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Creating an inclusionary classroom through alternative ways of knowing : A Swedish Case StudySmith, Natasha January 2021 (has links)
In recent years Sweden has witnessed an increasing number of newcomers into its schools from an array of sociocultural and ethnic backgrounds. Rather than see this as a ‘burden’, this case study looks at ways teachers can embrace diversity, build upon students' prior knowledge and experiences and challenge traditional notions of how knowledge is produced in the classroom. Drawing on multicultural and critical pedagogies, 11 class teachers across four subject disciplines and working at 2 different schools, in a provincial town in the south of Sweden, were asked about their pedagogical practices teaching in mainstream classrooms with students of different ethnic backgrounds. The analysis focuses on whether the teachers are able to create spaces for inclusive learning. Findings suggest that while aspiring to a participatory model of teaching which welcomes students’ views and experiences newcomers are largely excluded from such practice further cementing their marginalised status. Furthermore, in navigating dominant discourse around race, ethnicity and cultural diversity teachers, for the most part, end up reproducing stereotypes or rely on common sense understandings of otherness which do not change the status quo. However, some of the teachers’ pedagogical practices demonstrate ways of moving beyond normative practice towards a more critical approach by providing students with alternative ways of knowing that aim to challenge stereotypes, avoid generalisations and disrupt the Western/Eurocentric ideal of the universality of truth.
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Movement / MovementRišiaňová, Zuzana Unknown Date (has links)
The diploma project Move is a simple 3D digital game in the genre typology of platform games, specifically of an atmospheric-meditative nature, with elements of a walking simulator from a third-person perspective shooter (TPS). Its interactive content is based on topics such as portraits, wandering, meditation, painting and personal mythology. Through the author's stylization of the theme and graphic processing, my goal is to create a playable prototype of a digital game containing interactive elements, with a controllable character named Mo and the atmospheric environment of the levels through which the player passes. Using the medium of digital games, I would like to point out the possibilities of communication means, that it offers within the art world.
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The literacy teaching and learning in a classroom: A case study in an American Islamic schoolParlindungan, Firman 24 June 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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“Äta ska vi ju göra.”“Mer än att bara producera mat.” : Hållbar odling ur olika perspektiv, en jämförelse av konventionella jordbrukares och skogsjordbrukares tankar kring miljö, samhälle och skogsjordbruk. / “We have to eat.”“More than just producing food.” : Sustainable farming from different perspectives, a comparison of conventional farmers’ and agroforestry farmers’ views on environment and society.Ekfrost, Andreas January 2023 (has links)
Ett intensivt jordbruk anses leda till ett antal negativa miljöförändringar och mer miljövänliga jordbruksmetoder förespråkas av IPCC och IPBES varav skogsjordbruk är en metod som ses som ett hållbart alternativ. Det är en jordbruksmetod som hittills endast finns på få platser i Sverige, men som i andra delar av Europa och världen visat sig produktivt. Genom reflexiv diskursanalys avser denna studie undersöka konventionella jordbrukares och skogsjordbrukares upplevelse av sin verksamhet i förhållande till samhälle och miljö och deras syn på skogsjordbruk. Jordbrukare från respektive jordbrukstyp rekryterades för medverkan i separata fokusgrupper och ur dessa fokusgrupper valdes en jordbrukare ut för besök och deltagande observation. Båda jordbrukstyper såg sig som en del av naturen och visade omtanke för dess bevarande. De konventionella jordbrukarna såg sig som förvaltare av naturen och en viktig samhällsaktör med fokus på matproduktion och ekonomisk lönsamhet. Samtidigt kunde de konventionella jordbrukarna ses som både ofrivilligt låsta och försvarande en strömfåra - det etablerade industrisamhället. De ville förbättra miljön, men var fast i en ekonomisk cirkel. Skogsjordbrukarna fungerade som en kontrapunkt - en reaktion mot det etablerade jordbrukssystemet som de ansåg ohållbart. Istället ville de visa på ett alternativt samhälle och odlingssätt. Skogsjordbrukarna drevs av en vilja att förändra och ett ekologiskt fokus med en ekocentrisk och vid natursyn. Båda grupper menade att ett bättre bidragssystem skulle kunna leda till mer miljöarbete. / Intensified agriculture is considered as contributing to negative environmental changes. More positive methods of agriculture are advocated by IPCC and IPBES to halt these negative changes and agroforestry is one method that is considered as a sustainable alternative. Agroforestry as an agricultural method is only found in a few places in Sweden but is found in other parts of Europe and the world as a productive system with many environmental advantages. The purpose of this study was to examine what conventional farmers and agroforestry farmers thought about their work in relation to the environment and society and what their views were on agroforestry. Participants from the different methods were recruited to participate in separate focus groups and among these participants, one farmer from each method was recruited for participant observation. Both types of farmers had strong nature connectedness and cared about nature conservation. The conventional farmers saw themselves as stewards of nature and an important part of society that could work with the environment for food production and economic gain. At the same time, the conventional farmers could be seen as both involuntarily locked in and defending a mainstream - the established industrial society. They wanted to improve the environment but were stuck in an economic circle. The agroforestry farmers functioned as a counterpoint - a reaction against the established agricultural system which they considered unsustainable. Instead, they wanted to show an alternative society and way of farming. The agroforestry farmers were driven by a will to change and an ecological focus with an ecocentric and broader view of nature. Both groups believed that a better subsidy system could lead to more environmental work.
