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The effectiveness of infusing multicultural knowledge and awareness into a Master's-level internship: A deliberate psychological education approachCannon, Edward P. 01 January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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A cross-cultural comparative study of teacher effectiveness: Analyses of award-winning teachers in the United States and ChinaXu, Xianxuan 01 January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Trends in learning styles amongst black and white South African learners in a multicultural classroomLevinrad, Lance 19 May 2014 (has links)
There is a growing body of literature supporting the importance of recognising
individual learning styles and teaching styles. Using More's model, this study
explored the prevalence of learning style profi'es amongst different racial groups
within multicultural South African classrooms. Seven teachers at two multiracial,
English medium schools completed the More Learning Style Inventory for 38
white learners and 30 black learners with a mean age of 11.4 years. In addition,
each teacher completed the More Teaching Style Inventory. The findings
suggested that learners from different racial groups showed a preference on
certain learning style dimensions. In particular, white and black learners were
found to differ significantly on the Global-Analytic and the Trial & feedback-
Reflective dimensions. Furthermore, an investigation of teaching styles
supported mismatches between teachers’ teaching style and learners’ learning
style, especially where learning style differences emerged. This study highlights
the possible usefulness of learning style research for addressing the challenges
faced by teachers in facilitating racial integration in classrooms.
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Negotiating identities: experiences of rural migrant learners in an urban school in JohannesburgWongo, Nomathamsanqa January 2016 (has links)
Thesis (M.Ed.)--University of the Witwatersrand, Faculty of Humanities, School of Education, 2016 / Due to the contextual difference between rural schools and urban school, many rural learners have migrated to urban schools. The rural population movement in the urban contexts has resulted in an increased number of rural learners in urban schools and also contributed in the diversity of cultures, ethnicities and races in urban schools making it difficult for teachers to respond to every learner’s needs. This study hypothesises that rural learners are likely to face challenges in terms of inclusion and negotiating their identities in the new urban schools. This study describes the challenges faced by rural migrant learners in new urban school, and how these migrant learners construct their identities in the new urban context. The study focusses on one primary school in Johannesburg that has a large influx of rural learners over the years. Using the key concepts of social identity, social inclusion and social exclusion, this describes the lived experiences of migrated learners and how they negotiate their identities in a new urban context. Findings show that migrated learners face inclusive challenges both academically and socially and challenges in adapting to the new urban school environment. The factors that caused academic challenges were: language barrier, difficult subjects, and teachers’ intervention. Social challenges were, adapting to a new environment, interacting with other learners and learning a new culture of the school.
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The relationship between mother tongue and English second language learning strategiesMakoni, Rachel, Tuso January 2016 (has links)
Submitted in part fulfilment of the requirements for the degree
Masters in Educational Psychology
At the: University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg / South Africa is a multicultural and multilingual country. The majority of learners (90%)
speak a mother tongue that is not English. The language of instruction is however English.
English has become the dominant language in education, commerce and industry and
therefore proficiency in the language is imperative. In order to help learners learn more
efficiently, and to inform education policy making, an exploration of what language learning strategies learners from divergent mother tongue backgrounds employ, is beneficial. This study was conducted in a high school, in a township area of Gauteng, South Africa in order to investigate whether there is a relationship between the mother tongue of South African high school learners and English second language learning strategies employed by these learners.
The sample consisted of 107 Grade 8-Grade 12 participants who were receiving instruction in English, with their mother tongue specified as one of the 9 African languages. Learners were asked to complete a 50 item questionnaire, as well as a demographical information form. The results showed that although there was no significant relationship between mother tongue and English second language learning strategies used by high school learners, other variables such as number of years of English language instruction and age were significant variables that influenced choice of English language learning strategy use. It was also found that metacognitive strategies were the most commonly used English language learning strategies. Research on the relationship between mother tongue and language learning strategy use is imperative given the significant number of learners that would benefit from this research and
subsequent interventions implemented. / AC2018
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Effects of a brief intervention programme on teacher attitudes towards multicultural educationDa Silva, Zena 20 February 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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The relationship between mother tongue and English second language learning strategiesMakoni, Rachel 27 July 2016 (has links)
Submitted in part fulfilment of the requirements for the degree
Masters in Educational Psychology
At the: University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
