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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.
261

Metadata Visualizations in Virtual Reality: A study of alternative ways of visualizing a search result’s metadata in virtual reality.

Millwood, Stella, Nordén, Leo January 2023 (has links)
This study explores ways of visualizing metadata in virtual reality through means other than text. Specifically, we focus on the metadata of a 3D object as a search result and how these visualizations can support understanding of the object. The study draws on research from the field of information science and is positioned in the domain of cultural heritage. There are few studies about human information interaction in virtual reality or metadata visualization in these environments. However, metadata can be a useful tool in the information seeking search process. Because its visualization should depend on purpose, ways of visualizing metadata other than through text are in need of exploration. This study answers the following question: How can descriptive metadata of a 3D search result object be visualized in VR to support users’ understanding of the object? A research through design approach was employed. Data was collected through interviews about objects with visitors at a museum. These interview data were analyzed using a thematic analysis, and the results of that analysis were triangulated with the objects’ metadata in a database. This triangulation resulted in sets of characteristics and techniques that, as expressed by interviewees, could help them gain an understanding of an object of historical and cultural significance. We then selected a smaller set of characteristics for implementation using a prioritization matrix, and an object to visualize metadata for. Brainstorming sessions generated ways of visualizing these characteristics using relevant techniques. The prototype is a virtual reality experience that allows the user to navigate three layers of information with visualizations of the 3D object’s characteristics. The prototype was interactively demonstrated with four participants and their feedback was documented. The discussion is about the definition of metadata, unforeseen designs, the search process, the role of virtual reality in information seeking, how metadata visualizations can support understanding of an object and whether our do, our choice of using research through design as the approach and the study’s ethical and societal implications and its limitations. We conclude that metadata of a search result as an object in VR can be visualized by segmenting the VR experience into different layers of information, specifying a sequence in which the layers are presented that builds a narrative and provides users with multisensory feedback. We encourage future evaluative and comparative studies.
262

First year university students' conceptual understanding of electric circuits

Coetzee, Moreen 01 May 2021 (has links)
This dissertation reports on the secondary analysis of data obtained in 2013 about first-year university student’s conceptual understanding of concepts related to simple DC-circuits. The aim was to investigate the nature of conceptual understanding of students entering first-year physics at a South African university, and to explore how their conceptual understanding relates to contextual factors. Data collected from 815 participants comprise contextual data about each participant and responses in the DIRECT-instrument (Determining and Interpreting Resistive Electric Circuits Concepts Test). The conceptual framework for this study was based on a combination of the model about the effectiveness of science teaching and the critical outcomes related to electricity and electric circuits, which involve aspects of current, energy, potential difference and the physical aspects of circuits. The contextual data included information at personal, classroom and school level. Data were analysed using Rasch analysis. The study found that students entering a first-year physics module at a South African university have poor conceptual understanding about simple DC-electric circuits. The analysis of the DIRECT-instrument revealed that students had difficulties understanding concepts relating to parallel circuits, confusing terms such as voltage and current, and current and energy. They also struggled to relate a circuit diagram to an actual circuit and issues regarding short circuits were prominent. The analysis of the contextual data revealed that students’ degree of exposure to practical work does not imply conceptual understanding of DC-electric circuits. Factors that relate with conceptual understanding included students’ attitudes towards science, gender and previous achievement in Science, Mathematics, and English. Key terms: Conceptual understanding, DC-electric circuit, Misconception, Aptitudes / Dissertation (MSc)--University of Pretoria, 2021. / Science, Mathematics and Technology Education / MEd / Unrestricted
263

Pre-School Children’s Understanding of Cancer: The Impact of Parental Teaching and Life Experience

Varkula, Lindsay C. 05 October 2006 (has links)
No description available.
264

The Ability of Children with Language Impairment to Understand Emotion Conveyed by Prosody in a Narrative Passage

Voorhees, Chelsea Celeste 05 December 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Several recent studies indicate that children with Language Impairment (LI) have difficulty recognizing and inferring meaning from emotional prosody. The present study is a replication investigating the ability of children with LI to recognize emotion conveyed by prosody in an orally presented narrative passage. Twenty-two children with LI and twenty-two age matched peers ranging from age 7;0 to 10;11 (M= 9.11, SD= 2.54) were selected to participate. Participants listened to recordings of a seven sentence passage read by actors to express happiness, anger, sadness, and fear. The children's task was to identify which emotion the speaker portrayed. Scores obtained from the children with LI as a group were significantly lower than the scores of typically developing children. Differences in the degree of recognition of individual emotions were also apparent; happiness being correctly identified most frequently, followed by anger, sadness, and then fear. Evidence supports the supposition that children with LI struggle to understand emotion conveyed through prosodic cues, which may contribute to the social challenges children with LI experience.
265

The Relationship of Language and Emotion Understanding to Sociable Behavior of Children with Language Impairment

