75,801 research outputs found
Re-Viewing the Mass Communication Education Curriculum. Case for Language/Linguistics, Communication Synergy.
Curriculum review of any academic curriculum is one way of demonstrating the dynamism of such discipline. Mass Communication as a dynamic discipline is one such beneficiary of curriculum review. In line with Iwuchukwuâs (2010) earlier submission that no graduate of any academic level or discipline worthâs more than the curriculum that produces him/her, it was an observed inability of some practicing journalists, especially, those in the print. To handle ethical issues, which was traced to a lacuna in the curriculum that led to the introduction of the course, ethics. This paper seeks to unveil another obvious lapse among mass communication practitioners cutting across, print, broadcast and electronic media. It further highlights that such lapses as incompetence in language use, both at the phonetic, phonological semantic. Syntactic stylistic and even psycholinguistic to be a direct fall out of a perceived lacuna in the present mass communication education curriculum especially in Nigeria. We contend that a review of the present curriculum is glaringly imperative recommending not only the inclusion of more language/linguistic courses but also a stronger synergy between language/linguistics and mass communication. This is our opinion could be boosted with a course "Language and Communication not only though to all mass communication students at all levels, but it being recognized as another Sub-field of specialization by mass communication graduates who wish to further their stadium at the postgraduates levels as in the case in the University of Calabar
Utilising Enterprise Education to Prepare Healthcare Professional Graduates for the Real-world
Objectives: Every year, HEIs around the world provide an increasing number of graduates with professional degrees in various areas of healthcare including for example medicine, pharmacy, dentistry and podiatry. In most cases, these graduates will get the opportunity to develop a range of generic transferable skills during their HE. Yet, many of these become self-employed or responsible for managing a business, but are not always exposed to curricula that develop their awareness of the concepts of enterprise and entrepreneurship and their role in developing economies and societies, and, thus, do not have the necessary range of enterprise skills that they will need in the real-world, whether employed or self-employed.
This paper investigates the extent to which Enterprise Education (EE) is applied at professional schools at HEI to develop graduatesâ âsoftâ and âfunctionalâ enterprise skills, and how effective the process of delivering this education is.
Prior work: Previous literature mainly deals with the application of enterprise education through business and management schools, rather than professional ones. Yet, there is a call for researching enterprise education and skills with more focus on exploring the methods and objectives of specific disciplines. At the same time, research investigating learning in professional degrees focuses almost entirely on the development of technical skills related to the discipline, without a general perspective on developing a wider range of enterprise skills.
Approach: The study draws on, but develops a PhD in the pharmacy education context. Personal interviews with pharmacy employers and academics were carried out, and thematic analysis was applied to identify themes and codes.
Results: Despite that experiential and interactive learning approaches, which can support the development of graduatesâ enterprise skills, are applied quite often at pharmacy schools, the application of these approaches is focused on discipline-related material and, therefore, can only support the development of graduatesâ âsoftâ enterprise skills. However, there appears to be resistance against developing graduatesâ âfunctionalâ enterprise skills in pharmacy disciplines, especially in light of the lack of awareness of the concept of enterprise education among academics. The study offers some possible opportunities/propositions that could facilitate the development of more enterprising healthcare graduates, while highlighting the importance of raising the awareness of academics in this regard and embedding enterprise education as part of schoolsâ philosophies.
Implication: This study should help professional schools at HEIs decide more accurately on how to develop their graduatesâ âsoftâ and âfunctionalâ enterprise skills, and address the needs of the real-world.
Value: This study directs the attention of HEIs to support developing professional graduates who are ready for the real-world, and who can support the growth and success of any organisation whether employed or self-employed
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Innovating Pedagogy 2017: Exploring new forms of teaching, learning and assessment, to guide educators and policy makers. Open University Innovation Report 6
This series of reports explores new forms of teaching, learning and assessment for an interactive world, to guide teachers and policy makers in productive innovation. This sixth report proposes ten innovations that are already in currency but have not yet had a profound influence on education. To produce it, a group of academics at the Institute of Educational Technology in The Open University collaborated with researchers from the Learning In a NetworKed Society (LINKS) Israeli Center of Research Excellence (I-CORE).
