Academic literature on the topic 'Study and teaching (Secondary)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Study and teaching (Secondary)"

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Beisenherz, Paul C., and Marylou Dantonio. "Preparing secondary teachers to study science teaching." Journal of Science Teacher Education 2, no. 2 (June 1991): 40–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf02962851.

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Barad, Mr Sadashiv, and Prof Prasanta Kumar Acharya. "Attitude of Secondary School Students’ towards Smart Classroom Teaching: An Explanatory Study." International Journal of Research Publication and Reviews 5, no. 1 (January 24, 2024): 2162–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.55248/gengpi.5.0124.0348.

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Kothawade, Dr Pravin Laxman. "Correlative Study of Teaching Effectiveness & Job Satisfaction of Higher Secondary School Teachers." Indian Journal of Applied Research 4, no. 7 (October 1, 2011): 116–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.15373/2249555x/july2014/35.

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Das, Sijila, and Nalinilatha M. "A STUDY ON TEACHING COMPETENCY OF SECONDARY SCHOOL TEACHERS." International Journal of Research -GRANTHAALAYAH 5, no. 6 (June 30, 2017): 508–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.29121/granthaalayah.v5.i6.2017.2063.

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The role of teacher is proficient, be composed of academic, didactic and social roles. Academic roles cover teaching, instructing and supervisory characters and pedagogical characters include instructional, valuation and simplifying roles. The study aimed to identify the teaching competency of secondary school teachers. The investigator adopted survey method to study the teaching competency between teachers from selected government, private and aided school. For this study a sample of 300 school teachers from eight various schools which are situated in Palakkad district selected by the investigator using simple random sampling technique. The findings revealed that there is no significant difference towards teaching competency among selected secondary school teachers with respect to personal variables like Gender, Marital Status, Educational Qualification, Type of Management and Teaching experience. The findings of the study help to discover the teaching competency of secondary school teachers in the society.
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Mardiani, Ridha, and Sifa Prasasti. "Capturing Secondary English Teachers' Teaching Style in the 21st Century: A Case Study at one Secondary School." Biormatika : Jurnal ilmiah fakultas keguruan dan ilmu pendidikan 9, no. 1 (February 26, 2023): 9–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.35569/biormatika.v9i1.1507.

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The demand of teaching in the 21st century has centered on the four Cs, critical thinking, creativity, collaboration and communication. How English teachers become aware of these characteristics and adapt their teaching styles to this demand needs to be researched. Therefore, this study aimed to (1) investigate the types of two English teachers teaching styles and (2) find out whether the teaching styles are still relevant to the 21st century teaching. This study employed a qualitative case study with descriptive data analysis. The study was conducted in one secondary school in Cimahi with two English teachers as participants. Two techniques were used in obtaining the data: 1) classroom observation, and 2) teachers’ interviews. Data were analysed in the lense of teaching style types from Grasha (1996), then juxtapose with the characteristics of learning in 21st century. The findings showed that T1 applied formal authority teaching style, while T2 implemented personal model category. T2 is more adaptable to the challenges of English teaching in 21st century by facilitating the students to be more critical in thinking, discussing current learning issues, helping the students using learning media proficiently and solving learning problems by collaborating and co-creating in real and virtual world
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Zain, Azrani Mohd, Soaib Asimiran, Abu Bakar Razali, and Nor Aniza Ahmad. "The Implementation of Teaching Supervision in Excellence Cluster Secondary Schools and Daily Secondary Schools." International Journal of Human Resource Studies 11, no. 4S (November 25, 2021): 243. http://dx.doi.org/10.5296/ijhrs.v11i4s.19251.

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This study explores the implementation of teaching supervision in Excellence Cluster National Secondary Schools and Daily Secondary Schools. This study adopts the qualitative exploratory approach and involves eight study samples selected by purposive sampling. Methods of interview, observation and document analysis were used as the main tools in collecting the study data. The data collected were analysed using in-depth reading, open coding and axial coding. The results of the study as a whole show that the two categories of schools do not show differences in the characteristics studied in the implementation of teaching supervision in secondary schools. The study’s findings show that teaching supervision in Excellence Cluster Secondary Schools and Daily Secondary Schools is implemented through the devolution of power to middle leaders. Teaching supervision is guided by the teaching supervision form found in SKPMG2 standard 4. Teaching supervision in both school categories is done three times a year involving three phases. Moreover, teaching evaluation is done through direct observation in the classroom with full guidance on the teaching supervision form. The similarity in the implementation of teaching supervision is due to the same challenges faced by principals in both school categories, namely time constraints and administrative workload. The findings also show that supervisors use no specific approach for teaching supervision. The implication of this study is that it provides an insight into the implementation of teaching supervision by school administrators and that strengthening the skills and knowledge of middle leaders could improve teaching supervision effectiveness and positively impact the students, teachers and the school.
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Jena, Prakash C. "A Study of Techno-Pedagogical Competence among Secondary School Teachers." JOURNAL OF TEACHER EDUCATION AND RESEARCH 18, no. 02 (December 20, 2023): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.36268/jter/18201.

