Neither ‘Reading’ nor ‘Writing’: The History of Practical Work in Media Education

1995 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 77-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian Sefton‐Green
Author(s):  
V. A. Vecherkin ◽  
S. N. Gisak ◽  
V. A. Ptitsyn ◽  
N. V. Glagolev ◽  
D. A. Baranov ◽  
...  

The article considers the history of the pediatric surgery department of N. N. Burdenko Voronezh State Medical University. The department was founded in 1947. Based on the results of the research undertaken by associates of the department by now, 3 manuals for doctors and students and 12 collections of scientifc papers were issued and 12 investor’s certifcates were obtained. The role of the Student’s scientifc circle was noted: the students struck 5 gold medals during the last fve years. During the last 8 years, the scientifc circle was considered the best and was awarded a gold medal and frstclass honours degree. A close interrelation between the research work of associates of the pediatric surgery department and practical work of pediatric surgeons from the Central Black Earth region was underlined.


John Locke and Robert Boyle first met at some time before May 1660 but do not seem to have become closely acquainted until 1664 when they were both in Oxford. 1 Locke’s notebooks for 1664-67 contain many short entries ending ‘Mr.Boyle’, which appear to be details that Locke received from Boyle personally. 2 In his work, Boyle relied on various assistants, quite apart from craftsmen like glass-blowers and blacksmiths, who ranged from his amanuensis, needed because of his poor sight, and his servants who watched experiments through the night, to skilled collaborators like Robert Hooke. 3 In addition, Boyle was in touch with independent workers, notably Richard Lower whose name appears in Locke’s notebooks some time before Boyle’s; 4 and Dewhurst suggested that Locke was also a member of this group. 5 It is certainly true that Locke provided Boyle with barometric and meteorological readings about this time and that 21 of his headings for the ‘chymicall Analysis’ of blood are related to Boyle’s 46 headings in his Memoirs for the Natural History of Human Blood (1683/4). 6 But it is going too far to conclude from Locke’s practical notes on blood that he was then acting as Boyle’s assistant. Those notes come from Bodleian MS. Locke f.25. What they describe are not ‘experiments’ done by Locke, Boyle or anyone else. They are a record of the practical work Locke did when he attended a course of lectures in 1666 which were given by Peter Stahl, the German chemist brought by Boyle to Oxford in 1659.


2020 ◽  
Vol 75 ◽  
pp. 01001
Author(s):  
Hanna Tsvietkova ◽  
Olena Beskorsa ◽  
Liudmyla Pryimenko

The article focuses on a holistic retrospective analysis of the history of media education in Canada, which has been done for the first time. Based on the theoretical findings of Canadian media educators, the authors substantiate the periodization, identify the trends, the periodization criteria and three main periods of establishment and development of Canadian media education in the context of sociopolitical and socio-pedagogical determinants. The historical preconditions of the development of media education in Canada are revealed. The essence of media education is regarded as a theory study and development of practical skills for mastering modern mass media, which is considered as part of a specific, autonomous field of knowledge in pedagogical theory and practice. The authors determine that media education is associated with all types of media, which include the set of information and communication tools that each person interacts with in everyday life: printed (newspapers, magazines), auditive (radio, audio) and screen or audiovisual media (cinema, TV, video, multimedia, Internet, etc.); they identify the essential characteristics of media education, determine that media education is the form of media literacy and media culture of an individual; as well as they find out, characterize and systematize the gaps in media education in Canada. The article presents the evolution of media education programs, techniques as well as media education associations. In the context of studying the experience of Canadian media theorists and practitioners, the necessity of applying positive Canadian experience to solve the problems of implementing media education in Ukraine in terms of reforming and humanizing its educational space has been substantiated.


2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tetsuo Isozaki

Practical work, including laboratory work, has been part of science education for more than a century, and is considered an essential component of science teaching. This paper uses historical insights to demonstrate that there is a pressing need to critically examine the role of laboratory work in science teaching. The author performed a historical case study of laboratory work in Japan from the 1880s to the 1930s. Given that the West, particularly the United Kingdom and United States, has influenced Japanese education since Japan began to modernize in the late 19th century, this study refers to the history of those nations with respect to laboratory work, and compares their educational system to that of Japan. The author concludes that practical work (including laboratory work) should be considered a means to an end - not an end in itself - with teachers sufficiently educated/trained in both science and pedagogy, functioning as facilitators who provide students with learning support. Without enthusiastic and knowledgeable teachers, the benefits of quality facilities and an established system cannot be fully realized. Thus, in conducting practical work, emphasis ought to be placed on its purpose and what students can learn from the experience - not on merely the actions they perform in conducting such work.