Potter, Jami L. 19 March 2009 (has links) (PDF)
The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between emotion understanding and language ability to the sociable behavior in children with language impairment (LI) and their typically developing peers. Twenty-nine children with LI and 29 age- and gender-matched peers with typical language were used in this study. Sociability was rated by his/her classroom teacher using the Teacher Behavior Rating Scale (Hart & Robinson, 1996). Language ability was assessed using the Comprehensive Assessment of Spoken Language (Carrow-Woolfolk, 1999). To assess emotion understanding, each participant was asked to perform several structural dissemblance tasks. Children with LI received scores significantly lower in language, dissemblance, prosocial behavior, and likeability compared to their typical developing peers. Hierarchical regression analyses indicated that language was a significant predictor of sociability. However, further analyses indicated that dissemblance mediated the relationship between language and likeability in girls, but not boys. Results from further analyses for prosocial behavior indicated that dissemblance did not mediate the relationship between language and prosocial behavior. Evidence from this study supports past research indicating children with LI experience emotional and language difficulties, which affect their social competence, particularly in girls.
266

A Conceptual Framework for Student Understanding of Logarithms

Williams, Heather Rebecca Ambler 09 December 2011 (has links) (PDF)
In the past, frameworks for what it means for students to understand elementary mathematical concepts like addition have been well-researched. These frameworks are useful for identifying what students must understand to have a good grasp of the concept. Few such research-based frameworks exist for secondary mathematical topics. The intent of this study was to create such a framework for what it means for students to understand logarithms, a topic that has been under-researched up to this point. Four task-based interviews were conducted with each of four different preservice secondary mathematics teachers in order to test a preliminary framework I had constructed to describe what it means for students to understand logarithms. The framework was adjusted according to the findings from the interviews to better reflect what it means for students to have a good understanding of logarithms. Also, a common practice taught to students learning logarithms, switching from logarithmic form to exponential form, was found to possibly have negative effects on student understanding of logarithms. The refined, research-based framework for what it means for students to understand logarithms is described in full in this document. The implications of the results of this study for mathematics teachers as well as for mathematics education researchers are also discussed.
267

Manipulatives and the Growth of Mathematical Understanding

Gibbons, Stacie Joyce 03 May 2012 (has links) (PDF)
The purpose of this study was to describe how manipulatives facilitated the growth of one group of high school students' mathematical understanding of combinatorics and Pascal's Triangle. The role of manipulatives in mathematics education has been extensively studied, but much of the interest in manipulatives is focused on the general uses of manipulatives to support student learning. Unfortunately, there is a lack of research that explicitly defines how manipulatives can help students develop mathematical understanding. I have chosen to examine mathematical understanding through the lens of the Pirie-Kieren Theory for Growth of Mathematical Understanding. Through analysis of the students' explorations of the Towers Task, I identified ways in which manipulatives facilitated students' understanding of combinatorics and Pascal's Triangle. It was found that the properties and arrangements of the manipulatives were significant in prompting students' progression through levels of understanding and helped students to reason abstractly and develop mathematical generalizations and theories. From this study we can gain insights into explicit ways in which manipulatives facilitate mathematical understanding. These results have implications for research, teaching and teacher education.
268

Media Sensationalism and its Implications on the Public Understanding of Science

Barsoum, Christopher 01 December 2014 (has links)
Myths, misinformation, and sensationalism. These are common enemies that directly inhibit the public understanding of science. In particular, the media is often responsible for mishandling or otherwise misrepresenting scientific information, historically and presently speaking. Many sources can combat the public understanding of science through pseudoscientific means. This includes but is not limited to religion, the media, politics, or just simple hearsay. For example, Young Earth creationism is deeply rooted in Christian theology, but the beliefs hold no scientific basis. Yet, almost half of Americans still believe in Young Earth creationism. Another such example is anti-vaccination campaigns due to fears of autism-spectrum related disorders. In this case, falsified claims were given illegitimate credibility through the media, and the claims are widely and erroneously contentious to this day. The purpose of this research was to investigate the relationship between an individual's ability to dictate science from pseudoscience and their exposure to sensationalized media. Through means of surveying the university level population, relationships were drawn between how many pseudoscientific beliefs an individual may have versus how they interact with science and the media. The results of the survey showed a general lack of interest or care for science with more pseudoscientific beliefs, yet failed to draw a relationship between pseudoscientific beliefs and a sensationalized media.
269

Four Shades of Culture - A study of four teachers' perception of culture

Landström, Johanna, Persson, Lecille January 2011 (has links)
This study focuses on four English teachers’ perception of the concept of culture linked to teaching language. Semi-structured interviews were carried out in order to investigate how they perceive culture in relation to both their personal views and the steering documents for the educational system. To gain a more in–depth understanding of their perception we asked them about their own perception of their teaching methods and how they in turn perceive the students’ development with regards to intercultural understanding. We applied Eva Gagnestam’s four descriptions of culture to be able to explore the different ways in which the teachers worked with the concept of culture in the English classroom.
270

Fostering Teacher's Conceptual Understanding Of Ordering, Adding, And Subtracting Fractions Through School-based Professional Development

Maguhn, Jessica 01 January 2009 (has links)
In an attempt to examine my practice of providing conceptually-based professional development on fractions to fifth grade teachers, I conducted a series of four one hour professional development workshops. I focused on the conceptual understanding of ordering, adding, and subtracting fractions. I examined the solution process that teachers used to solve fraction problems and their abilities to explain and justify their solutions in an attempt to interpret their understanding. My data showed the effects of this workshop series. The study helped determine the effects of conceptually-based professional development on fractions as demonstrated in the teachers' discussions, participation, and written explanations.

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