241,218 research outputs found
Using The Internet In Teaching Algebra To Middle School Students: A Study Of Teacher Perspectives And Attitudes
During the past decades, technological resources have been improved to support the teaching of mathematics. While the improvement of technological resources, the World Wide Web provides teachers and students many resources that engage students in rich mathematics experiences. There are a vast number of educational resources available through the Internet for students and teachers, which should be implemented in the classroom to support and improve algebra instructions. This study seeks to identify the extent of the middle school teacherâs awareness of using the Internet to teach and develop studentsâ learning of algebra. The participantâs teachers in this study are teaching in schools located in a rural Appalachian region of a Midwestern state in the United States. The study found that the Internetâs function in the algebra classroom within this particular group of middle childhood teachers are used for purposes that do not contribute to algebra instruction.
Basic Skills for Complex Lives: Designs for Learning in the Community College
Outlines the Strengthening Pre-collegiate Education in Community Colleges project's activities, results, and lessons learned, including five principles for teaching underprepared students. Recommends an institution-wide focus and faculty collaboration
Development of bambangan (Mangifera pajang) carbonated drink
Mangifera pajang Kostermans or bambangan is a popular fruit among Sabahan due
to its health and economic values. However, the fruit is not fully commercialized since it is
usually been used as traditional cuisine by local people. Thus, development of bambangan fruit
into carbonated drink was conducted to produce new product concept. The objectives of this
study were to conceptualize, formulate, evaluate consumer acceptance, and determine
physicochemical properties and nutritional composition of the accepted product. Method used
in conceptualising the product was based on questionnaire. The consumer acceptance was
evaluated based on descriptive and affective tests with four product formulations tested. The
physicochemical properties on carbon dioxide volume, colour, pH, total acidity, total soluble
solid (TSS) and viscosity were highlighted, meanwhile nutritional composition on fat, protein,
carbohydrates and energy content were determined. About 77% respondents gave positive
feedback, and 69% respondents decided this product is within their budget. The formulation of
5% bambangan pulp, 70% water, 25% sugar and 0.2% citric acid was highly accepted in
descriptive and affective tests with 4.4 and 6.39 mean scores, respectively. The
physicochemical properties and nutritional composition of the acceptance product were in
optimum value except for colour, total acidity and TSS. Overall, this study showed that the
product has high potential to be commercialized as new product concept, and heritage of
indigenous people can be preserved when this fruit is known regionally
Recommended from our members
National models for CPD: The challenges of C21st knowledge management
Teacher quality is the most critical factor in improving educational outcomes (McKinsey, 2007). This paper proposes analytical frameworks for national models for continuing professional development (CPD). It examines the unacknowledged problem of the quality and extent of the evidence base underpinning teachersâ CPD. In the 21C through the use of ICTs the research and evidence base underpinning educational practice surely could be made accessible to all teachers and all providers of initial teacher training and CPD. The evidence base available internationally appears to be patchy. Yet this is taken for granted in the literature, and is rarely if ever acknowledged in the discourse about school and system improvement. This lack of research based professional knowledge, is a particular problem for subject specialist issues and is further compounded by the fact that research published in journals is not generally designed around questions teachers want answered. In short, the knowledge that is produced and the management of it within the education sector is lacking systemic organisation and dissemination. The paper outlines opportunities which exist for low cost interlinked national and international e-infrastructures to be developed to support knowledge sharing, but such collaboration may pose an insurmountable challenge for national and international agencies
New trends in education: the use of ICT in different ways
In the 21st century and due to the exponential growth of the Internet and Information and Communication
Technologies (ICT), people live in a technological age, in all areas and in all contexts, we have daily
contact with technology, with access to Information. This dynamic requires a constant update of the
services and technological tools that change the method that we study, work, communicate and socialize
on an unprecedented scale. These constant changes force everyone, regardless of age, gender or
profession, to possess a range of functional and critical thinking skills, such as information literacy,
media literacy and technological literacy. The evolution of technologies, forces the promoters of
education, to always be aware of the changes that society is introducing outside the classroom. Today,
students don't have the same pattern as before, regardless of age, they are very active and are no
longer the same introverted child who studied a few years ago in the classroom. According to this,
