scholarly journals Approaching quality of global education practices through action research: A non-governmental development organization–university collaborative experience

Author(s):  
Alejandra Boni ◽  
Estela López Torrejón ◽  
Rodrigo Barahona

This article intends to describe a collaborative experience between a non-government development organization (NGDO) and a university in the area of development education. The experience has included the design, following an action research methodology, of a system of quality criteria for experiences promoted by the Network of Educators for Global Citizenship. The network comprises a wide range of people from Spain and is supported by the NGDO Intermón Oxfam. The experience has enabled stakeholders to acquire valuable knowledge, primarily in understanding educational practices and about how to tackle their analysis.

Author(s):  
April R. Biccum

The concept of “Global Citizenship” is enjoying increased currency in the public and academic domains. Conventionally associated with cosmopolitan political theory, it has moved into the public domain, marshaled by elite actors, international institutions, policy makers, nongovernmental organizations, and ordinary people. At the same time, scholarship on Global Citizenship has increased in volume in several domains (International Law, Political Theory, Citizenship Studies, Education, and Global Business), with the most substantial growth areas in Education and Political Science, specifically in International Relations and Political Theory. The public use of the concept is significant in light of what many scholars regard as a breakdown and reconfiguration of national citizenship in both theory and practice. The rise in its use is indicative of a more general change in the discourse on citizenship. It has become commonplace to offer globalization as a cause for these changes, citing increases in regular and irregular migration, economic and political dispossession owing to insertion in the global economy, the ceding of sovereignty to global governance, the pressure on policy caused by financial flows, and cross-border information-sharing and political mobilization made possible by information communications technologies (ICTs), insecurities caused by environmental degradation, political fragmentation, and inequality as key drivers of change. Global Citizenship is thus one among a string of adjectives attempting to characterize and conceptualize a transformative connection between globalization, political subjectivity, and affiliation. It is endorsed by elite global actors and the subject of an educational reform movement. Some scholarship observes empirical evidence of Global Citizenship, understood as active, socially and globally responsible political participation which contributes to global democracy, within global institutions, elites, and the marginalized themselves. Arguments for or against a cosmopolitan sensibility in political theory have been superseded by both the technological capability to make global personal legal recognition a possibility, and by the widespread endorsement of Global Citizenship among the Global Education Policy regime. In educational scholarship Global Citizenship is regarded as a form of contemporary political being that needs to be socially engineered to facilitate the spread of global democracy or the emergence of new political arrangements. Its increasing currency among a diverse range of actors has prompted a variety of attempts either to codify or to study the variety of usages in situ. As such the use of Global Citizenship speaks to a central methodological problem in the social sciences: how to fix key conceptual variables when the same concepts are a key aspect of the behavior of the actors being studied? As a concept, Global Citizenship is also intimately associated with other concepts and theoretical traditions, and is among the variety of terms used in recent years to try to reconceptualize changes it the international system. Theoretically it has complex connections to cosmopolitanism, liberalism, and republicanism; empirically it is the object of descriptive and normative scholarship. In the latter domain, two central cleavages repeat: the first is between those who see Global Citizenship as the redress for global injustices and the extension of global democracy, and those who see it as irredeemably capitalist and imperial; the second is between those who see evidence for Global Citizenship in the actions and behavior of a wide range of actors, and those who seek to socially engineer Global Citizenship through educational reform.


2011 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 142-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sue Duncan

The aim of this paper is to demonstrate that it is possible to make major changes in a primary school with limited investment. I wish to present the methods used in this process which enabled me to examine the existing catering, to identify, investigate and research the problems, to explore the literature available and to synthesise my results with authors in the area of my research. I wish to share my findings so that others may also benefit. The paper will contain a rigorous review of the literature on the Action Research methodology, the historical context of the school meal and the current national debate on the quality of school meals.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-60
Author(s):  
Agung Prihantoro ◽  
Fattah Hidayat

The paper explores the classroom action research as one of research methodologies. This kind of research methodology aims to solve learning and teaching problems and improve the quality of education. There are four models of classroom action research, namely Kurt Lewin model, Stephen Kemmis and Robyn McTaggart model, Margaret Riel model, and Robert P. Pelton model. To make the models easy to apply, the authors show an example of classroom action research framework.