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To attain efficiency in every aspect of teaching, a teacher must have a high level of professional commitment. Teachers having appropriate techno-pedagogical skills can make teaching a more pleasurable experience without feeling much pressure. Techno-pedagogy has three ranges of information such as content, pedagogy and technology. Techno-pedagogical competence is teachers’ ability to use technology technology effectively in teaching. A teacher with competency in technology and pedagogy must know the existence, components, and capability of various technologies used in teaching and learning settings
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Kim, ShinYoung. "An Evaluation Study on Teaching Practicum in Secondary Schools." Korean Society for Educational Evaluation 31, no. 4 (December 30, 2018): 831–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.31158/jeev.2018.31.4.831.

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Bolden, Benjamin. "Teaching composing in secondary school: a case study analysis." British Journal of Music Education 26, no. 2 (June 3, 2009): 137–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0265051709008407.

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This article reports a case study of an experienced teacher of composing working with secondary school students in a large urban centre in Ontario, Canada. Results suggest authentic assignments connect student composing to the ‘real world’, and so have meaning and life beyond the music classroom. Teachers can facilitate the development of theoretical music knowledge by supporting and enhancing the experiential learning that students accomplish on their own, through composing. Offering suggestions for change to compositions-in-progress, and cultivating a classroom ethos where students exchange this service amongst themselves, serves to enhance composing potential. By helping students infuse their work with personal knowledge, experiences, and interests, teachers can increase students’ meaningful involvement in classroom composing.
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SUGIYAMA, Sarina, and Yukinori UTSUMI. "Study on STEM Teaching Materials in Australian Secondary Schools." Journal of Research in Science Education 63, no. 2 (November 30, 2022): 311–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.11639/sjst.22005.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Study and teaching (Secondary)"

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Nothdurft, Lyn M. "Teaching for autonomy in senior secondary mathematics." Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 2000. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/36626/1/36626_Digitised%20Thesis.pdf.

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Lau, Yin-har, and 劉燕霞. "Values teaching in Hong Kong junior secondary mathematics." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 1996. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31958734.

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Mabodoko, Mkhumbuzi Joe. "A phenomenological investigation into the lived experiences of grade 12 Physical Sciences learners from selected schools in the Western Cape Province." Thesis, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11838/2565.

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Thesis (MEd (Education))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2017.
This study aims to narrate the lived experiences of Grade 12 Physical Sciences learners. According to UMALUSI reports on National Senior Certificate (NSC) of 2011 and 2013, there seems to be a steady decrease in the number of learners writing Physical Sciences from 2008 to 2013. One of the aims of this study is to investigate why there is a steady decline in the number of learners choosing the subject and what their classroom experiences are. A related aim is to describe how these learners’ perceptions of their Physical Sciences educators affect their mental experiences in the subject. The study used phenomenology both as a research methodology as well as the underpinning theoretical framework. Twelve Grade 12 learners from 3 different schools in the Metro North Education District in Cape Town were chosen to participate in this research. The data were collected using two rounds of in-depth semi-structured interviews. The interviews were transcribed and explicated using Giorgi’s phenomenological method. The findings show that although Physical Sciences educators are trying to support their learners, they are failing to meet the expectations of the learners. These findings provide new insights into understanding the world of the learner better and that the recommendations could have transformative implications for curriculum planners, curriculum advisors and pedagogical strategies in how the subject is presented to learners.
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Kgwadi, Ntate Daniel. "Inexpensive conceptual experiments/demonstrations for physics teaching." Virtual Press, 1992. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/834635.

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Current research on cognitive learning is applied to the designing of several experiments for use in high school physical science and physics classes. The goal of the project was to use simple inexpensive materials to construct experiments and demonstrations that illustrate physics concepts and can easily be modeled using simple mathematics.Saline solutions are used to show simple examples of refraction and effects of a solution of varying density. The refractive index of two liquids is measured. The continuous refraction of a stratified fluid is demonstrated. Fluid flow is investigated. This leads to a simple experiment that leads to an easy way to measure the acceleration of gravity.The goal was met with several simple experiments using inexpensive materials, modeling techniques, and simple mathematics derivations were designed and tested. Data from the experiments gives results that are very close to the accepted values.
Department of Physics and Astronomy
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Pentland, Kathleen Ann. "Similarities and differences in perceptions held by secondary art teachers, secondary art students and animators on the role and character of animation in art education." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/28998.