students are eager for different forms of motivation inside and outside the classroom, they need the
learning and teaching process to move along with changes in society and ICT. To ensure the success
of today's students, it is important to provide them with the technological skills to make the correct use
of ICTs, to perform tasks essential to their learning process, such as researching and selecting
information, creating content, information sharing, use of collaboration tools or environment simulation
tools. The main objective of this chapter is to show how ICT tools that can be used in educational
environments to help students, helping them develop key skills in their training process, is also relevant
to show how these tools can help teachers achieve these goals in daily activities with their students
Managing educational leadership and online teaching in a diverse technological society
This paper consisted of an overview of leadership and its definition and\ud
a discussion of who and what surrounds the leader in a diverse society of everchanging technology as he/she make decisions that impact the students, teachers\ud
and staff of school districts and other educational institutions. The discussion\ud
supported the notion espoused by Thomas Freeman that the world is indeed truly\ud
flat and getting smaller through instant communication. Leaders interested in\ud
applying the best practices in communicating are now able to utilize the internet in\ud
ways that can save time, energy and money. Selected technology and best\ud
practices from various disciplines were outlined as examples of how leaders can\ud
bring about positive change and focus on cutting edge techniques for classroom\ud
and business applications. Methods were discussed in the use of an analysis of a\ud
business or corporation, to the use of bringing experts to students, university\ud
professors, managers and chief executive officers via the internet and other\ud
electronic devices. The author included several examples of best practices for use\ud
with the adult or P-12 learners in the classroom, or managers of a Fortune 500\ud
organization. Examples of how to conduct live, online international connections\ud
were presented in detail. Key concepts such as defining leadership, who controls\ud
leaders, and the managing leadership in a diverse society as contradiction were\ud
discussed
To what extent could Business Process Management Suite (BPMS) contribute positively to e-learning?
The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the effectiveness of Business Process Management Suite (BPMS) as a teaching-learning technology with the lens of the conversational framework (Laurillard 2002). The paper hopes to link commercial technological development with research in teaching-learning technologies and bring about better collaboration between the two. This theoretical evaluation aims to address the preliminary question - could educational communities adopt BPMS, a tool that has evolved from the commercial world to further enhance teaching-learning process? The scope of this paper and its evaluative study will be limited to using the conversational framework. The paper will briefly discuss BPMS and its relation to business process and business process management to provide a brief introduction. The main section of this paper will be a detailed analysis of key BPMS components against the conversational framework. The conclusion will provide a summary of the effectiveness of BPMS as a teaching-learning tool based on the requirements set out by the conversational framework. The results of the conclusion could lead to further empirical research on BPMS as a teaching-learning technology tool and may be the opportunity to request funding to carry out a proof of concept
Managing evolution and change in web-based teaching and learning environments
The state of the art in information technology and educational technologies is evolving constantly.
Courses taught are subject to constant change from organisational and subject-specific reasons. Evolution
and change affect educators and developers of computer-based teaching and learning environments alike â
both often being unprepared to respond effectively. A large number of educational systems are designed
and developed without change and evolution in mind. We will present our approach to the design and
maintenance of these systems in rapidly evolving environments and illustrate the consequences of evolution
and change for these systems and for the educators and developers responsible for their implementation and
deployment. We discuss various factors of change, illustrated by a Web-based virtual course, with the
objective of raising an awareness of this issue of evolution and change in computer-supported teaching and
learning environments. This discussion leads towards the establishment of a development and management
framework for teaching and learning systems
Recommended from our members
Sustainable eLearning in a Changing Landscape: A Scoping Study (SeLScope)
The report begins by exploring the concept of sustainable e-learning - defining it and establishing its characteristics in the context of Higher Education. To ensure a sound and systematic process, the review is informed by a five-phase methodological framework for scoping reviews by Arksey and O'Malley (2005). Examples and perspectives on the concept of sustainable e-learning are summarised and key factors impacting on sustainability are abstracted. highlights potential gaps and suggests directions for further research on the topic
- âŠ