scholarly journals Higher apprenticeship as educational strategy after the pandemic

2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 347-372
Author(s):  
Paolo Bertuletti ◽  
Andrea Potestio

This article analyzes strengths and weaknesses of the higher apprenticeship programme carried out by the University of Bergamo within the bachelor’s degree in educational sciences since the academic year 2017/2018. Starting from the voices of apprentices and tutors, a qualitative research tries to find out whether higher apprenticeship may be a good teaching strategy to enhance the principle of alternation between theory and practice in tertiary education.   L’apprendistato di terzo livello come strategia formativa per le società dopo il Covid.   L’articolo esplora punti di forza e criticità dei percorsi di apprendistato di terzo livello avviati dall’Università di Bergamo a partire dall’a.a. 2017/2018 nell’ambito del corso di laurea triennale in Scienze dell’educazione. La ricerca qualitativa consente, grazie alle testimonianze di apprendisti e tutor, di descrivere situazioni ed episodi di apprendimento e di mettere in evidenza come l’apprendistato di terzo livello, almeno potenzialmente, possa costituire un’ottima strategia didattica per realizzare il principio dell’alternanza formativa negli studi terziari.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammed A. A. Farrah

This study aims to analyze the experiences and perceptions of a group of graduate students regarding an MA Technology in Language Learning and Teaching Course at Hebron University, Palestine. Specifically, the study addressed the aspects of the course that were perceived as the most useful for them and how graduate students perceive their professional growth as a result of the course. The study took place during the second semester of the academic year 2016/2017. The researcher employed a qualitative research to achieve the aims of the study. The participants wrote reflective journals and described how the course integrated theory and practice. The results revealed that the students benefited from the different elements of the course. Particularly, they benefited from the practical projects. The experience helped them in their professional development. Finally, the students offered a number of suggestions for improving the course. The researcher concluded with a set of recommendations.


Gerundium ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 161-170
Author(s):  
István Komlósi

The first 150 years of Agricultural Tertiary Education in Debrecen. The Georgikon in Keszthely was founded in 1797 as the first one in the line of subsequent agricultural tertiary institutions and was followed by one in Magyaróvár in 1818. It was fifty years later – that is one and a half centuries ago – that the National Higher Institution of Agriculture opened its gates in Debrecen. The speech that opened the first academic year at the new agricultural higher school was delivered by the then director Péter Papi Balogh and it has been preserved for later generations. On 5 September 2018, a hundred and fifty years later, Dean István Komlósi had the honour to recall the first 150 years of agricultural tertiary education in Debrecen. His speech is published in full length by Gerundium, the journal devoted to papers on the history of the University of Debrecen.


Author(s):  
Gordon Shawanda ◽  
Cynthia Wesley-Esquimaux

This paper evolved, maybe ‘was birthed’ is an even better term given the circumstances, out of an engagement process that brought Gordon Shawanda and several university students together over an academic year. Gordon was invited to attend my Aboriginal Spirituality class at the University of Toronto in September 2009. He liked being there so much that he came each week, sitting through lectures, reading the materials, and participating with unerring grace in the many discussions over the entire year. We were all touched by his presence, his quiet dignity, and his deep interest in our academic learning and sharing experience. Gordon embodies what modern education is trying to get right, the bringing together of theory and practice, and the unveiling of the kind of humanity that can bring Indigenous Knowledge alive for all young people everywhere. Gordon was inspired by their enthusiastic receiving of his words to write down his story. This paper is his first real attempt to express the pain and healing he has experienced over his adulthood. I am honoured and humbled to (gently) edit this work for publication. This is a story that comes directly from the heart and soul of one man, but is the lived experience of many of our people who attended Indian Residential Schools in Canada. It is organized into four parts.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 36
Author(s):  
Catarina F. Castro ◽  
Manuel R. Barbosa

Students are formal learners seeking documented and recognized tertiary education. Student mobility in higher education can be inward (into a country) or outward (out of a country). Both types of mobility are educational processes offering different experiences and resulting in different outcomes. At least half of MIEM (Integrated Mechanical Engineering master degree of the Faculty of Engineering of the University of Porto, Porto, Portugal) students are driven to seek different institutions and different societies outside their known environment. During the academic year 2019/20 one hundred and forty MIEM students were engaged on exchange mobility projects distributed among inward Portuguese universities and a large number of outward European and non-European programs. This report focuses on MIEM student exchange aiming to share collected data based on numbers and experiences. A developed questionnaire addressing exchange mobility benefits on student educational progression as well as on the foreseen future career was handled to all 2019/20 mobility students and the collected data are reported here. Results of the survey show that 90% of the responding students consider that the engaged exchange program will turn into a positive influence on their career and a short 10% did not appreciate the mobility experience.