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The purpose of this study was to discover similarities and differences in opinions held by secondary art teachers, secondary art students and animators on the role and character of animation in art education. The problem was to determine whether the relative neglect of animation as a part of the art curriculum has come about because the techniques and concepts associated with it are seen as difficult and/or unnecessary to implement by teachers; or whether students are unfamiliar and uninterested in animation as a field of study; or whether animation, in the opinion of professional animators, is not a suitable subject for study. The study was conducted with five secondary art teachers, nine secondary art students and three professional animators. Informants responded verbally to questions posed by the researcher. These responses were documented on a tape recorder and later transcribed for analysis. Responses from the informants generated data relating to five areas of animation: 1) defining animation, 2) potent images, 3) popular culture, 4) careers and 5) backgrounds. The study showed that although animation is a part of students1 popular culture and students are interested in it, teachers are not currently teaching it. Technical difficulties prevent them from doing so, despite the fact that they acknowledge animation as an important art form. The other findings in this study are that both teachers and students are often not consciously aware that they are watching animation; and that there are many misconceptions and prejudices associated with the medium. Implications for art education are discussed.
Education, Faculty of
Graduate
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Woodward, Robert. "Teaching television literacy in South African secondary schools." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/18321.

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Bibliography: pages 190-196.
This dissertation develops a syllabus for the study of television literacy in South African secondary schools. There are two natural divisions in the development of the thesis; the section which explores epistemological issues and the section which describes the strategic issues. The first section examines the nature of print literacy. This consists of four elements: mastering the basic language of the medium; being able to decode this language; using the medium for personal creative ends; and having the capacity for critical reflection. It is possible to talk in terms of a language of television and so this definition of literacy can be extended to television as well. There are three main areas for the study of television literacy. These are: the production techniques and effects of television; the conventional forms of the medium; and the nature of television as a mass medium. Once this has been established the dissertation explores the strategic issues of a methodology and areas of knowledge for teaching television literacy. Although there are many methodologies for the study of the mass media, the British Cultural Studies approach, together with Hall's three moments of encoding and decoding, seems to offer the methodology most suitable for teaching critical literacy. Within this theoretical framework it is possible to describe a syllabus for teaching television literacy. This syllabus involves studying the encoding and decoding of television messages within the context of the technical infrastructure of television; the internal and external relations of production, and the frameworks of knowledge which determine the form and content of television.
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Ceasar, Reginald Raymon. "Investigating an integrated teaching methodology as a means to prepare students for university studies in mathematics." Thesis, University of the Western Cape, 2005. http://etd.uwc.ac.za/index.php?module=etd&amp.

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A key issue for the success of students entering a first year mathematics course at tertiary level is whether or not they have an integrated understanding and view of the mathematical concepts acquired at school. Various integrated applications from first year mathematics suggest that a compartmentalised view of mathematics would be detrimental to any student's chances of passing mathematics at this level. This study tried to assess whether learners do have an integrated understanding of mathematics at grade 12 level.
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Langdon, Paul. "Built environment education : a curriculum paradigm." Thesis, McGill University, 1996. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=40377.

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The expansion of Built Environment Education into art programs is a relatively recent phenomenon but very timely. The need to develop in students an understanding of their living environment is urgent as they inherit a world that is experiencing the depletion of its resources and erosion of its ecological balance.
There is a fundamental need for more comprehensive curriculum planning in built environment education. The goal of this research is to develop a curriculum paradigm that can be used to create curriculum plans and instructional designs for built environment education as part of the art class in secondary schools.
The built environment content of this curriculum paradigm is based on the active investigation of the students' internal world with all its different perceptions and lived experience and how this affects their understanding of the greater built environment. Through a more intense investigation of the greater built environment, the students will then analyze the effect that this environment has on their own perceptions and living habits. By developing a more conscious understanding of the built environment, the students will be better equipped to make informed decisions on how to better adapt to or change their environment.
A guiding principle for the curriculum paradigm was to ensure that the introduction of a new subject area, such as built environment education, into art education curriculum involved processes of creativity and discovery along with self-reflective and participatory action for both the teacher and students. To be effective, the content material must not only be accessible through the traditional modes of academic literature research but also made valid through observation, reflection and interaction with the particular built environment of the teacher and students themselves.
Vigilance and active participation in the process of urban change are vital. These changes can only be effective and enduring if we acknowledge the capacity of the built environment to enrich our lives as private and communal beings.
One of the essential goals of this curriculum paradigm is to capture the excitement and potential that the built environment offers as a pervasive agent for understanding and celebrating constructed past, present and future.
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Taylor, Charles 1955. "Conceptual development in mechanics." Monash University, Faculty of Education, 2002. http://arrow.monash.edu.au/hdl/1959.1/8063.

