Lean Teaching Experiences in Universidade NOVA de Lisboa and the TRIZ-LEAN Model

Author(s):  
Helena V. G. Navas ◽  
V. Cruz Machado
Keyword(s):  
2020 ◽  
Vol 42 (5) ◽  
pp. 729-758
Author(s):  
Ji Sue Lee ◽  
Hee Ho Park ◽  
Kwang Suk Lim ◽  
Hee Jae Lee ◽  
Suk-Jin Ha

Journal ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alejandra Carolina Silva Ronc

“Education as it always should have been”. That was the motto of the summer school where I taught anthropology for a three-week programme aimed secondary school students. The implications of this slogan went far beyond cognitive goals, aiming at the very acquisition of socioemotional skills and, in my case, the transformation of our idea of humanity and our role within society as human beings. This paper will try to discuss some of the teaching experiences of this period to better understand the nature of an education for uncertain (but hopeful) times and the value of methodologies that address uncertainty as prelude for a personal and social growth.


Author(s):  
Courtney Crappell

For teachers of piano pedagogy, this book provides tools to transform college piano students into professional piano teachers. It is not simply a book about teaching piano—instead, it is a book about how piano students learn to teach. It helps teachers develop pedagogy course curricula, design and facilitate practicum-teaching experiences, and guide research projects in piano pedagogy. After an introduction to the history of the domain, to its related topics, and to course materials, the book gives unique perspectives on how pedagogy teachers can introduce students to course concepts and then how to help them put those concepts into practice. To facilitate easy integration into the curriculum, it provides example classroom exercises and assignments throughout the text, which are designed to help students understand and practice the related topics and skills.


Author(s):  
Ismaila Temitayo Sanusi ◽  
Sunday Adewale Olaleye ◽  
Oluwaseun Alexander Dada
Keyword(s):  

1967 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 58-61 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard S. Knauel ◽  
Robert C. Wittrup
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
pp. 161189442110186
Author(s):  
Anna Kozlova

The article analyses the survival of the children’s centres, Artek and Orlyonok, during the post-socialist transformation. It is based on 50 interviews with employees who worked there starting in the late-Soviet era. Artek and Orlyonok were exemplary children’s camps, subordinated to the Central Committee of the Komsomol. Since the early 1960s, they have functioned as schools for distinguished teenagers who were considered ‘good examples’ for other children. In this article, I have made an ethnographic analysis of Artek and Orlyonok employees’ late-Soviet experiences. This analysis shows how the agency of Soviet counsellors and camp directors became a creative interpretation of the governmental order to raise the children as active Soviet citizens. Camp educators transformed it in line with the idea to base their agency on ‘common human values’, which was spread in the Soviet educational field in the post-Stalin era. As a result, the Soviet teaching experiences gained in these education centres were heterogeneous. When a child-centred paradigm was later introduced to the post-Soviet educational system, the camps adopted the most applicable practices from their Soviet experiences.


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