Themes:
⢠Big-data inquiry: thinking with data
⢠Learners making science
⢠Navigating post-truth societies
⢠Immersive learning
⢠Learning with internal values
⢠Student-led analytics
⢠Intergroup empathy
⢠Humanistic knowledge-building communities
⢠Open Textbooks
⢠Spaced Learnin
Volunteer tourism and architecture students: what motivates and can best prepare them
This paper explores student attitudes toward volunteering in the context of university-led building development programs, raising questions about the practice of volunteering and its contribution to community development. Focusing on students undertaking tertiary education in Western countries, this literature-based study firstly explores the perceptions and motivations behind volunteering, and secondly discusses its developmental impact on low-income communities
Enhancing Literacy Instruction through Technology
Technology has altered how children experience language. As technology has taken root in society, literacy skills have expanded beyond simply reading and writing print texts to include interacting with digital texts and media. To prepare students to operate in this digital environment, teachers should integrate technology into language arts instruction; however, many teachers feel unprepared to do so effectively. Additionally, some teachers hesitate to implement technology into language arts instruction as a tool because of its supposed negative effects on literacy. Despite beliefs about technology inhibiting reading and writing, teachers can utilize technology to enhance literacy instruction. The digital age has laid the foundation for new literacies, and teachers must build upon it
Toward a Systematic Evidence-Base for Science in Out-of-School Time: The Role of Assessment
Analyzes the tools used in assessments of afterschool and summer science programs, explores the need for comprehensive tools for comparisons across programs, and discusses the most effective structure and format for such a tool. Includes recommendations
Etika dan moral profesional dalam kalangan Pelajar Sarjana yang telah menjalani program latihan mengajar
Etika dan moral profesional merupakan salah satu elemen yang penting bagi
meningkatkan sahsiah untuk kecemerlangan pelajar yang berilmu, berkualiti dan
berbudi. Kajian ini bertujuan untuk mengenal pasti tahap etika dan moral profesional
dalam kalangan pelajar Sarjana yang telah menjalani program latihan mengajar.
Selain itu, kajian ini turut mengenal pasti perbezaan tahap etika dan moral
profesional di antara demografi iaitu dari segi jantina dan pencapaian akademik
pelajar. Kajian ini berbentuk tinjauan dengan menggunakan borang soal selidik
sebagai instrumen kajian. Seramai 144 orang responden terlibat yang terdiri daripada
pelajar Semester III program Sarjana PTV, UTHM yang mengikuti program latihan
mengajar 2 sesi Julai 2012. Data dianalisis secara statistik deskriptif dan statistik
inferensi dengan menggunakan perisian Statistical Packages for Social Science
Version 16 (SPSS ver 16). Penganalisisan data secara statistik desktiptif adalah untuk
mendapatkan kekerapan dan peratusan. Manakala bagi pengujian hipotesis pula,
ujian Mann-Whitney U dan Ujian Kruskal Wallis digunakan. Hasil kajian
menunjukkan tahap etika dan moral profesional dari aspek amalan profesional adalah
baik (skor=38.19%), dari aspek menyelesaikan masalah berkaitan etika adalah pada
tahap sederhana (skor= 42.36%) dan dari aspek sikap beretika adalah pada tahap
lemah (skor=32.64%). Di samping itu, hasil kajian juga menyatakan tidak terdapat
perbezaan yang signifikan tahap etika dan moral profesional antara pelajar lelaki dan
pelajar perempuan dan tidak terdapat perbezaan yang signifikan tahap etika dan
moral profesional pelajar yang berlainan pencapaian akademik. Berdasarkan dapatan
kajian ini, beberapa cadangan telah dikemukan untuk meningkatkan lagi tahap etika
dan moral profesional dalam kalangan guru pelatih
Education alignment
This essay reviews recent developments in embedding data
management and curation skills into information technology,
library and information science, and research-based
postgraduate courses in various national contexts. The essay
also investigates means of joining up formal education with
professional development training opportunities more
coherently. The potential for using professional internships as a
means of improving communication and understanding between
disciplines is also explored. A key aim of this essay is to identify
what level of complementarity is needed across various
disciplines to most effectively and efficiently support the entire
data curation lifecycle
Proposal for the creation of a national network of global studies high schools
This is a proposal to seek private and public funding to create a national network of global studies high schools (GSHS). The aim of a network of GSHSs is to enlarge the leadership corps of the next generation and to equip its members to address mounting global challenges to the security, material welfare, and freedoms of the American people, the citizens of open societies everywhere, and those who are striving to join their ranks.Title VI National Resource Center Grant (P015A060066)published or submitted for publicationnot peer reviewe
Pursuing an Export Culture Through the Teaching of Asian Languages in Australian Schools - the Gap between Theory, Practice and Policy Prescription
In February 1994, the Coalition of Australian Governments (COAG) endorsed a report it commissioned in December 1992 on a policy prescription for the study of Asian Languages and Cultures in Australian schools. The acceptance of this report, Asian Languages and Australia's Economic Future (1994), referred to as the Rudd Report after the Chair of the Working Group, was significant. It offered a 15-year plan that aimed to produce an Asia-literate generation fluent and familiar with "export" Asian languages and cultures. In particular, students would have the opportunity to commence the study of one of four priority "export" Asian languages, namely, Korean, Japanese, Indonesian, and Chinese, in primary school. However, the Rudd Reportâs emphasis on prioritising Asian languages for utilitarian reasons was opposed by those who advocated the study of European languages. This paper examines some of the assumptions about second language acquisition that the Rudd Report made and argues that greater emphasis should have been placed on addressing those theoretical and pedagogical issues significant to LOTE teaching in Australia
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