scholarly journals TECHNICAL PHENOMENA AS A MEANS OF FORMATION TECHNICAL LITERACY OF SCHOOLCHILDREN

Author(s):  
Анатолій Іванчук ◽  
Анатолій Матвійчук

The article substantiates the expediency of using narratives about technical phenomena in mechanical transmissions in the profile education of high school students as a means of forming technical literacy. Based on the methodology of the activity approach and the narrative way of interpreting technical knowledge, it was found that the operation of semantic information of technical content is the main condition for its perception and understanding by students. It was found that the stimulation of meaning making contributes to the activation of the humanitarian potential of technical knowledge. To master the knowledge of technical phenomena by high school students, it is necessary to choose the subject of interpretation, to include it in specific story lines. Having understood the explanation of the plot lines, students will realize the value-semantic aspects and study a fragment of the modern technosphere. It is established that the narrative explanation of technical phenomena in mechanical transmissions as the main elements of drives of working machines is organically intertwined in the context of the cultural concept of technological education of schoolchildren. The main learning outcomes of students will include experience of cognitive activity, experience of reproductive activity, experience of creative activity, experience of emotional and value relations. Emotional-value relations are acquired using reflection. The attitude of students to the object of knowledge is one of the main conditions for the transformation of technical knowledge into beliefs, which serve as a guide in the perception of the phenomena of the technosphere and contribute to the solution of technical problems. Technical ideas, beliefs and values will form the basis of technical literacy of high school students.

2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (2) ◽  
pp. 192-204
Author(s):  
Tatiana N. Tokareva

The article examines the problem of foreign high school students living in the territory of the Russian Federation, a stable system of axiological norms and spiritual and moral guidelines of Russian society, the inviolability and correctness of which is proven by centuries-old experience, which captured the best examples of science and art. The need for foreign learners to study works of educational nature is substantiated. The process of understanding Russian culture by foreign students is analyzed as an important part of the educational process, including the study of the rules of communication in a non-native language, as well as the development of communicative competencies focused on the complex and multi-level development of the Russian language. The problem of conformity of artistic texts designed for studying foreign learners, the functions of the best examples of classical literature, is actualized. Understanding the cultural component of education is seen as a way of incorporating foreign citizens into the moral foundations of Russian society, built on the principles of humanism. It is stated that the presence of a role model for the emerging person, that can also be a character of the work as well, that meets the requirements of the best representatives of Russian society to a strong, strong-willed, educated, humane, selfless love for the Fatherland of the personality. The emergence of diverse personalities of foreign high school students is analyzed in the direction of not only education, but also a better understanding of the peculiarities of the Russian language, as well as the cultural identity of Russia by introducing the best examples of art texts. The methodological basis of the work was formed as a result of the complex use of techniques of dialectic, synergies, historical and literary method, content analysis of scientific and literary sources.


1970 ◽  
pp. 76
Author(s):  
Palmyre Pierroux

This article investigates how high school students master and appropriate concepts in aesthetics and modern art in art history classes and in art museums. It is argued that distinctions between schools and museums as places of formal and informal learning, respectively, are not useful analytical categories for understanding complex meaning making processes. 


2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 87-104
Author(s):  
Andrea Del Carmen Vázquez

This essay explores a Latinx, queer and trans, student’s resistance to a gender-neutral restroom at a high school in an agricultural community of the Central Coast of California. Through a close reading of a field note, I analyze Joaquin’s narrative of refusal to demonstrate how queer and trans youth engage in an active subjectivity (Lugones, 2003). For decolonial philosopher María Lugones (2003), an active subjectivity is the process through which oppressed communities become conscious and critical by engaging in a meaning-making process centered on their socialites. I argue that queer and trans high school students’ active subjectivity is in relation to their embodied knowledges and geographies. The body and space are both critical in learning to think in community and reflexively. Joaquin’s refusal of the restroom becomes useful in understanding how queer and trans youth tell narratives of their self, grounded in a social history capable of alternating the story told about space and place.


10.12737/1995 ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (6) ◽  
pp. 47-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
��������� ◽  
Galina Makotrova