January 2016 / South Africa is a multicultural and multilingual country. The majority of learners (90%) speak a mother tongue that is not English. The language of instruction is however English. English has become the dominant language in education, commerce and industry and therefore proficiency in the language is imperative. In order to help learners learn more efficiently, and to inform education policy making, an exploration of what language learning strategies learners from divergent mother tongue backgrounds employ, is beneficial. This study was conducted in a high school, in a township area of Gauteng, South Africa in order to investigate whether there is a relationship between the mother tongue of South African high school learners and English second language learning strategies employed by these learners. The sample consisted of 107 Grade 8-Grade 12 participants who were receiving instruction in English, with their mother tongue specified as one of the 9 African languages. Learners were asked to complete a 50 item questionnaire, as well as a demographical information form. The results showed that although there was no significant relationship between mother tongue and English second language learning strategies used by high school learners, other variables such as number of years of English language instruction and age were significant variables that influenced choice of English language learning strategy use. It was also found that metacognitive strategies were the most commonly used English language learning strategies. Research on the relationship between mother tongue and language learning strategy use is imperative given the significant number of learners that would benefit from this research and subsequent interventions implemented
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The Racial Geography of Teaching: Two White Teachers' Construction of RaceDemers, Kelly Elaine January 2009 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Marilyn Cochran-Smith / In this study I asked two questions: "How does the ideological stance of two White elementary school teachers inform their construction of race?" and, "How do teachers' ideological stances and constructions of race influence teaching practice?" The purpose of this study was to understand the ways that White teachers negotiated the meaning of race and racism within their personal lives and professional practice. Using a critical ethnographic approach, I examined the experience of two White teachers from a variety of perspectives. Data included semi-structured interviews, participant observations and selected classroom artifacts. In order to look at the data, I developed a conceptual framework referred to as the "racial geography of teaching." This framework emerged from Frankenberg's (1993) conception of the sociology of race, Rousmaniere's (2001) interpretation of racial biography, theoretical and empirical work about White teachers, and repeated readings of the collected data. Findings suggested that White teachers are worried about race and this worry is negotiated through discursive repertoires such as color-blindness and race cognizance. For the color-blind White teacher, practice is shaped by avoidance and silence about race, which prevents him or her from fully knowing his or her students. For the race cognizant teacher, practice is shaped by the idea that practice is far more expansive than what goes on in the classroom or the school community at-large. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2009. / Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. / Discipline: Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction.
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Diversity in the Digital Age: Integrating Pedagogy and Technology for Equity and InclusionKaiser, Kathryn de Groof January 2019 (has links)
This qualitative dissertation explores the perceptions of how and why teachers might integrate technology to support their goals of equity and inclusion with a group of teachers who identify as culturally responsive in their pedagogy and describe themselves as fluent in the use of technology in school. Teachers working with students of diverse backgrounds were chosen purposively using an "extreme case sampling" method in order to interview experienced and pedagogically aligned participants. Drawing on in-depth interviews, a review of class artifacts and documents, and a focus group, this study provides critical insights into how self-identified culturally relevant teachers use technology. Discussion of the findings focused on two areas. The first examined how the unique affordances of technology lend themselves as a critical resource for teachers engaged in culturally responsive pedagogy. The second looked at how the self-directed approach of participant teachers led them to seek learning opportunities through informal means, in particular with peers they saw as aligned with their own thoughtful practice in service of their beliefs and values for equity and inclusion. Participants provided evidence that technology can be an active dimension of their work toward equity and inclusion. Thus, this research expands upon existing literature on pedagogical practice in both technology in education and diverse classrooms.
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Creating Spaces For Culturally Responsive Pedagogy Amid Standards Driven Curriculum In Secondary School English/Language Arts ClassesUnknown Date (has links)
This hermeneutic phenomenological study emerged from concerns about the ways
teachers’ pedagogical practices are affected by growing diversity in their classrooms and
continuous education reform. Drawing on the perspectives of critical pedagogy and
postcolonial literary theory, this study also explored the tension that exists between what
students ought to learn in schools and what they actually learn. Data was gathered
through two interviews and a classroom observation with each of eight high school
language arts teachers in South Florida to gain an understanding of how they use their
pedagogical practices to navigate changes that occur in the practice field and create
spaces to utilize culturally responsive pedagogy in their implementation of the current
secondary school English/Language Arts curriculum. Teachers’ reflections on their
experiences, descriptions of the climate of their practice and how teachers create spaces
for culturally responsive pedagogy were analyzed to consider how their pedagogical practices conform to or challenge the structural and normative assumptions of the
practice field.
Findings revealed that despite the constraints imposed on their pedagogy by
education reform, including standardization of their practice, all teachers used culturally
responsive pedagogy in their classrooms to achieve state mandated goals, albeit at a
foundational level. While teachers unencumbered by standardized testing expressed
higher levels of freedom to make pedagogical choices in their classrooms, all participants
suggested that prescribed curriculum and resources could do more to represent students’
needs and growing diversity in schools rather than standardized assessments.
Furthermore in their implementations of culturally responsive pedagogy, teachers
continue to use students’ voices to represent standardized curriculum and universal
literary themes rather than establishing them as curriculum in their own right. As such,
this study’s findings extend discussions by educational and postcolonial literary theorists
regarding whose knowledge has legitimacy as a part of curriculum especially in a
practice field that emphasizes student performance at state mandated levels above all
else. / Includes bibliography. / Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2018. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
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