11 research outputs found

    Implementing a new mathematics curriculum in England: district Research Lesson Study as a driver for student learning, teacher learning and professional dialogue.

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    Against a backdrop of a transformation in teacher professional development and learning and state school organisation in England this century, this chapter describes a project which harnessed six cycles of Research Lesson Study at school and district level over two years to tailor the implementation of a new statutory curriculum in England to address the professional development needs of teachers and classroom learning needs of London students. It also reports the findings of research carried out during the project into how these teachers learned and developed this new curricular expertise and practice- knowledge through lesson study dialogues that supported student learning. It concludes by proposing future directions for teacher professional learning research and practice

    The mediating role of a teacher’s use of semiotic resources in pupils’ early algebraic reasoning

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    The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11858-012-0421-2.This paper focuses on the semiotic resources used by an experienced sixth-grade teacher when her pupils are working on a mathematical task involving written text and the two inscriptions of figure and diagram. Socio-cultural analytical constructs such as semiotic bundle, space of joint action and togethering are applied in order to enable and frame the collective activity of the teacher and pupils. Four extracts from different situations in the classroom illustrate the important role of both teacher gestures and pupil gestures, interacting with other modalities such as speech and inscription, in the process of making sense of pupils’ appropriation of coordinating two dimensions in a diagram. It is argued that the nature of the mathematical task is an important entry point into early algebraic reasoning. The study emphasises the mediating role of the dynamics of semiotic bundles produced in teacher–pupil dialogues as a promising way to address the fundamental relationships between mathematics, pupil and teacher in a classroom context in order to provoke pupil involvement and engagement when experiencing mathematics

    Psychotherapy Research Needs Theory. Outline for an Epistemology of the Clinical Exchange

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    This paper provides an analysis of a basic assumption grounding the clinical research: the ontological autonomy of psychotherapy—based on the idea that the clinical exchange is sufficiently distinguished from other social objects (i.e. exchange between teacher and pupils, or between buyer and seller, or interaction during dinner, and so forth). A criticism of such an assumption is discussed together with the proposal of a different epistemological interpretation, based on the distinction between communicative dynamics and the process of psychotherapy— psychotherapy is a goal-oriented process based on the general dynamics of human communication. Theoretical and methodological implications are drawn from such a view: It allows further sources of knowledge to be integrated within clinical research (i.e. those coming from other domains of analysis of human communication); it also enables a more abstract definition of the psychotherapy process to be developed, leading to innovative views of classical critical issues, like the specific-nonspecific debate. The final part of the paper is devoted to presenting a model of human communication—the Semiotic Dialogical Dialectic Theory–which is meant as the framework for the analysis of psychotherapy

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    Maligne und benigne lobuläre und duktale Veränderungen mit Umgebungsreaktionen

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