Author(s):  
Katarina Lang

In the present work a try is made to make the governmentality of Foucault accessible for analytics in the area of media education. The centre of attention is the (juvenile) smoking prevention. In an introducing part the concept of governmentality is placed and systematically envolved in accordance with the history of Foucaults work. An aggravation of the contemporary neoliberal conditions and the rationalities established in the health-care sector follows. That the 'history of smoking' features a genealogical dimension of the continously proceeding problematization reveals alongside the question of repressive mechanisms of power about smoking. With the tools developed during the process of this presentation it is conclusively expected to systematically take two smoking prevention documents of the Federal Centre for Health Education into account to illustrate the power of the medial staging as a melange of truth, subjectivization and self-leadership. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird der Versuch unternommen, den Foucaultschen Gouvernementalitätsansatz für Analytiken im Feld der  Medienpädagogik aufzuschließen. Im Fokus der Darstellung steht dabei der Bereich der Raucherprävention. In einem einführenden Teil wird das Konzept der Gouvernementalität innerhalb der Werkgeschichte Foucaults platziert und systematisch entfaltet. Hieran schließt sich eine Zuspitzung auf die gegenwärtigen neoliberalen Verhältnisse und  die im  Gesundheitsbereich etablierten Rationalitäten an. Dass die Geschichte des Rauchens eine genealogische Dimension der stetig voranschreitenden Problematisierung aufweist, wird entlang der Frage  nach repressiven Machtmechanismen um das Rauchen deutlich gemacht. Mit den so im Verlauf der Darstellung entwickelten Werkzeugen werden abschließend zwei an Jugendliche gerichtete Raucherpräventionsschriften der Bundeszentrale für gesundheitliche Aufklärung systematisch in den Blick genommen, um so die Macht der medialen Inszenierung als Melange von Wahrheit, Subjektivierung und Selbstführung aufzuzeigen.


Comunicar ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 14 (28) ◽  
pp. 45-49
Author(s):  
Michel Clarembeaux

This paper gives a brief account of the history of media education in the French Community of Belgium using as a starting point the political, media and educational contexts. Afterwards, it explains media education in the Internet and media society and the integration of the press in the field of learning. Finally, the paper describes the educational challenges of reality-television, cinema and advertising. Partiendo del contexto político, escolar y mediático de la educación en los medios en la comunidad francesa de Bélgica, este texto hace un breve recorrido de la situación del país tanto anterior a 1995, como del organigrama que surge a partir de 1995 con la creación de un Consejo y tres Centros de Recursos. Posteriormente se conceptualiza la educación en los medios en el marco de la sociedad Internet y multimedia y la integración de la prensa escrita en la enseñanza. Se describe también la tele-realidad y sus retos pedagógicos, así como la educación en el cine y la educación crítica de la publicidad.


Author(s):  
Владимир Помелов ◽  
◽  
Людмила Сахарова ◽  
Василий Сахаров ◽  
◽  
...  

The article reveals the pedagogical and methodological activities of the famous Vyatka priest and teacher-methodologist N.N. Blinov, who clearly showed himself to be a priest, a practical teacher, a methodologist of primary education, a local historian and a researcher of the history of the Udmurt people. The theoretical and practical work of N. N. Blinov is a bright page in the history of the Vyatka region.


Author(s):  
Ivanna Makukh-Fedorkova

The era of audiovisual culture began more than a hundred years ago with the advent of cinema, and is associated with a special language that underlies non-verbal communication processes. Today, screen influence on humans is dominant, as the generation for which computer is an integral part of everyday life has grown. In recent years, non-verbal language around the world has been a major tool in the fight for influence over human consciousness and intelligence. Formation of basic concepts of media education, which later developed into an international pedagogical movement, in a number of western countries (Great Britain, France, Germany) began in the 60’s and 70’s of the XX century. In Canada, as in most highly developed countries (USA, UK, France, Australia), the history of media education began to emerge from cinematographic material. The concept of screen education was formed by the British Society for Education in Film (SEFT), initiated by a group of enthusiastic educators in 1950. In the second half of the twentieth century, due to the intensive development of television, the initial term “film teaching” was transformed into “screen education”. The high intensity of students’ contact with new audiovisual media has become a subject of pedagogical excitement. There was a problem adjusting your children’s audience and media. The most progressive Canadian educators, who have recognized the futility of trying to differentiate students from the growing impact of TV and cinema, have begun introducing a special course in Screen Arts. The use of teachers of the rich potential of new audiovisual media has greatly optimized the learning process itself, the use of films in the classroom has become increasingly motivated. At the end of 1968, an assistant position was created at the Ontario Department of Education, which coordinated work in the “onscreen education” field. It is worth noting that media education in Canada developed under the influence of English media pedagogy. The first developments in the study of “screen education” were proposed in 1968 by British Professor A. Hodgkinson. Canadian institutions are actively implementing media education programs, as the development of e-learning is linked to the hope of solving a number of socio-economic problems. In particular, raising the general education level of the population, expanding access to higher levels of education, meeting the needs for higher education, organizing regular training of specialists in various fields. After all, on the way of building an e-learning system, countries need to solve a set of complex technological problems to ensure the functioning of an extensive network of training centers, quality control of the educational process, training of teaching staff and other problems. Today, it is safe to say that Canada’s media education is on the rise and occupies a leading position in the world. Thus, at the beginning of the 21st century, Canada’s media education reached a level of mass development, based on serious theoretical and methodological developments. Moreover, Canada remains the world leader in higher education and spends at least $ 25 billion on its universities annually. Only the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia are the biggest competitors in this area.


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