2014 ◽  
Vol 12 (S1) ◽  
pp. S118-S120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rajeev Varshney ◽  
Mahendar Thudi ◽  
Hari Upadhyaya ◽  
Sangam Dwivedi ◽  
Sripada Udupa ◽  
...  

A chickpea simple sequence repeat (SSR) marker reference kit has been developed based on the genotyping of the global chickpea composite collection (3,000 accessions) with 35 SSR markers. The kit consists of three pools of chickpea accessions along with supporting documentation on the SSR markers, polymerase chain reaction and detection conditions, and the expected allele sizes for each of the 35 SSR loci. These markers were selected based on quality criteria, genome coverage and locus-specific information content. Other important SSR selection criteria were quality of amplification products, locus complexity, polymorphism information content and well-dispersed location on a chickpea genetic map. The developed SSR kit has a wide range of applications, especially for genetic diversity studies in chickpea. Using the markers and reference accessions in the kit, scientists in other laboratories will be able to compare the genotypic data that they obtain for their germplasm with that obtained using the global composite collection.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Tondeur ◽  
D Petko ◽  
R Christensen ◽  
K Drossel ◽  
Anne Starkey ◽  
...  

© 2021, Association for Educational Communications and Technology. In order to effectively use technology in education, appropriate conceptual understandings are needed to guide the integration process. Today, there is a wide range of conceptual models that are developed and used in research and/or practice focusing on educational technology integration. Conceptual models are of relevance as they can bridge theory with practical applications. Today, there are a wide range of conceptual models are developed and used in research and/or practice focusing on educational technology integration. These models can be seen as simplified versions of theories for practical application or as condensed wisdoms of practice that need to be further investigated theoretically and empirically. However, there is insufficient agreement on the dimensions and criteria used to judge the quality of conceptual models in educational technology. Therefore, the main goals of this article are to: (1) develop criteria to assess the quality and scope of conceptual models and (2) identify and compare exemplary models for technology integration in educational settings along with these quality criteria. The resulting five criteria from this investigation provide the means to effectively evaluate the quality and scope of conceptual models focused on technology integration while providing additional insight into applying these models in research and practice.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 124-130
Author(s):  
Agata Kielesińska ◽  
Miroslav Pristavka

Abstract In the paper, the problem and importance of maintaining an appropriate level of quality in relation to labor protection in the light of EU and national legal standards have been presented. Maintenance of machines and, consequently, stability in the field of process quality is identified on the basis of specific management requirements according the machinery safety in food industry, also with respect to the sphere of their construction, production, distribution, and in particular exploitation. The food industry on global markets is characterized by a large variety of consumers. Therefore, both needs and requirements can have a very wide range, also with regard to quality criteria, care for the natural environment, development of technologies as well as new products introduction. Trends defining dynamics and competition in the food industry include a large number of factors, that require effective management, e.g.: quality ingredients of foodstuffs, preparation of products, maximum product safety as a measure of quality, application of modern production technologies (fast filling and packaging installations). Care for the safety of machinery and equipment used in industry and food processing is a guarantee of manufacturing products of the highest nutritional quality for consumers. With regard to ensuring the safety and quality of food products, in the paper the general principles in risk assessment and the technical measures to improve the safety of machines during their use have been presented.


