1,636 research outputs found
Conceptualizing a Personalized Identity-Focused Approach to Teacher Professional Development: Postulating the Realization of Reform
Identity structure analysis (ISA) reveals core and conflicted identity constructs, long-term aspirant goals for behaviours, behaviours one wishes to avoid, potential for behaviour change when moving from one life domain to another, and people that are the subject of identity conflicts. In this work, ISA is applied to a teacherâs identity to form a framework to guide professional development. A rationale for use of the ISA framework is developed that connects it to calls for reform in professional development.
Keywords: teacher identity; identity structure analysis; professional development; mentoring; teacher education
Lâanalyse de structure identitaire (ASI) rĂ©vĂšle des constructions identitaires fondamentales et divergentes; des objectifs Ă long-terme relatifs au comportement; des comportements que lâindividu dĂ©sire Ă©viter; le potentiel pour un changement comportemental lors du mouvement dâune sphĂšre de la vie Ă une autre; et des gens qui vivent des conflits identitaires. Cet article porte sur lâapplication de lâASI Ă lâidentitĂ© dâun enseignant de sorte Ă fournir un cadre pour guider le dĂ©veloppement professionnel. Nous dĂ©veloppons un motif pour lâutilisation du cadre dâASI qui le lie aux demandes pour des rĂ©formes dans le domaine du dĂ©veloppement professionnel.
Mots clĂ©s: identitĂ© dâenseignant; analyse de structure identitaire; dĂ©veloppement professionnel; mentorat; formation des enseignant
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https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-vp/5794/thumbnail.jp
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Understanding the coach-coachee-client relationship: a conceptual framework for executive coaching
Objectives: There is a need for a more comprehensive understanding of how coaching processes psychologically operate. This paper presents the findings from a study aimed to characterise the coaching process experience and to identify how specific experiences contribute to coaching outcomes. Design: A qualitative design was adopted. Data was analysed by Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (Smith, 2008). Method: Data was collected from 10 participants, this included coaches (N = 4), coachees (N = 5) and one commissioner, three times along the coaching process. A total of 30 interviews were undertaken. Findings: Coaching outcomes can be generated by three essential mechanisms: Projection of Future Self; Perspectivation of Present Self; and Confirmation of Past/Present Self. Each mechanismâs name represents a particular effect on coacheeâs self and may evolve diverse coaching behaviours. Although they all can be actively managed to generate sustainability of outcomes, each mechanism tends to contribute differently to that sustainability. Conclusion: The study provides a comprehensive understanding of the different methodological and experiential ingredients of the coaching process and its implications. While most coaching research is focused on identifying coaching results based on a retrospective analysis, this is one of the first studies accompanying longitudinally the coaching process and capturing an integrative understanding of its dynamics. Moreover, the study provides evidence of how coaching can differently deliver sustainable outcomes and be used as a valuable developmental tool in organisations. The study contributes to our understanding of theory building and raises questions for further research on the uniqueness of coaching interventions
Why Did Cornwall Vote for Brexit? Assessing the Implications for EU Structural Funding Programmes
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via the DOI in this record.In the 2016 referendum on UK EU membership, regions which benefitted from high levels of structural
funds voted to leave the EU. This was unexpected given the Europeanisation processes expected of the
funds in terms of identity and loyalty. Within this case study of Cornwall, we use qualitative methods
to assess why this happened and the implications for future structural funding programmes. We find
that the rationale behind the Brexit vote was less about the EU as an institution, but was a reflection
of the deep levels of uncertainty, insecurity, and frustration that people felt about governance
decisions, scarce resources, and the future for themselves and their children. This created a situation
where people looked to the nation state for support and security, and were fearful of post-national
forms of identification and governance. Consequently, EU support is imagined as being organised by
âelitesâ, for elites, rather than benefitting local communities.
