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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
101

Health and Physical Education Teachers' Constructions of Teamwork: A Discursive Analysis

Mr Dean Barker Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
102

Specialist Teachers and Curriculum Reform in a Western Australian Primary School in 2002 A Comparative Study of Specialist Music, Health and Physical Education, and Languages-Other-Than-English Teaching Professionals

fino@westnet.com.au, Helen Stone January 2006 (has links)
This thesis details research on the first phase of curriculum reform (1999–2004) in a government primary school in Western Australia. The purpose of the study was to examine what progress had been made with the implementation of the Curriculum Framework (1998). The research focussed on Music, Health and Physical Education, and Languages Other than English as specialist teachers working with the Curriculum Framework (1998). Teachers and school administrators, as frontline practitioners, considered their experiences and perceptions of daily practice and provided their perspectives on curriculum reform. The hypothesis formulated for the study was that with the introduction of the Curriculum Framework (1998) the delivery of these three subjects could be further improved. This study argues that successful curriculum performance of these three subjects traditionally considered “specialist programs” may be more fully supported by becoming aware of the forces influencing Australian curriculum discourse and delivery. Subject knowledge endorsement in this study refers to the transfer of valued knowledge in Western Australian educational systems. It is proposed that if teaching professionals articulated the substance of their educational beliefs and experiences with regard to subject knowledge meaning, place and value, curriculum delivery in primary schools may progress more effectively. Positive learning experiences for all students can be provided through the encouragement of communication and collegiality together with relevant and accessible professional development. These measures can also be supported by mounting whole-school primary programs that engage with beliefs about Music, Health and Physical Education, and Languages Other Than English through collaborative networks and learning communities. Accordingly, curriculum delivery can come within reach of the seamless curriculum anticipated by reform (Curriculum Framework, 1998:6–7). In this qualitative interview study, the frontline participants included generalist teachers, specialist teachers and school administrators. These educational practitioners were asked to participate in an in-depth, semi-structured discussion that explored their perceptions of specialist teaching and knowledge while employed at Deep Sea Primary School in 2002. They teachers also commented on how these perceptions may be linked to their experiences of socially constructed and established notions of valued knowledge. The findings of this study indicated that the progressive implementation of these three subjects or specialist’s areas were characterised by subtle historical, economic, political and social forces. This thesis suggests that, these largely obscured external forces together with individual yet, taken for granted perceptions of what is perceived as valuable knowledge work together to position curriculum rhetoric and curriculum enactment that reflect established perceptions of the knowledge hierarchy. Teachers and administrators at the school often operated within the structures and meanings of conventional teaching practice of subject knowledge as determined by dominant culture in Australia. The findings indicated that school culture in a time of reform re-traditionalised hierarchical patterns of subject knowledge organisation and evaluation. Accordingly, current subject knowledge endorsement in terms of specialist teaching often worked to the benefit of established power relationships typical of post-industrial market economy in Australia. The findings also indicated that issues pertaining to curriculum prioritisation were influenced by institutional, group and individual experiences of subject specialist knowledge. Poor perceptions of these three subjects could also be generated by experiencing inflexible and inadequate yet established funding and resource patterns in educational systems. Frontline teachers, their school-based roles and responsibilities attached to the teaching and learning of the three specialist areas were typified by rigid school organisation and job structures together with condensed teaching time and community backing. This thesis argues that progressive, outcomes education requires an articulate and supportive school culture, more funding and the genuine maintenance of quality Music, Health and Physical Education and Language Other Than English teachers. In addition, curriculum implementation would benefit from the promotion of constructivist-orientated student activities within specialist programs.
103

A family life education curriculum for the secondary school

Sisk, Virginia A. 01 January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
104

Dancing on the edge of truth: A study of weight-loss advertising and implication

Smith, Karen Ann 01 January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
105

PETE Student Placement Procedures: In-depth with Six Programs

Kesselring, LeAnn E. 18 October 2018 (has links)
No description available.
106

Valuing Physical Activity: Teaching Standard 5

O'Neil, Kason, Kesselring, LeAnn E. 29 October 2018 (has links)
Whether our students participate in physical activity for health, enjoyment, challenge, or social interaction it is imperative as physical educators that we have an ongoing discourse about the vast benefits and value associated with physical activity participation This is also the foundation of standard 5 in our state and naƟonal standards. This interaction session will provide strategies and specific learning tasks to implement in the classroom to help meet standard 5.
107

Surviving and Thriving as an Early Career Academic

O'Neil, Kason, Krase, Jennifer M., Richards, K. Andrew R., Wahl-Alexander, Zachary, Doan, Robert J., Healey, Sean 23 March 2018 (has links)
Congratulations! You’ve received your first faculty position! Now comes the real test: balancing your teaching, research, service, and grant writing, all while keeping connected with students and finding an appropriate work-life balance. This session will provide different perspectives from a panel of current junior faculty within the field of kinesiology who will provide specific strategies to help navigate and network your way into the professoriate and set yourself up for success
108

PETE University Supervisor’s Perceptions of Use and Feasibility of Live Remote Supervision

O'Neil, Kason, Krause, J M. 04 January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
109

University Supervisor Perceptions of Live Remote Supervision in Pete Training

Krause, Jennifer M., Douglas, Scott, O'Neil, Kason M. 01 May 2016 (has links)
No description available.
110

Self-efficacy Scale Towards Teaching Lifetime Physical Activities: Development and Validation

O'Neil, Kason M. 01 March 2015 (has links)
No description available.

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