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Capturing Critical Institutionalism: A Synthesis of Key Themes and DebatesHall, Kurt V., Cleaver, Frances D., Franks, Tom R., Maganga, F. January 2014 (has links)
No / The article aims to provide a synthesis of key discussions within scholarship that is critical of Mainstream Institutionalism. It adopts a thematic approach to chart debate and areas of convergence about key issues. The first section of the article briefly charts the rise to prominence of the mainstream 'collective action' school. Each of the themes identified as central to the alternative critical approach is then examined in turn. These are the 'homogenous community' critique, the avoidance of politics critique (further divided into ideational politics and politics of local empowerment) and the sociological critique. The article concludes by reflecting on the challenge of 'making complexity legible' that faces the nascent critical tradition in institutional analysis.
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Beyond Fourths and Pentatonics: A Critical Analysis of Selected Recordings of McCoy Tyner from 1962 to 1963Satterthwaite, Gregory 05 1900 (has links)
In this paper, I explore the early musical language of McCoy Tyner. Today, Tyner is recognized mostly for his use of quartal harmony and pentatonic scales despite having made recordings in his early career that reflect a more mainstream approach. In an effort to expand how Tyner is represented, I argue that Tyner's early style was characterized by a graceful balance of tradition and innovation, a masterful blend of bebop syntax with pentatonic melodies and quartal harmonies. The recordings that I analyze and discuss are: "Effendi," "Cousin Mary," and "Newport Romp." I transcribed and analyzed selected portions of these recordings in order to better understand his early musical language as a soloist from 1962 to 1963. A portion of this paper is focused on the early reception of Tyner, which acknowledged him as an accomplished mainstream player with a firm grasp of the jazz tradition. Ultimately, my analysis shows that Tyner's early style was a balance of tradition and innovation, incorporating bebop syntax, pentatonic melodies, and quartal harmonies.
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The social inclusion of learners with visual impairment in a mainstream secondary school in NamibiaHuman, Lizl 03 1900 (has links)
According to Hatlen (2004), most learners with disabilities in an inclusive educational setting are socially isolated. This statement contributed to the research question of this study, how do learners with visual impairment experience the social aspects of their inclusion in a Namibian mainstream secondary school?
The aim of this study was to design a case study to analyse and describe data collected from learners with visual impairment and other participants to determine how they are socially included in a mainstream setting. A qualitative research methodology was used, which included purposive sampling to select participants. The researcher functioned in an interpretive/constructivist paradigm.
It was found that the learners with disabilities and the able-bodied learners do not truly mix, however, the learners with disabilities are content in the mainstream school and they prefer it. / Om aan 'n groep te behoort en sosiaal ingesluit te voel is 'n basiese menslike
behoefte - dit is net so belangrik soos die basiese behoeftes van kos en
veiligheid. Sosiale inklusie kan as een van die kritiese elemente beskou word
wat onderskei tussen mense wat ongesteld is en mense wat gesond is.
Betekenisvolle verhoudings dra by tot self-aktualisering. Lae sosiale inklusie
beteken vir leerders eensaamheid en swak aanvaarding deur portuurgroepe.
Sosiale inklusie is van groot belang vir kinders se ontwikkeling.
Navorsing het bevind dat inklusiewe hoofstroomskole die effektiefste manier is
om diskriminasie te beveg en sosiale insluiting te bevorder. Hatlen (2004) is
van mening dat die groter meerderheid van leerders met gestremdhede in 'n
hoofstroomskool sosiaal gei soleerd is.
Die doel van hierdie kwalitatiewe studie was om leerders met gestremdhede se
persepsie van hulle eie sosiale aanvaarding binne 'n inklusiewe hoofstroom
sekondere skool te ondersoek. Die navorser het binne 'n
interpretatiewe/konstruktivistiese paradigma gewerk. 'n Kwalitatiewe
navorsingsmetodologie is gevolg en het die volgende ingesluit: doelbewuste
seleksie om te bepaal wie die deelnemers sou wees; onderhoude, observasie,
dokumente en refleksies om data te genereer; en inhoudsanalise om die data
te analiseer.