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Chiarella, Andrew. "Statistical reasoning and scientific inquiry : statistics in the physical science classroom." Thesis, McGill University, 2001. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=33882.

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Teaching science using an inquiry approach is encouraged by several organisations responsible for defining teaching and learning guidelines in North America. However, using this approach can be difficult because of the complexity of inquiry. One source of difficulty is an inability to make sense of the data. Error variation, in particular, poses a significant barrier to the correct interpretation of data and therefore successful inquiry learning. A study was conducted to examine middle school students' ability to make sense of the data they collected in three related experiments. These data involved taking measurements of two continuous variables that were affected by error variation. The results indicated that students tended not to use abstract patterns to describe the data but rather used more local patterns that did not make use of the whole data set. However, many students also indicated an intuitive understanding that a greater amount of data could be used to generate results that are more accurate. This suggests a disparity between what the students understand about data and what they are capable of doing with data. Educational implications are that students may benefit from learning ideal patterns that can be compared to non-ideal data they collect.
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Books on the topic "Study and teaching (Secondary)"

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Savage, Jonathan, and Jayne Price. Teaching secondary music. London: SAGE, 2012.

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1944-, McDuell G. R., and Association for Science Education, eds. Teaching secondary chemistry. London: John Murray, 2000.

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1964-, Rock David, ed. Teaching secondary mathematics. 2nd ed. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum, 2001.

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Ross, Keith. Teaching secondary science. 2nd ed. London: David Fulton, 2004.

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David, Curtis. Teaching secondary English. Buckingham [England]: Open University Press, 1993.

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Parkinson, John. Improving secondary science teaching. London: RoutledgeFalmer, 2004.

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John, Parkinson. Improving Secondary Science Teaching. London: Taylor & Francis Inc, 2004.

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Wellington, J. J. Teaching and learning secondary science. 3rd ed. London : New York, NY: Routledge, 2008.

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Wellington, J. J. Teaching and learning secondary science. 3rd ed. London : New York, NY: Routledge, 2008.

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Wentworth, Donald R. Teaching strategies: International trade (secondary). New York, NY (432 Park Avenue S., New York 10016): Joint Council on Economic Education, 1988.

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Book chapters on the topic "Study and teaching (Secondary)"

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Whitehead, Jack, Jacqueline Delong, Marie Huxtable, Liz Campbell, Cathy Griffin, and Joy Mounter. "Self-Study in Elementary and Secondary Teaching." In International Handbook of Self-Study of Teaching and Teacher Education Practices, 1253–89. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-6880-6_42.

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Whitehead, Jack, Jacqueline Delong, Marie Huxtable, Liz Campbell, Cathy Griffin, and Joy Mounter. "Self-Study in Elementary and Secondary Teaching." In Springer International Handbooks of Education, 1–38. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-1710-1_42-1.

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Lewis, Catherine, Shelley Friedkin, Elizabeth Baker, and Rebecca Perry. "Learning from the Key Tasks of Lesson Study." In Constructing Knowledge for Teaching Secondary Mathematics, 161–76. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-09812-8_10.

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Ortiz, José, and Aldora Dos Santos. "Mathematical Modelling in Secondary Education: A Case Study." In International Perspectives on the Teaching and Learning of Mathematical Modelling, 127–35. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-0910-2_14.

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Guerra-Ramos, María Teresa, and José Baltazar García-Horta. "Scientific Skills in Secondary Education: A Study of Curriculum Expectations and Teachers’ Thinking." In Teaching Science with Context, 49–64. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-74036-2_4.

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Jarosz, Anna. "The Methodology of the Longitudinal Action-Research Study Among Secondary-School Learners." In Second Language Learning and Teaching, 73–95. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-13892-9_4.

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Ludwig, Matthias, and Xenia-Rosemarie Reit. "A Cross-Sectional Study About Modelling Competency in Secondary School." In International Perspectives on the Teaching and Learning of Mathematical Modelling, 327–37. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-6540-5_27.

