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Just Pushing Through: Developmental Student Perspectives of Their Positioning in Higher EducationDorhout, Lesley January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
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Through a Different Lens: Student Perspectives on the Impact of Study AbroadLearman, Megan A. 30 July 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Engaging with Psychology Students to Find New Ways of Improving Behaviour in LibrariesDawson, Louise, Phelan, Louise 10 November 2023 (has links)
In the period following the pandemic, we observed that poor student behaviour was increasingly becoming a problem in our library. We decided to take a novel approach to try and discover new ways of encouraging positive use of the university library using existing resources and ensuring the inclusion of student voices to gather rich critically evaluated feedback to inform our service improvements.
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Identifying Teacher Emotional-Social Competencies That Predict Positive & Negative Relationships With StudentsFults, Justin R. 02 May 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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La Evaluación De La Competencia Oral En Las Clases De Lenguas Extranjeras: Las Perspectivas De Los Instructores Y De Los EstudiantesMilgie, Christine Marie 23 April 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Student Mobility: Former Students’ Perspectives and Mitigation StrategiesRamirez, Sarah J. 28 July 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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Student perspectives on school camps : a photo-elicitation interview studySmith, Erin F. January 2008 (has links)
First-hand narrative accounts of participants’ experiences during outdoor programmes are notably absent from the outdoor education literature. This thesis reports on an exploratory study which applied a creative qualitative approach called photo-elicitation interviews to gather student accounts about the ways in which they experienced an outdoor education programme known as ‘school camp’. A group of Year 10 (14-15 years old) students attending secondary school in Christchurch, New Zealand, participated in this study, and were provided with 27-exposure, disposable cameras on which they were asked to take a series of photographs to demonstrate what a residential school camp was like for them. Follow-up, individual photo-elicitation interviews with the 32 self-selected respondents (21 female, 11 male), revealed that school camp is primarily an enjoyable, social experience where students are able to spend time with their friends and develop their peer networks in a unique environment. From the perspective of these students, school camp primarily contributed to developing a greater understanding of others, while developing greater understandings of the self and the environment were less salient. A greater understanding of others was achieved primarily through the ways in which school camp created an enjoyable, novel, experience which allowed students to see their peers from a different, more ‘real’ perspective. Aspects of this novel experience which contributed to students’ social interactions included the residential nature of these camps and the absence of ‘urban’ features associated with teenage culture such as mobile phones, clothing and make-up. Interestingly, students’ camp experiences included little specific reference to the natural environment; a finding which challenges recent discourses advocating for a shift towards a more critical outdoor education aiming to promote human-nature relationships. The use of photo-elicitation interviews in this context is critically examined. Providing students with cameras was an effective way to engage young people in academic research and to capture important aspects of the outdoor experience from their perspective. To better assess the utility of the technique, it warrants further application in other outdoor education contexts. The inclusion of participant-generated photographs, however, raises several research ethics issues. This study contributes to the growing body of qualitative literature seeking to provide a more in-depth understanding of outdoor education and complements the quantitative studies which predominate in the field.
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