“You Can be Whatever You Want to be!”: Transforming Teacher Practices to Support Girls’ STEM Engagement

Author(s):  
Tanya Stephenson ◽  
Marilyn Fleer ◽  
Glykeria Fragkiadaki ◽  
Prabhat Rai
Author(s):  
Peter Geller ◽  
Jaymie Stein ◽  
Daniel Du ◽  
Jason R. Webb ◽  
Zack Lieberman ◽  
...  

AbstractCurrent educational presentation software used in STEM education fail to maximize student engagement and comprehension. Mixed reality presentation is one specific type of digital presentation software that has shown to significantly improve student engagement and comprehension. In this paper, we describe a pilot study on adult scientists which evaluates the usage of an integrated mixed reality presentation software in the Zyndo platform as an enhanced alternative to Adobe PDFs. A group of adult scientists (N = 20), with higher education of at least a bachelor’s degree, from an academic research center at Harvard Medical School were randomized and asked to read two articles (one on Immunology and the other on Bioengineering) presented through either the mixed reality presentation or PDFs. Our results indicate that participants improved in nearly all metrics for engagement (ranging from + 4 to 51% improvement depending on engagement metric and subject matter) when viewing the mixed reality presentation over the traditional PDFs for both articles. Specifically, the participants demonstrated improved comprehension of the scientific content and time spent viewing the presentation in a content-dependent manner. Therefore, 3D mixed reality environments can potentially be applied to enhance student learning in STEM fields, particularly Biomedical Engineering in both on-line and in person classroom settings.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 112
Author(s):  
Aridah Aridah ◽  
Haryanto Atmowardoyo ◽  
Kisman Salija

The discrepancy between students’ preferences and teacher practices for feedback on writing has created difficulty on the side of teachers and confusion on the side of the students. What teachers believe and practice as effective feedback for students may not be the one that students perceive as useful and effective feedback for them. This paper investigates the types of written feedback preferred by the students and the types of feedback provided by the teachers on students’ writing. This study employed a survey design which involved 54 students and 22 teachers using convenience sampling technique. The instrument used in collecting data was a questionnaire in the form of Feedback Scale. The results showed that there were some points of compatibility between students’ preferences and teachers’ practices and some other points were incompatible. The data showed that both students and teachers preferred to have or to give direct feedback but the data also indicated that students liked to have more direct feedback than the teacher could provide. It was also found that the teachers provided more indirect feedback than the students expected to have. The students also preferred unfocused feedback to focused feedback. The findings of the study have crucial implications on writing instruction. There is a need to design writing instructions which accommodate both teachers’ practices and students’ preferences for written feddback. Based on the profile of students’ preference and teachers’ practices, a model of feedback provision in teaching writing is proposed. This model is called preference-based feedback on writing instruction.


2012 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 16-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michaelene M. Ostrosky ◽  
Chryso Mouzourou ◽  
Natalie Danner ◽  
Hasan Y. Zaghlawan
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 403-419 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina Elde Mølstad ◽  
Tine S. Prøitz
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 1882 (1) ◽  
pp. 012148
Author(s):  
H H Azman ◽  
M N Maniyam ◽  
N S Yaacob ◽  
N M Nawawi ◽  
N N A Samah ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Hasaa Abdel Latif Al - Ghihab

The study aimed to identify the practice of kindergarten teachers in providing، nutritional knowledge of the kindergarten child during the ، meal time. To achieve this، a descriptive method was used. The questionnaire was used as data collection tool. The sample consisted of (148) In the analysis of the data، the results of the study showed that the tool obtained an average of (2. 96 from 4. 00) and at the field level Axis (concept of nutritional knowledge (2. 89 of 4. 00)، followed by the difficulty of kindergarten teachers during the meal time، at an average (3. 49 of 4. 00)، both of which are rated (high)، while very high on (kindergarten teacher practices during the meal time at an average of (2. 50 of 4. 00) The teachers also showed that the meals attended by the children are healthy and that there is awareness among the families about the type of food provided to the children. .  


2014 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lyla Alsalim

Teaching is generally considered a complex practice that involves the constant and dynamic interaction between the teacher, the students and the subject matter. One of the main goals of most education reform initiatives has been to change teachers’ classroom practices. Most recent reform curricula focus on highlighting teacher practices that promote and evoke students’ understanding alongside the changes in content (Tirosh & Graeber, 2003). Changes to a teacher’s role that are included in the education reform movement call for more research in order to understand and theorise teachers’ classroom practices. In this paper, I will present patterns-of-participation (PoP) as a promising framework that aims to understand the role of the teacher for emerging classroom practices. Instead of relying on a traditional approach to understanding classroom practices by analysing teachers’ beliefs, this framework applies a participatory approach to look for patterns in the participation of individual teachers in many social practices at the school and in the classroom. Some of these practices are directly related to the teaching and learning of mathematics while others are not. And some of them relate to communities that are not actually present in the classroom or at the school. PoP views teachers’ social interaction in a certain community as a piece which is influenced by other pieces of social interactions. In every interaction, the ‘pieces’ shape a ‘fluctuating pattern' that shows the shifting impact of different, previous practices and the dynamic relations between them (Skott, 2010; 2011; 2013).


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