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Sartatzemi, Maya, Vassilios Dagdilelis, and Katerina Kagani. "Teaching Programming with Robots: A Case Study on Greek Secondary Education." In Advances in Informatics, 502–12. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11573036_47.

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Bouchardon, Serge, and Magali Brunel. "Teaching Literary Interactive Digital Narratives in Secondary Education: A French Study." In Interactive Storytelling, 101–20. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-22298-6_7.

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Maguire, Meg. "Bullying and the Postgraduate Secondary School Trainee Teacher: an English case study." In The Journal of Education for Teaching at 40, 374–88. London: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315114309-25.

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Conference papers on the topic "Study and teaching (Secondary)"

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Eichler, Andreas. "Statistics teaching in German secondary high schools." In Joint ICMI/IASE Study: Teaching Statistics in School Mathematics. International Association for Statistical Education, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.52041/srap.08208.

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This report focuses on a research project that combines two aspects of a statistics curriculum related to teachers’ classroom practice and their students’ statistical knowledge. Data were collected with questionnaires. The development of the questionnaires derived from results of a qualitative research project will be sketched. Afterwards, some results will be discussed.
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Fields, Paul. "A case study in collaboration preparing secondary education teachers." In Joint ICMI/IASE Study: Teaching Statistics in School Mathematics. International Association for Statistical Education, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.52041/srap.08703.

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Although the mission of mathematics education departments or programs is to prepare the next generation of secondary education mathematics teachers, the question still remains, “Who should provide the training in statistics education for these future teachers?” We propose that statistics education should be provided by statisticians in collaboration with mathematics educators. We describe a model that has been designed recognizing how statistical reasoning differs from mathematical reasoning and implemented incorporating how classroom pedagogy is consequently affected.
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Arnold, Pip. "Developing new statistical content knowledge with secondary school mathematics teachers." In Joint ICMI/IASE Study: Teaching Statistics in School Mathematics. International Association for Statistical Education, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.52041/srap.08507.

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This paper describes a pilot study exploring the acquisition of new statistical content knowledge by teachers, which is now needed as a result of curriculum change. The teachers involved in the study formed a professional learning community where their learning needs with respect to changes in the statistics curriculum were identified and workshops presented to help meet these needs. In this paper teachers’ understanding of new statistical content knowledge and learning experiences are reported. Initial findings support previous research into how teachers learn and show that new content knowledge is not automatically gained through their participation in professional development.
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Borim da Silva, Cláudia, and Cileda de Queiroz e Silva Coutinho. "Reasoning about variation of a univariate distribution: a study with secondary mathematics teachers." In Joint ICMI/IASE Study: Teaching Statistics in School Mathematics. International Association for Statistical Education, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.52041/srap.08312.

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Variation is a fundamental concept in statistics literacy; standard deviation is part of compulsory school curriculum in Brazil. The objective of this study is to explore reasoning about variability by teachers, using the model proposed by Garfield (2002). The sample was composed of nine in-service mathematics teachers who took part in a teacher-training course on statistics. An experimental focus made it possible for them to experience all the steps of a statistics research project in which the course content was designed to expose the reasoning about variability employed by these teachers. We identified an oscillation between idiosyncratic and procedural levels, but no teacher showed complete reasoning about variation. The most prevalent reasoning employed was verbal, when teachers interpreted standard deviation as a measure of variation among observations.
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González, Teresa, and Jesús Pinto. "Conceptions of four pre-service teachers on graphical representation." In Joint ICMI/IASE Study: Teaching Statistics in School Mathematics. International Association for Statistical Education, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.52041/srap.08309.

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In this study we analyze the conceptions of future secondary school mathematics teachers on the teaching of statistics and their influence in classifying the problems in which graphical statistics play a role. For this purpose we present a case study of four students taking the course ‘Introduction to the Teaching of Mathematics’, who responded to different data collection instruments and were interviewed afterwards.
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Carranza, Pablo, and Alain Kuzniak. "Duality of probability and statistics teaching in French education." In Joint ICMI/IASE Study: Teaching Statistics in School Mathematics. International Association for Statistical Education, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.52041/srap.08206.