We suggest breaking down some of the barriers that have arisen through a participatory approach to
development decision-making, greater flexibility to regional priorities, and forms of funding that
individuals might apply to â such as a skills pot to facilitate easier access to further education and
training.Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC
Multi-year salutary effects of windstorm and fire on river cane
Canebrakes are monodominant stands of cane (Arundinaria gigantea [Walter] Muhl.), a bamboo native to and once prominent in the southeastern USA. Canebrakes were important wildlife habitat within the bottomland hardwood forest ecosystem. They have been reduced in areal coverage by an estimated 98% since European settlement due to land conversion and the drastic alteration of disturbance regimes in their floodplain habitat. Ongoing canebrake restoration efforts are hampered by incomplete understanding of the role of natural disturbance in cane ecology. We used a large tornado blow down and multiple prescribed fires to quantify the response of cane to the sequential disturbances of windstorm and fire in the Tensas Watershed of northeastern Louisiana using number and condition of bamboo stems (culms) as response variables. We hypothesized that culms would be more abundant in burned than in unburned stands and that culm populations in burned stands would be younger than in unburned stands. In this study, conducted four years post fire, effects of both windstorm and burning were additive and beneficial. Results indicate that periodic aboveground disturbance has three salutary effects on cane ramet demography: 1) clonal growth following disturbances more than compensates for any culms killed; 2) the cohort of new culms is younger than the culms they replace; and 3) disturbance appears to inoculate some cane stands for several years against local die-offs. Fire is a valuable tool for canebrake management. By periodically resetting cane stands, fires and other disturbances may have played a key role in canebrake formation and persistence over time
The influence of engine demand map design on vehicle perceived performance
This paper reports a study into the influence of the steady state engine demand map on perceived performance. Analysis of the results of a survey of 24 C and C/D class 1600cc cars is presented and shows that the primary parameters are mean wide-open throttle acceleration, throttle progression, and part-throttle rate of change of acceleration with engine speed. These results are used to design a factorial experiment to investigate these parameters using an electronic throttle system. This approach eliminates problems of inter-vehicle variations in noise, comfort or general image, allowing subjective ratings to be attributed directly to the demand map changes. The results are discussed in terms of the significant main effects and interactions and as response surfaces, from which optimum setups can be determined
Closing the gap for drowning prevention across Europe
[No abstract available
Groundcover community assembly in high-diversity pine savannas: seed arrival and fire-generated environmental filtering
Environmental filteringâabiotic and biotic constraints on the demographic performance of individual organismsâis a widespread mechanism of selection in communities. A given individual is âfiltered outâ (i.e., selectively removed) when environmental conditions or disturbances like fires preclude its survival and reproduction. Although interactions between these filters and dispersal from the regional species pool are thought to determine much about species composition locally, there have been relatively few studies of dispersal Ă filtering interactions in species-rich communities and fewer still where fire is also a primary selective agent. We experimentally manipulated dispersal and filtering by fire (pre-fire fuel loads and post-fire ash) in species-rich groundcover communities of the longleaf pine ecosystem. We tested four predictions: (1) That species richness would increase with biologically realistic dispersal (seed addition); (2) that the immediate effect of increased fuels in burned communities would be to decrease species richness, whereas the longer-term effects of increased fuels would be to open recruitment opportunities in the groundcover, increase species richness, and increase individual performance (growth) of immigrating species; (3) that adding ash would increase species richness; and (4) that increased dispersal would generate larger increases in species richness in plots with increased fuels compared to plots with decreased fuels. We found that dispersal interacted with complex fire-generated filtering during and after fires. Dispersal increased species richness more in burned communities with increased and decreased fuels compared to burned controls. Moreover, individuals of immigrating species generally grew to larger sizes in burned communities with increased fuels compared to burned controls. In contrast to dispersal and fuels, ash had no effect on species richness directly or in combination with other treatments. We conclude that filtering occurs both during fires and in the post-fire environment and that these influences interact with dispersal such that the consequences are only fully revealed when all are considered in combination. Our experiment highlights the importance of considering the dynamic interplay of dispersal and selection in the assembly of species-rich communities
Stoics against stoics in Cudworth's "A Treatise of Freewill"
In his 'A Treatise of Freewill', Ralph Cudworth argues against Stoic determinism by drawing on what he takes to be other concepts found in Stoicism, notably the claim that some things are âup to usâ and that these things are the product of our choice. These concepts are central to the late Stoic Epictetus and it appears at first glance as if Cudworth is opposing late Stoic voluntarism against early Stoic determinism. This paper argues that in fact, despite his claim to be drawing on Stoic doctrine, Cudworth uses these terms with a meaning first articulated only later, by the Peripatetic commentator Alexander of Aphrodisias
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