Author(s):  
В.В. Державина

. Повышение качества инклюзивного образования невозможно без трансформации существующей системы. Недостаток квалифицированных кадров в данной сфере и отсутствие личностно-ориентированного подхода к детям с ОВЗ предлагается решить за счет наставнической деятельности. Цель статьи заключается в исследовании особенностей наставнической деятельности в современной образовательной практике инклюзивного образования. В качестве методологии исследования при выявлении особенностей и видов наставничества в инклюзивной среде автором статьи осуществлены анализ и синтез существующих теорий и образовательных практик в наставнической и инклюзивной деятельности. Учитывая факторы быстрого эмоционального выгорания начинающих педагогов инклюзивного образования, автором предложены такие виды наставничества, как социально-воспитательное и учебно-методическое наставничество. Необходимость выделения данных видов наставничества продиктована особенностями существующей образовательной системы. Социально-воспитательное наставничество призвано раскрыть особенности инклюзивной среды, подготовить молодого педагога к работе в рамках усложнения дефектов детей с ОВЗ. Учебно-методическое наставничество направлено на нормативно-правовые, методико-дидактические аспекты преподавательской деятельности. Цель данного типа наставничества в осознании педагогом структуры нарушения ребенка с инвалидностью и в создании, исходя из этого, специальных условий. Статья предназначена для педагогов, работающих в рамках инклюзивного образования, учителей-дефектологов; она актуальна для широкого круга лиц. Improving the quality of inclusive education is impossible without transforming the existing system. The lack of qualified personnel in this field and the lack of a person-oriented approach to children with disabilities are proposed to be solved through mentoring. The purpose of the article is to study the features of mentoring in the modern educational practice of inclusive education. As a research methodology for identifying the features and types of mentoring in an inclusive environment, the author analyzes and synthesizes the existing theories and educational practices in mentoring and inclusive activities. Taking into account the factors of rapid emotional burnout of novice teachers of inclusive education, the author suggests such types of mentoring as social and educational and methodological mentoring. The need to identify these types of mentoring is caused by the features of the existing educational system. Social and educational mentoring is designed to reveal the features of an inclusive environment, prepare the young to work in the framework of complicating the defects of children with disabilities. Educational mentoring is aimed at regulatory, methodological and didactic aspects of teaching. The purpose of this type of mentoring is to make the teacher aware of the structure of the violation of a child with a disability and to create special conditions based on this. The article is intended for teachers working in the framework of inclusive education, teachers-defectologists and is relevant for a wide range of people.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Tondeur ◽  
D Petko ◽  
R Christensen ◽  
K Drossel ◽  
Anne Starkey ◽  
...  

© 2021, Association for Educational Communications and Technology. In order to effectively use technology in education, appropriate conceptual understandings are needed to guide the integration process. Today, there is a wide range of conceptual models that are developed and used in research and/or practice focusing on educational technology integration. Conceptual models are of relevance as they can bridge theory with practical applications. Today, there are a wide range of conceptual models are developed and used in research and/or practice focusing on educational technology integration. These models can be seen as simplified versions of theories for practical application or as condensed wisdoms of practice that need to be further investigated theoretically and empirically. However, there is insufficient agreement on the dimensions and criteria used to judge the quality of conceptual models in educational technology. Therefore, the main goals of this article are to: (1) develop criteria to assess the quality and scope of conceptual models and (2) identify and compare exemplary models for technology integration in educational settings along with these quality criteria. The resulting five criteria from this investigation provide the means to effectively evaluate the quality and scope of conceptual models focused on technology integration while providing additional insight into applying these models in research and practice.


Author(s):  
Anna Mravcová

Global citizenship is still a relatively new concept concerned mainly with the growing prominence of global and development education issues. The importance of this phenomenon is increasing in the area of education, which must be able to respond to the interconnection and interdependency of the current world. There is an effort to support implementation of global issues in the educational process at all its levels, including higher education where the unsatisfactory situation is most visible. Global citizenship is one of the fundamental pillars of global education. Its aim is to show citizenship from a new perspective. It provides information and knowledge about the modern diversified world where each diversity has its own place and importance, and about the problems that have been expanding worldwide. It should bring people to the understanding that they are part of a global entity and so everyone should accept their place and role in it. For this purpose people have to be educated. Therefore, global citizenship education should form an integral part of educational processes at all levels today. The aim of this paper is to present the current situation of global citizenship education and the process of implementation and emphasizing global citizenship at Slovak University of Agriculture, mainly through the critical analyses of the current situation in this field in Slovakia, and selected activities.


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