In this article the use of electronic resources in compliance with the didactic goals of developing research potential in high school students is represented. The implementation of these goals is aimed at achieving subjectivity and subjectness which represent the integral process of developing the personality in students. The idea of subjectivity is implemented when electronic resources enable the student to plan his or her own development in education connected with an informed choice and coordination of different offers of educational services to build his or her own educational programme. The idea of subjectness means that using the digital resources and technologies, the student acquires experience of intellectual self-organization which enables him or her to achieve a higher degree of proactiveness and independence. The research potential can be evaluated with the help of digital tools as follows: referring to the past � as a general resource of natural and acquired research aptitude which ensures their further development; referring to the present � as research aptitude which is in demand in definite cultural and creative circumstances; referring to the future as �proximal development zone�, as research aptitude which, for a number of reasons, has not been used and is expected to be developed in future in the course of cognitive activity. The author presents pedagogical characteristics of digital tools which are used to estimate the dynamics of the development of personal research aptitude from the point of view of culture genesis, as well as the manifestations of the emotional and cognitive components of cognitive activity and to ensure comprehension by high school students of their self-development in the process of gaining new knowledge.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 28-33
Author(s):  
Nina Savel'eva ◽  
Evgenia Serova

The relevance of this problem research is conditioned on the intellectually trained teaching staff shortage and the complexity of organizing pre-professional teacher training in high school. The purpose of this article is to develop and test the program named "Intellect" for students of pedagogical specialized classes. The content of the program has an intellectual, emotional-value, communicative holistic impact on students: The leading research method for this problem was the questionnaire survey, that was conducted in 114 high school students and 13 teachers, which allowed to identify positive dynamics in high school students attitude to modern education and pedagogical activity. The article proves that an expanded psychological and pedagogical intelligence-based education can be the constructing successful life trajectories foundation for high school students The presented in the article research results indicate that the «Intellect» program implementation give rise to intellectual (cognitive) activity of high school students; pedagogical education professional preferences cultivation; activation of essential in the pedagogical field personal qualities of high school students; students self-development. Practical relevance of the research results is the ability to use the presented program to organize pedagogical oriented specialized classes.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonia Sanchez ◽  
S. Khalid Latif ◽  
Elias Faraclas ◽  
Catherine Koehler ◽  
Kazem Kazerounian

2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 231 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Lin Lubold ◽  
Sarah Forbes ◽  
Ian Stevenson

Written fluency and fluency building activities have been shown to promote linguistic choice and student voice development, increased ability to express ideas using complex grammatical structures and greater intrinsic motivation in English language learners. Since the 1970’s, process-oriented writing has been emphasized, yielding an amplified focus on meaning of student content over linguistic form precision. Current research of writing fluency must delve deeper into questions of student ownership of topic and the outcomes for low-risk activities that support fluency practice and encourage confidence building in students. The purpose of this replication study is to further explore previous findings on the effects of topic selection on writing fluency for high school English as foreign language learners. Building off of the work of Bonzo (2008), this study focused on a timed, non-graded writing activity administered to groups of Japanese engineering students in three departments: mechanical, electrical, and global engineering. The six subsequent samples for each participating student were analyzed using online text-analysis for total and unique word counts, providing data used to perform a t-test. Responses to bi-lingual student questionnaires, with prompts on self-perceived written English ability, self-efficacy and strategies for success while writing, provided additional insight into the facets of fluency. The results of these writing sessions offer both confirmation of and contrast to Bonzo’s original work, demonstrate increased student meaning making, and support the use of free writing activities in English language classrooms as a means by which student written fluency may be improved.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (191) ◽  
pp. 185-190
Author(s):  
Vasily Chubar ◽  

The article is devoted to the problem of improving the formation of key competencies among high school students in the process of specialized training in production technologies. In the search for ways to improve the formation of key competencies among high school students in the process of specialized training in production technologies, it was believed that the effectiveness of their formation would increase if: – During the educational and cognitive process, activity-oriented and personal-oriented approaches will be consistently applied by implementing creative projects that require the application of knowledge and skills obtained in studying school subjects at various stages of education and integrating them into the project process; – the formation process will correspond to the specifics of the creative process for assimilating the methods of scientific and practical search for new, original solutions; – positive motivation will be provided regarding independent creative activity when performing individual and group creative projects. Based on the results of the study of the problem, conditions are proposed that will contribute to improving the effectiveness of the formation of key competencies in teaching high school students in the process of specialized training in production technologies. The directions of realization of components of key competencies in training in the process of implementation of creative projects are proposed by logical, consistent, methodically justified use of teaching methods and technologies at the same time at different levels of complexity taking into account professional intentions and cognitive capabilities of high school students. The study examined only a separate aspect of the problem of improving the formation of key competencies in education in high school students in the process of specialized technology training. Further work is desirable to look for ways to improve the cognitive activities of high school students in learning competencies, in particular: – use of project activity as one of the leading factors, which activates intellectual and innovative cognitive activity; – optimal use of an active and personal-oriented approach in the educational and educational process; – Links of project activities with the social production sector, depending on the type of production activities and, accordingly, vocational education of high school students.