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In epistemological studies, two main interpretations of probabilities are the frequentist and the Bayesian. In this paper we first show that both interpretations are present in French Secondary schools, albeit the official curriculum only supports the frequentist approach. We then suggest a possible teaching situation to introduce teachers and students to the subjective-objective duality with some statistics training situations via the use of problem solving. We also give some characteristics and conditions useful to build situations fitted to this goal.
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Kim, Sang Cheol. "A STUDY ON SHIFTS OF OPEN SECONDARY SCHOOLS POLICY IN KOREA THROUGH HISTORICAL NEW INSTITUTIONALISM." In 8th Teaching & Education Conference, Vienna. International Institute of Social and Economic Sciences, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.20472/tec.2019.008.013.

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Groth, Randall. "Navigating layers of uncertainty in teaching statistics through case discussion." In Joint ICMI/IASE Study: Teaching Statistics in School Mathematics. International Association for Statistical Education, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.52041/srap.08509.

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The dynamics of an online case discussion among a group of fifteen prospective secondary mathematics teachers are described. During the discussion, participants offered and debated conjectures about general pedagogy, statistical content, and content-specific pedagogy. Their collective discourse showed that cases can help catalyze online conversations in which prospective teachers challenge one another’s claims and interpretations. It also suggested that discussion moderators may need to help participants consider factors in addition to teacher explanations when analyzing the path of students’ statistical learning. The paper closes by suggesting that a carefully-sequenced case-based curriculum may have the potential to build prospective teachers’ statistical knowledge and challenge persistent misconceptions.
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Meletiou-Mavrotheris, Maria, Efi Paparistodemou, Efstathios Mavrotheris, Pilar Azcárate, Anna Serradó, and Jose Cardeñoso. "Teachers’ professional development in statistics: The EarlyStatistics European project." In Joint ICMI/IASE Study: Teaching Statistics in School Mathematics. International Association for Statistical Education, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.52041/srap.08707.

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The EU-funded project EarlyStatistics aims to enhance the teaching and learning of early statistical reasoning in European schools by utilizing distance education to offer high-quality professional development experiences to teachers across Europe. The project consortium has developed and is currently pilot testing an online professional development course in statistics education targeting elementary and lower secondary school European teachers. The article provides an overview of the EarlyStatistics course design. It describes the pedagogical and didactical approach underlying EarlyStatistics and the course content and structure. It also outlines the quality assurance processes used in the project to avoid quality failures and the evaluation processes employed to assess the course effectiveness in achieving its objectives.
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Opolot-Okurut, Charles, Patrick Opyene-Eluk, and Margaret Mwanamoiza. "The current teaching of statistics in schools in Uganda." In Joint ICMI/IASE Study: Teaching Statistics in School Mathematics. International Association for Statistical Education, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.52041/srap.08603.

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This paper describes the current state of teaching statistics in Ugandan schools at different levels. Different emphasis is placed on teaching statistics at primary, secondary and tertiary levels. Official documents on curricula and examination make explicit statements on what statistical ideas and techniques are to be taught in schools and suggest useful skills and capabilities that school graduates should acquire, but little of the qualities are visible on the ground. There is little emphasis on the application of these techniques in the context of real life problems. Various challenges on the teaching of mathematics and statistics in schools and the school-university transition are identified, which include the curricula, the teaching force, and the nature of the students and the shortage of teaching resources. These challenges maybe addressed through synchronising students with varied mathematics school backgrounds in their study of statistics, policy adjustments and continuous professional development.
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Reports on the topic "Study and teaching (Secondary)"

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Klampe, Charlotte. The work values of secondary teachers : a comparative study by teaching assignment. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.3261.

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Моісеєнко, Наталя Володимирівна, Михайло Вікторович Моісеєнко, Владислав Сергійович Кузнецов, Богдан Альбертович Ростальний, and Арнольд Юхимович Ків. Teaching computer game development with Unity engine: a case study. CEUR Workshop Proceedings, September 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.31812/123456789/8486.

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Computer game development is a popular and engaging topic that can motivate students to learn various aspects of software engineering, such as design, programming, testing, and teamwork. However, there is a lack of research on how to effectively teach this topic in the context of secondary education. In this paper, we present our experience of designing and delivering a course on computer game development for master’s students in the specialty 014.09 Secondary education (Informatics) at the Kryvyi Rih State Pedagogical University. We describe the objectives, content, software tools, and teaching methods of the course, as well as the challenges and outcomes of its implementation. We also evaluate the course using a framework proposed by Ritzhaupt based on student feedback and learning outcomes. Our results show that the course was successful in achieving its goals and enhancing students’ knowledge and skills in game development. We also identify some areas for improvement and provide recommendations for future iterations of the course. We conclude that Unity Engine is a suitable platform for teaching game development in secondary education, as it offers a low barrier to entry, a rich set of features, a cross-platform compatibility, and a wide adoption in the game industry. We also argue that a team-based approach is beneficial for fostering collaboration and creativity among students.
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Cassity, Elizabeth, Jennie Chainey, Jacqueline Cheng, and Debbie Wong. Teacher development multi-year study series. Vanuatu: Interim report 2. Australian Council for Educational Research, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37517/978-1-74286-659-8.