2020 ◽  
Vol 88 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 554-575
Author(s):  
Zvonka Zupanič Slavec ◽  
Zvonka Zupanič Slavec

The early beginnings of Slovenian medical education take root in the Enlightenment-era Academia operosorum (Academy of the Industrious, 1693–1725) and its medical section with the physician Marko Gerbec, although the Jesuit College introduced higher education in Ljubljana already in 1619. In 1782, a Medico-Surgical Academy was established in Ljubljana, the first to provide a secondary level of medical education. Later on, when a part of present Slovenian lands was included in the Illyrian Provinces (1809–1813) as a part of Napoleon’s French Empire, with Ljubljana as capital, the school advanced to the level of a medical faculty (École Centrale). The subsequent restoration of Austrian sovereignty prevented the school from completing even the first class of graduates’ training. In 1848, Medico-Surgical Academy was dissolved and only midwifery schools remained.  It was only after disintegration of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, as a consequence of the World War I, that in 1919 the first Slovenian University was established in Ljubljana, and within it a incomplete medical faculty was offering four preclinical semesters. In 1940, fifth and sixth semesters were added to the Faculty. The liberation impetus led in July 1945 to the establishment of a complete medical faculty including five years course divided in ten semesters. In the 1949/1950 academic year, the Faculty of Medicine was separated from the University and trained one generation of physicians as a medical college; in 1954, it was reintegrated into the University. During that period, in autumn 1949, the Faculty of Stomatology was established, which soon joined with the Faculty of Medicine, whereupon two departments were established: one for general medicine and one for stomatology (dental medicine). In the 1968/1969 academic year, the Faculty of Medicine introduced a master’s programme, and in 1995 a uniform doctoral programme; in the academic year 1989/1990 the programmes of medicine and dental medicine were extended to twelve semesters. In 1975, the new Ljubljana Medical Centre building was finished and the Faculty thus obtained the necessary lecture halls, classrooms, and rooms for clinical practice. In the next decade, in 1987, the main preclinical institutes moved to the new building of the Faculty and students finally received state-of-the-art lab classrooms, facilities, and other infrastructure. In 2015, the Faculty also constructed a new building for preclinical institutes for biochemistry and cell biology. Throughout the years the programme has continued to improve and stay up to date, and the Bologna system of education was introduced in the academic year 2009/2010. In its hundred years of existence, the Faculty of Medicine has trained approximately 9,000 physicians and 2,000 dentists, and awarded more than 1,700 doctors of science degrees and more than 1,000 master of science degrees in the postgraduate programme for physicians and dentists; it has also trained many students in graduate clinical training programmes. The Faculty of Medicine is oriented towards the future, a strong connection between theory and practice, interdisciplinary and international cooperation, and especially training new high-quality medical professionals.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bawah A. Kassima ◽  
Yussif Abdallah

The paper examines the staff strength of the University for Development Studies (UDS) in the light of the standard recommended by the National Council of Tertiary Education (NCTE) for staffing in Ghana's public universities, with an emphasis on Teaching Staff (TS). The study uses the University's 2020/2021 Academic Year payroll data, which was analyzed with Microsoft Excel 2016 for Windows. The study found that, apart from the Lecturer rank that had a staff surplus of 65, the rest of the ranks consisting of Professor, Associate Professor and Senior Lecturer ranks did not meet the recommended standard by NCTE.  The study also revealed that the number of female TS was much lower than that of their male counterparts for all ranks. The paper recommends that University Management should encourage all TS to publish more articles in reputable journals along with community service and teaching; in order to facilitate their promotion to higher ranks. The University should target candidates with final degrees for further recruitment in order to reduce the long waiting period required for staff with a master's degree to rise to higher ranks. 


EAD em FOCO ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Layla Julia Gomes Mattos ◽  
Silvana Claudia dos Santos

Este trabalho teve por objetivo investigar como acontece o estágio supervisionado em uma licenciatura ofertada a distância. Para tanto, o nosso olhar buscou compreender como os estágios supervisionados do curso de licenciatura em Matemática a distância de uma universidade federal mineira têm sido propostos pela instituição, como eles são organizados pelo professor responsável pelas disciplinas de estágio e como eles são vivenciados pelos alunos. Essa pesquisa é de cunho qualitativo e se constituiu na análise de dados de documentos oficiais da universidade, de entrevistas online com a professora orientadora dos estágios e com estagiários e de relatórios de estágios elaborados por alunos do curso. Concluímos que os princípios da racionalidade técnica, pautados na lógica três (teoria) mais um (prática), é ainda dominante. Acreditamos também que um dos principais problemas que a EaD tem vivenciado é justamente o fato de se estar reproduzindo o modelo presencial, partindo da cultura presencialista?, e elaborando adaptações para o uso de AVA e suas ferramentas, sendo essa uma das dificuldades enfrentadas pelos docentes que atuam na modalidade.Palavras-chave: Educação Matemática, Educação a Distância, Formação inicial de professores, Teoria e prática, Licenciatura em Matemática. The challenges of the supervised internship in a distance bachelor's degree courseAbstractThe objective of this paper was to investigate how the supervised internship takes place in a degree offered at distance. In order to do so, our view sought to understand how the supervised internships of the degree course in Mathematics at distance of a Federal University in Minas Gerais have been proposed by the institution, how they are organized by the professor responsible for the internship subjects and how they are experienced by the students. This research is qualitative and was based on the analysis of data in official documents of the University, of online interviews with the internship teacher and with the trainees, as well as of reports of internships elaborated by students of the course. We conclude that the principles of technical rationality, based on logic three (theory) plus one (practice), is still dominant. We also believe that one of the main problems that the EaD has experienced is precisely the fact of reproducing the face-to-face model, starting from the "face-to-face" culture, and elaborating adaptations for the use of AVA and its tools, that being one of the difficulties faced by teachers who work in the modality. Keywords: Mathematical Education, Distance Education, Initial teacher training, Theory and practice, Degree in Mathematics