Author(s):  
М. Kоzyr ◽  
O. Pavlyuk

of the nature of its origin and development, its structure, types and levels. The theoretical approaches, main characteristics and peculiarities of formation of motivation in senior pupils are determined. The role of information and communication technologies in raising the level of motivation in high school students in mathematics lessons is considered. During the study, we used the following basic methods: — theoretical: analysis of philosophical, psychological, and pedagogical literature with the aim of studying, generalization and systematization of scientific materials on the research problem; the selection of theoretical substantiation of the content, forms, methods, means of forming the motivation of senior pupils in the process of application of ICT; — empirical: observation, testing, questioning, studying and generalization of modern pedagogical experience in order to substantiate the effectiveness of tested content, forms, methods and means of forming motivation of senior pupils in the process of ICT application. The methodical recommendations developed and tested in the process of experimental work demonstrate the following possibilities of the use of ICT as a means of development of students’ motivation: formation of cognitive motivation, excitation of interest in the study of an object; development of visual thinking; formation of the ability to create, apply and transform patterns and schemes for solving educational and cognitive tasks; organization of independent search cognitive and research activity of students, their activity on independent use of ICT for the search and learning of educational information; implementation of differentiated control, self-control and correction of mathematical knowledge and skills of students. As a result of an experimental study with a sufficient degree of probability, confirmed by a statistical evaluation of the results, it is found that the implementation of the identified in the study of organizational and pedagogical conditions and methods of using ICT as a means of activating cognitive activity of students contributes to a significant increase in the level of motivation students in the study of mathematics.


2006 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 70
Author(s):  
Stephanie Jane Hall

A review of: Walter, Virginia A. and Cindy Mediavilla. "Teens Are from Neptune, Librarians Are from Pluto: An Analysis of Online Reference Transactions.” Library Trends 54.2 (2005): 209-227. Objective – To evaluate the effectiveness of an online reference and referral service for students (primarily those in middle school and high school) seeking homework help. Design – Analysis of 114 transcripts of reference transactions. Setting – A centralized homework reference and tutor referral service provided on behalf of the California State Library by the Metropolitan Cooperative Library System. Subjects – Virtual reference librarians at a large urban library system and middle and high school students in California. Methods – One hundred fourteen virtual reference transactions recorded between October 12 and November 8, 2003 were evaluated against the Reference and User Services Association’s (RUSA) “Guidelines for Behavioral Performance of Reference and Information Service Providers.” Secondly, the transcripts were subjected to discourse analysis. Main results – Performance of virtual reference librarians vis-à-vis RUSA guidelines In the majority of cases, there was some evidence that librarians communicated clearly (110 out of 114 transactions). In 78 cases, it appeared that a librarian was available quickly, and in 92 of the transactions a friendly greeting was given. What was striking, however, was that in a clear majority of cases, some of the classic reference interview strategies were not employed. In 100 or more cases each, the following strategies were not observed: repeating or paraphrasing the question; helping to interpret the question; verifying mutual understanding; asking if the question has been answered; asking if the student needs more information. Furthermore, in 75 cases librarians did not probe for further information to clarify the question, while in 87 cases they did not check that information had been clearly understood. Possibly related to these findings, the researchers felt that the transcripts revealed “a conviction that homework questions are not the proper content for reference transactions” (222). In addition, librarians were found to be frequently too quick to refer students to a tutor, when a query might have been better answered as a reference question. Findings of discourse analysis In general, the virtual reference librarians used impersonal, formal language to “reinforce the professional’s superior position vis-à-vis the help-seeker” (217). There were repeated attempts by the students to interject a lighter or warmer tone (using humour, emoticons, informal language, introducing a personal note, etc.). These attempts were rarely reciprocated, with librarians continuing to use impersonal language, including stock messages such as: “we are experiencing a very busy time right now,” (217); or, “I am going to send you a page which will give you some help with your homework. After we disconnect this session, click on this link and follow the instructions to be connected with a tutor. Please do not click on any links on this page until after we have disconnected” (217). In several cases librarians were preoccupied with defining their roles—for example, specifying that they could give reference help but not advice. In all, the distancing mechanisms used by librarians, combined with occasional inaccurate referrals and technical problems with the software, were seen to create an enormous potential for frustration on the part of the student. Conclusions – The most important implication of the study was that librarians and students were worlds (or planets) apart in their approach to the reference interaction. While “teens attempted to create meaning by recreating the chat discourse environment in which they were most at home”, librarians “tried to create meaning in a parallel discourse environment that duplicated as much as possible the standard impersonal protocols of a face-to-face reference counter” (223). One suggested way to alleviate the disconnect between librarians and students was to involve students in the planning of the services. For now, however, the authors conclude that “teens are from Neptune, librarians are from Pluto. Better services would result if they could meet somewhere closer together” (224).


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