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The Australian Government is supporting the Government of Vanuatu through its Vanuatu Education Support Program (VESP) to undertake long-term education reforms. A key focus of these reforms is the rollout of a new national curriculum in conjunction with the National Language Policy (2012), intended to improve teaching quality and student learning outcomes for students in the primary and early secondary years of education. Part of a multi-year study series, the Education Analytics Service (EAS) is investigating how the VESP is making a difference to these teaching and learning outcomes.
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Cassity, Elizabeth, Debbie Wong, Jevelin Wendiady, and Jennie Chainey. Teacher Development Multi-Year Study Series. Vanuatu: Final Report. Australian Council for Educational Research, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.37517/978-1-74286-729-8.

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The Australian Government is supporting the Government of Vanuatu through its Vanuatu Education Support Program (VESP) to undertake long-term education reforms. A key focus of these reforms is the rollout of a new national curriculum in conjunction with the National Language Policy (2012), intended to improve teaching quality and student learning outcomes for students in the primary and early secondary years of education. Part of a multi-year study series, the Education Analytics Service (EAS) is investigating how the VESP is making a difference to these teaching and learning outcomes. The new primary curriculum has been rolled out to schools in stages by year level, starting with Year 1 in 2016, and is accompanied by the distribution of teaching and learning materials and training. The new curriculum facilitates content uniformity and promotes pedagogical approaches, such as student-centred learning, that aim to transform teaching and learning. The National Language Policy is an important change implemented as part of the new curriculum, allowing agreed local languages to be used throughout the primary years as students make the transition to English or French (MoET, 2012). 1 Phases I and II of the VESP have been integral to the design and implementation of the new primary curriculum. In-service training modules have supported the curriculum rollout. VESP also supports the distribution and development of teaching and learning materials as part of the new curriculum. This study has provided the opportunity to investigate teaching quality and student learning outcomes in Vanuatu linked to the rollout of the national curriculum.
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Ruhalahti, Sanna, Ricardo Cuenca, and Sabine Rieble-Aubourg. Acquiring Socio-emotional Skills through Digital Badge-Driven Learning: A Case Study of Teachers Experiences in Barbados and Trinidad and Tobago. Inter-American Development Bank, April 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0004858.

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This case study aims to examine how Barbadian and Trinbagonian teachers experienced socio-emotional skill learning through a digital badge-driven learning process and what were teachers perceptions on how socio-emotional skill training benefitted teaching and learning. The studys focus is on the teachers reported professional development experiences. Participants (n148) in this study were from pre-primary, primary, and secondary schools. The case study used a mixed-method approach, including quantitative analysis of simple frequencies and qualitative inductive content analysis based on an online questionnaire. The results indicated that the teachers participating in the programme recognise the importance of socio-emotional aspects in the teaching and learning processes. They further revealed that socio-emotional skill training has the greatest impact on teacher-student interaction, and that such skills should be integrated into daily teaching activities to support students personal growth and learning in a school community. The study offers practical recommendations for teachers professional development in Barbados and Trinidad and Tobago.
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Rashevska, Natalya V., Serhiy O. Semerikov, Natalya O. Zinonos, Viktoriia V. Tkachuk, and Mariya P. Shyshkina. Using augmented reality tools in the teaching of two-dimensional plane geometry. [б. в.], November 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31812/123456789/4116.

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One of the successful components of quality assimilation of educational material and its further use in the learning process is visualization of material in secondary education institutions. Visualizations need the subjects of the school course, which are the most difficult to understand and essentially do not have at the beginning of the study of widespread practical application, mostly mathematical objects. That is why this study aimed to analyze mobile tools that can be used to visualize teaching geometry. The object of the study is the process of teaching geometry in the middle classes of secondary schools. The subject of the study is the use of augmented reality tools in teaching geometry to students in grades 7-9. The study used such research methods as the analysis and justification of the choice of mobile augmented reality for the study of mathematics. Analyses displayed two augmented reality tools: ArloonGeometry and Geometry AR. In order to gain geometry instruction’s academic success for the students, these tools can be used by teachers to visualize training material and create a problematic situation. The use of augmented reality means in the geometry lessons creates precisely such conditions for positive emotional interaction between the student and the teacher. It also provided support to reduce fear and anxiety attitudes towards geometry classes. The emotional component of learning creates the conditions for better memorization of the educational material, promotes their mathematical interest, realizes their creative potential, creates the conditions for finding different ways of solving geometric problems.
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Chioda, Laura, Paul Gertler, and Nicole Perales. Empowering Women: Teaching Leadership Skills to Youth in Uganda. Centre for Excellence and Development Impact and Learning (CEDIL), April 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.51744/crpp10.

