to be adequate. The results also suggest that retention hierarchies produced by the posttesting method appear to be the same as learning hierarchies. The apparent adequacy of the posttesting method offers many advantages to the instructional developer. Instructional materials need not be developed prior to hierarchy validation, allowing the validated hierarchy to guide the development of instructional sequences and test specifications. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 46-01, Section: A, page: 0131. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1984.
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THE EFFECT OF VARYING TYPES OF INSTRUCTIONAL EPISODES ON IMMEDIATE AND LONG TERM INFORMATION AND ATTITUDE OUTCOMESUnknown Date (has links)
A study was conducted to determine the effect of various episode-forming instructional activities on verbal information and attitude learning. Episodes were structured to incorporate selected instructional events. An attention episode used prequestions in a game-format; an integration episode provided learning guidance in the form of activities to reinforce the content and links among memory structures; an evaluation episode used student values discussions to provide learning guidance for the attitude learning. There were two primary hypotheses: (1) the integration episode would be associated with higher immediate- and long-term retention of verbal information, particularly for below-average ability students; (2) higher positive attitudes toward the program content would be associated with the evaluation episode treatment. / Verbal information results indicated the presence of an aptitude-treatment interaction (ATI) such that for below- and average-ability students the attention episode was associated with higher performance than the other groups; for above-average students there was no treatment effect. Attitude results indicated no significant treatment effects. / The results suggest that, for verbal information learning, a high degree of correspondence between the information presented during the episode-forming activity and that presented when the propositions are being formed may be more important than the actual structure of the activity. For attitude outcomes, student discussions may not be necessary to promote attitude formation or change; a clear presentation of information by a role model may be adequate. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 46-04, Section: A, page: 0954. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1985.
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THE EFFECT OF TYPE OF FEEDBACK ON RULE LEARNING IN COMPUTER BASED INSTRUCTION (MATHEMATICS, NUMBERS, BASE CONVERSION, MICRO-COMPUTERS, HIGH SCHOOL, SUPERPILOT, CBI)Unknown Date (has links)
The determination of a facilitative effect of feedback on student achievement has been extensively researched. Usually not discriminated are the intellectual skill of rule using and verbal information. Only a few feedback studies have been conducted in a computer based instruction (CBI) setting. Anticipated in this study, conducted in a CBI setting, was that feedback for a rule using task (an intellectual skill) should be more complex than feedback for learning verbal information, because of the different types of learning involved. A feedback strategy that emphasized the rule and not the example was used to test this idea. / Ninety one high school students from the Florida State Developmental Research School, enrolled in Algebra I and II classes, were used in the study. The students were blocked on math ability and then randomly assigned to one of three feedback groups. All students received the same learning material except for different feedback. Group 1, the control group, received "right/wrong" feedback only. Group 2 received "right/wrong" plus if an error was made the "correct answer" (emphasizing the example). Group 3 received "right/wrong" plus if an error was made the "rule restated and the correct answer" (emphasizing the rule, not the example). Students were tested immediately after the lesson (acquisition measure), and one week later (retention measure). / A three factor mixed ANOVA with one repeated measure was used to analyze the performance results. The results yielded no significant main effects in the feedback treatment. Significant main effects were noted, however, between ability levels in favor of high ability students. A first level interaction between ability level and test time was also noted. / Although the null hypothesis was not rejected, the differences in the domains of verbal information and intellectual skills are so great that further research is needed to assess the role of feedback in rule learning. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 46-04, Section: A, page: 0955. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1985.
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PROBLEM STRUCTURES IN ITV SYSTEMS IN LATIN AMERICAUnknown Date (has links)
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 37-10, Section: A, page: 6224. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1976.
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INDIA'S CULTURAL HERITAGE: A HUMANISTIC APPROACH EMPLOYING AUDIOVISUAL LEARNING UNITSUnknown Date (has links)
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 37-12, Section: A, page: 7483. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1976.
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FORMULATION AND TRIAL USE OF GUIDELINES FOR DESIGNING AND DEVELOPING INSTRUCTIONAL MOTION PICTURESUnknown Date (has links)
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 38-05, Section: A, page: 2497. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1977.
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A STUDY OF SELECTED CHARACTERISTICS OF REVIEWS AND INDEXES OF AUDIOVISUAL MATERIALS FROM 1969 THROUGH 1972Unknown Date (has links)
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 38-11, Section: A, page: 6479. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1977.
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THE CONSTRUCTION OF THREE VIDEOCASSETTES DEPICTING THE SEQUENTIAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE FUNDAMENTAL MOTOR PATTERNS OF CATCHING, OVERHAND THROWING AND STRIKINGUnknown Date (has links)
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 39-11, Section: A, page: 6475. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1978.
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The effect of presentation sequence and generalization formulae on retention of coordinate and successive concepts and rules in computer-based instructionUnknown Date (has links)
This study investigated the effect of presentation sequence (adaptive and inclusive) and generalization formulae (example difficulty determined by subject matter experts or formulae developed by this experimenter) within rational sets of coordinate concepts and rules in computer-based instruction. / Fifty-five Florida State University students from the Biology for Nonmajors course were randomly assigned to four treatment groups: (1) inclusive SME, (2) inclusive formulae, (3) adaptive SME, and (4) adaptive formulae. Students completed a practice lesson on the PLATO computer system and later given a retention test during their scheduled lab period. The dependent variables were a retention test and time-on-task for completion of the computer lesson. / A two-by-two ANOVA was used to analyze the retention test results and time-on-task for the practice lesson. Significant differences were found for time-on-task and number of examples answered between the adaptive and inclusive groups, however, significant differences were not found for retention. Further analysis revealed that the adaptive groups answered 35% fewer examples and needed 30% less time to complete the assignment while scoring only 5% lower on the retention test. / Results are discussed in light of instructional implications for adaptive, computer-based instruction. Suggestions for further research in developing methods which support learning efficiency are also addressed. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 49-03, Section: A, page: 0486. / Major Professor: Robert M. Morgan. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1987.
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