2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Esteban González Pérez

<p align="justify"><span style="font-family: 'Liberation Serif', serif;"><span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US">This paper proposes a theoretical basis and some guidelines </span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US">for</span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US"> implement</span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US">ing</span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US"> the study of cases in the </span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US">academic </span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US">training of students of </span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US">the majors</span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US"> offered by the School of Library and Information Science at the University of Costa Rica. This teaching strategy can be successful in situations </span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US">in wich</span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US"> the application of theory and practice to study different subjects is required, </span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US">because these subjects are a </span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US">product of real situations or problems from work activity and encourage the search for solutions, creativity, negotiation, teamwork, leadership, among many other attitudes and skills. </span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US">This work</span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US"> starts from the perspective of constructivist that promotes meaningful learning and allows teachers and students </span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US">to </span></span><span style="font-family: Arial, serif;"><span lang="en-US">assume different roles in the construction of new knowledge.</span></span></span></span></p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mamon Saleem Al Zboon ◽  
Saif Al Deen Al Ghammaz ◽  
Malik Saleem Al Zboon

The aim of this study is to investigate the impact of the use of YouTube and Facebook on students’ academic achievement in geography course at the University of Jordan for the bachelor's degree, and the effect of the variable of the cumulative average. The study was conducted in the first semester of the academic year 2017/2018. The study consists of two groups: the first was taught by using YouTube and Facebook and the number of its members is (43) students, and the second group which is the control group was (34) students.A quasi-experimental approach was used and the study’s tools were the educational material designed in a manner consistent with the methods of YouTube and Facebook, and a 25-point achievement test to measure the students' achievement in geography course. The validity and reliability of the study tools were verified by known scientific methods.The results showed that there was a statistically significant effect on the achievement of the students of the University of Jordan in the geography course due to the variable of method of teaching and to the two experimental groups that were taught using the methods of YouTube and Facebook. There are too statistically significant differences (α = 0.05) due to the cumulative average and the significance was in favor of those with good, very good and excellent assessments. 


2020 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Milena Aleksieva ◽  
◽  
Mariana Borukova ◽  
◽  

After the declared state of emergency in Bulgaria and in the world due to the Covid19 pandemic, the last two months of the summer semester of the 2019/2020 academic year, the students from NSA “Vassil Levski” and VTU “St. Cyril and St. Methodius” continued their education in remote form in the learning platforms of the two universities, where adapted teaching materials were provided. The aim of the study is to study and compare the opinion of students from NSA and VTU regarding distance learning in basketball at both universities. Research methodology: in the platforms for distance learning the students from NSA and VTU were provided with a questionnaire of 12 questions. The questionnaire is anonymous and was filled in at will by 197 students (106 students from NSA, studying for a bachelor‘s degree and 91 students from VTU, studying for a master‘s degree). To achieve the set goal and tasks of the research, the following methods have been applied: a review study of the specialized literature and a survey. Statistical methods: the results were processed with SPSS 23, using frequency analysis by one-dimensional and two-dimensional frequency distribution, and comparison of the distribution of signs with Pearson‘s χ 2 criterion. Results: The answers of the students in the survey show that everyone regularly enters the platforms, as this is 80.2% of VTU and 78.3% of NSA. Students from both universities find their way easily with the materials in the platforms, 90.1% of VTU and 70.8% of NSA approve the way the teaching materials are presented. 72.6% of NSA and 67% of VTU share that they prefer basketball classes to be held in the hall. With regard to the university factor, statistically significant differences were observed in the answers to nine questions. With regard to the gender factor, statistically significant differences were observed in only two responses. Conclusion: students from both universities prefer basketball classes to be held in a gym, but they want the training to continue in the distance learning platform. The asynchronous form of distance learning is unacceptable for students (60.4% of NSA and 70.1% of VTU).


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