Navorsingsbevindinge dui aan dat leerders met gestremdhede vir jare
afgesonder was van die res van die samelewing deur hierdie leerders in
spesiale skole te plaas. Dit het veroorsaak dat mense vervreemd van mekaar
is en het 'n skeiding tussen 'ons' en 'hulle' veroorsaak. Die bevindinge van
hierdie studie beklemtoon die belangrikheid van bewusmaking tussen leerders
met gestremdhede en leerders sonder gestremdhede. Daar kom wel
afknouery voor op die skoolgronde en ware vriendskappe tussen leerders met
gestremdhede en leerders sonder gestremdhede vind nie in die ware sin van
die woord plaas nie. Hierdie leerders is egter tevrede en verkies steeds om in
'n hoofstroomskool te wees. Inklusiewe onderwys is nog 'n nuwe konsep en in die ontwikkelingsfase in Namibie, terwyl die leerders nog onbekend is met
inklusie, asook met mekaar. / Educational Studies / M. Ed. (with specialisation in Guidance and Counselling)
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Marginalization of social work practise with ethno-racial minorities in mainstream human service organizations in a Canadian setting : a critical exploratory study of systemic issuesIp, Eugene Yiu-Chung 07 1900 (has links)
The thesis is a qualitative study from critical theory perspectives to enhance
understanding of how systemically mainstream organizations marginalize social work
practice with ethno-racial minorities. It also explores strategic implications for systemic
change based on field research findings. Ten social workers from Edmonton – the
provincial capital city of Alberta, Canada - participated in investigative dialogues for the
thesis field research. These research participants’ workplace stories lend themselves to
explore three questions: what does marginalization of practice with ethno-racial
minorities look like in mainstream organizational settings; what is there to understand
about it as a systemic issue and what the research findings imply for change strategies.
A critical analysis of dialogic data thematically identifies everyday work issues
that describe how practice with ethno-racial minorities is kept at the operational and
service-delivery fringe of individual workplaces. These thematic findings point to
broader issues of the mainstream human service organization sector. These broader
issues further highlight how the practice marginalization of concern in this thesis is a
systemically constructed issue. These broader issues are mainstream benevolence, social
work as an employment regime, multicultural service delivery as a thrill and clientization
of ethno-racial minorities.
In consideration of these sector-wide issues, implied change strategies reveal
three thematic directions for systemic transformational change: (i) continued dialoguing
involving concerned social workers and ethno-racial minority community leaders, (ii)
community social work to build and foster coalitionary activist work and organizations,
and (iii) participatory research involving a community sharing concern of the practice
marginalization issue so as to build a strong knowledge-base to support and empower broad-base activist endeavour to effect change about mainstream human service
organizations. / Social Work / D. Phil. (Social Work)
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Learning support to grade 4 learners who experience barriers to English as language of learning and teaching / Learning support to grade four learners who experience barriers to English as language of learning and teachingMacKay, Blanche Denise 06 1900 (has links)
The advent of democrary in South Africa in the early 1990's led, due to choice or circumstances, to the influx of numerous learners whose home language is an indigenous language, into school environments where the language of learning and teaching (LoLT) is English. These learners are confronted with the challenge of mastering the curriculum content while simultaneously learning English in which it is couched and instructed. When the LoLT differs from learners’ home language, this difference can be an educational barrier, which if not addressed timeously and effectively, may become a major challenge to a fully inclusive education system. The main aim of this research was to investigate whether Grade 4 English second language learners who experienced barriers to English as LoLT were supported in all subjects. The research also probed how effectively these learning support strategies were being implemented under the guidance of SBSTs at mainstream schools. / Inclusive Education / M. Ed. (Inclusive Education)
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Guidelines for the teaching of reading in the intermediate phase within the context of inclusionLategan, Irene Anne Stewart 11 1900 (has links)
As theories on the process of reading have advanced so definitional changes have
resulted. This in turn has impacted on the teaching of reading. Comprehension is not
the result of successful word recognition, rather, meaning is constructed by the reader
using various sources as a frame of reference. Reading requires an interaction between
the reader, the text read and the context in vvhich it is read. Reader factors involve
language competencies, prior knowledge, vocabulary, the use of strategies and
attitudes and motivation. The text may be narrative or expository and encompasses
instructional materials. The tvvo broad categories in the context are the classroom
setting and the instructional context.
An 'interactive' or 'organisational' paradigm underlying inclusion recognises individual
differences as being a probable cause of failure but postulates that the school and all
that it encompasses, can be a barrier to learning and development. As such it is not
deficit driven, attributing failure to learners alone. In the case of reading, this means not
attributing reading failure to the reader alone but acknowledging the role of the text and
the context. This point of departure is confirmed by an interactive model of disability,
which, while still explaining reading deficits, advances that alternative areas also be
investigated. Focusing on abilities is conducive to proactivity in the prevention of
barriers to learning and development.
To be inclusive therefore, mainstream schools generally and classrooms specifically, will
need to be reformed and restructured to be more responsive to learners experiencing
barriers to learning and development. This will require enhanced teaching methods and
flexible support systems. Accommodating diversity presupposes the acknowledgement
of each learner's uniqueness in order to meet individual needs. This will be facilitated
when in the compilation of a reading programme to meet individual needs, the reader,
the text and context are matched through assessment and instruction .
A reading programme to enhance the teaching of reading and thereby meet individual
needs has been compiled and implemented in a mainstream, intermediate phase class.
From this practical experience and the literature studied, guidelines for the teaching of
reading have been formulated for teachers in the intermediate phase to use within the
context of inclusion. / Educational Studies / D. Ed. (Orthopedagogics)
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