21,466 research outputs found

    "I my own professor": Ashton-Warner as New Zealand educational theorist, 1940-60.

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    The invitation to contribute to this volume addressed me as a New Zealander who had written about how Sylvia Ashton-Warner's fantasies, theories, imagery, and life-history narratives threaded their way through my own. I had written of my youthful encounters with her work in Educating Feminists (Middleton 1993), in which I looked back on reading Spinster in 1960 at age thirteen and reflected on my teenage dreams of life as an artist and beatnik in Parisian cafes and garrets: confined to an Edwardian boarding school hostel in a provincial New Zealand town, I had plotted my escape to what Ashton-Warner described in Myself as "some bohemian studio on the Left Bank in Paris or over a bowl of wine in Italy, me all sophisticated and that, with dozens of lovers, paint everywhere and love and communion and sympathy and all that" (Myself, 212). When, in the early 1970s, I began secondary school teaching and read Teacher, that book built bridges between the frightening urgency of classroom survival, the enticing theories but alien classrooms described by American deschoolers and free-schoolers, and "what I believed myself to be when a girl on the long long road to school, a vagabond and an artist" (I Passed This Way, 307). As a young teacher I, too, had poured my impassioned soul into writing journals and poetry, painting, and playing the piano. Like Ashton-Warner, I had hoped that artistic self-expression could keep the mad woman in my attic at bay, for "asylums are full of artists who failed to say the things they must and famous tombs are full of those who did" (Incense to Idols, 169)

    Methods of presenting the fundamentals of bookkeeping

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    Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit

    Development and evaluation of a multimedia interactive CD: Public speaking interactive media

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    This paper reports on a study that endeavours to develop a Computer Assisted Learning (CAL) multimedia courseware namely, Public Speaking Interactive Media. This courseware was developed specifically for diploma students undergoing ENG4113 (Business English) and ENG 4153 (Public Speaking Skills) at Kolej Profesional MARA Indera Mahkota, Kuantan, Pahang. The objectives and goals of this study is to develop a CAL courseware which is in-line with the syllabus of the courses using multimedia elements together with the application of behaviorist, cognitive and constructivist learning theories as a basis in the design of the courseware. Moreover, the instructional design and implementation of this CAL multimedia courseware employ active and flexible learning strategies. Utilizing Hannafin and Peck’s Design Model, this courseware was developed using Macromedia Director and Macromedia Authorware to ensure that multimedia elements and simulations can be fully integrated. The findings of the study revealed that the courseware fulfilled its objectives in aiding students in comprehending the concept of public speaking skills better by using multimedia elements. In addition, the courseware is in-line with the syllabus and has incorporated the theories and strategies intended successfully

    THE PROBLEMS ENCOUNTERED IN ENGLISH TEACHING OF SECOND GRADE STUDENTS OF SMP NEGERI 12 SURAKARTA

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    Nungki Septiana Furi. 2009. The Problems Encountered in English Teaching of Second Grade Students of SMP Negeri 12 Surakarta. English Diploma Program. Faculty of Letters and Fine Arts, Sebelas Maret University. This final project is intended to describe the problems encountered in English teaching of Second Grade students of SMP Negeri 12 Surakarta.The objectives of the final project report are describing the English teaching, knowing the problems appeared in English teaching and giving solutions of problems in English teaching to the second grade students of SMP Negeri 12 Surakarta. This report is arranged based on the data which are taken from the observation that is done inside the class. The observation is done in order to know the method thatused in the class, the facilities that support the English teaching activities, and the materials that is given to the students. In the English teaching process, the writer used Grammar-Translation method. It is done since it the most suitable method for the students which is demanded to be more active in the Education Unit Level Curriculum which is applied. The problems appear during the English teaching process such as the difference of used method, the students’ attention are hard to be focused, limited facilities, limited time provided by school, and the topic development are too broad. To deal with the problems, the writer are implied some solutions such as familiarizing the new method, giving games and interesting materials, using alternative facilities, giving additional class and making priority list of the topics which will be given. It is suggested to the school management to complete the existed facilities so that it can fully support the students in English teaching and learning activities andto the English teacher to be more strictto the students

    Report on argumentation and teacher education in Europe

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    This document will ultimately form part of a comprehensive package of materials for teacher education and professional development in argumentation. The initial deliverable from Kaunas University of Technology described the rhetorical basis of argumentation theory for pre‐ and in‐service teachers, whilst this state of the art report sets out the current and rather unsatisfactory status of argumentation in curricula, initial teacher training/education and teacher professional development, across the fifteen S‐TEAM partner countries. We believe that this is a representative sample and that the report can be taken as a reliable snapshot of the situation in Europe generally

    An analysis of the role of the textbook in the construction of accounting knowledge

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    This report examines the role of the textbook and training manual in the teaching of introductory financial accounting. Although it has long been recognised that the textbook plays an important role in the education process, the issue has not been systematically examined in a comprehensive manner with respect to the teaching of introductory financial accounting. Based on research carried out in 2005, the current report addresses this issue. It does so using a research framework proposed by Thompson (1990) which recommends a comprehensive approach to the understanding of texts involving three separate aspects: the production of the textbook/training manual; the content of the textbook/training manual; the usage of the textbook/training manual
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