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Empowering adolescent girls through education has become a priority among numerous stakeholder. However, recent evidence suggests that education alone may not be suffcient if women remain in a low-empowerment equilibrium and face internal constraints as they relate to aspirations, self-efficacy, leadership, and other life (soft) skills. We study the long-term impacts of a school-based upper-secondary intervention, the Educate! Experience, designed to enhance adolescents’ leadership and social entrepreneurship skills in Uganda. The program was implemented as a cluster randomized controlled trial (RCT) in 48 schools. Four years post-intervention, we document lasting impacts on a wide array of leadership and soft skills. Overall, Educate! graduates developed skills that are traditionally associated with greater focus on long-term goals; they reported being more in control of aspects of their lives (self-efficacy and grit) and more empowered to implement actions towards their plans. Young women in the treatment group are also more likely to complete secondary education, delay family formation, enroll in tertiary education, and pursue STEM and Business majors relative to their counterparts in the control group. The program yielded socially desirable and gender relevant spillovers, including expansions in women’s agency. Both male and female Educate! graduates embraced more progressive views concerning women’s standing in the society and women’s ability to exercise their agency to engage in the labor market and refuse sex. The incidence of intimate partner violence (IPV) also improved among Educate! graduates, as did their attitudes toward IPV social acceptability.
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Kramarenko, Tetiana H., Olha S. Pylypenko, and Vladimir I. Zaselskiy. Prospects of using the augmented reality application in STEM-based Mathematics teaching. [б. в.], February 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31812/123456789/3753.

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The purpose of the study is improving the methodology of teaching Mathematics using cloud technologies and augmented reality, analyzing the peculiarities of the augmented reality technology implementing in the educational process. Attention is paid to the study of adaptation of Augmented Reality technology implementing in teaching mathematical disciplines for students. The task of the study is to identify the problems requiring theoretical and experimental solutions. The object of the study is the process of teaching Mathematics in higher and secondary education institutions. The subject of the study is augmented reality technology in STEM-based Mathematics learning. In the result of the study an overview of modern augmented reality tools and their application practices was carried out. The peculiarities of the mobile application 3D Calculator with Augmented reality of Dynamic Mathematics GeoGebra system usage in Mathematics teaching are revealed.
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Taylor, Rosalyn. The Role of Culturally Responsive Pedagogy in the Preparation of Secondary Teacher Candidates for Successful Teaching of Diverse Learners: A Multiphase Mixed Methods Case Study. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.6139.

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10

Duong, Bich-Hang, Vu Dao, and Joan DeJaeghere. Complexities in Teaching Competencies: A Longitudinal Analysis of Vietnamese Teachers’ Sensemaking and Practices. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE), December 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-risewp_2022/119.

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Education systems globally are implementing competency-based education (CBE) reforms. Vietnam's leaders have also adopted CBE in a comprehensive reform of its education since the early 2010s. Although the global idea of CBE has been widely adopted and recontextualized in various educational contexts, implementing the reform at the local level (e.g., teachers in schools) is never a linear and simple process. Given the complicated sensemaking process of competency and competency teaching, this study explores how Vietnamese teachers made sense of key competencies and adapted their teaching to competency development. Informed by a sociocultural approach and the sensemaking perspective, this study draws from a dataset of 91 secondary teachers collected over three years (2017-2019), with a particular focus on longitudinal analysis of eight teachers. The findings shed light on teachers’ ambivalence as they made sense of the target competencies and aligned their practices with the new CBE reform. Based on their prior experiences and worldviews, teachers made sense of competencies as learning foundational knowledge and skills, in addition to developing good attitude, character, and morality. Over the years, they placed a stronger emphasis on the competencies’ process-orientation, integration, and real-life application toward whole-child development. Despite teacher sensemaking and changing practices, the performativity culture for high learning outcomes still prevailed, making teaching competencies for life a challenging task. Contributing to the CBE literature and practice, this study illustrates the long and complicated process through which teachers recontextualize the CBE pedagogy. It also suggests how teacher practices can be better supported to transition to the new CBE curriculum.
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