scholarly journals Stimulating Collective Transformative Learning Experiences with an ESD Whole-School Assessment Tool

Glocality ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 5
Author(s):  
Jule Kemper
2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin J. Pugh ◽  
Cassendra M. R. Bergstrom ◽  
Bryden Spencer

2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 180
Author(s):  
Nosisana Patricia Mkonto

<strong></strong><p>Students who enter higher education have diverse learning needs, andhigher education institutions need to provide for these needs. One way of dealing with this variety of learning needs is to empower students to play an active role in their own learning, by making them aware of their learning styles.  Identifying learning styles is an important facet within the learning process. Assessing learning styles could provide students with an opportunity to be reflective, and interrogate how they learn. Students’ learning styles can be assessed by using a learning styles assessment tool. The Innovative Learning Experiences (ILE) which was developed in this study, caters for the students` voice where students reflect on their past and present learning experiences. </p><br /><strong> </strong>


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeneva J. Diez ◽  
Emiernafe M. Ebro ◽  
Ronna Joy C. Dequito ◽  
Tomas Jr A. Diquito

<p>The new normal education policy in response to the pandemic crisis pushed institutions to shift from traditional face-to-face to asynchronous instruction that posed challenges particularly to science courses in higher education. The purpose of this study was to understand the learning experiences of the students and the implications of asynchronous teaching instruction in the Science, Technology, and Society course. This study utilized a convergent parallel mixed method of research employing descriptive-comparative and descriptive phenomenological research designs. There were 100 respondents for the quantitative part and 12 participants for the qualitative part. Based on the quantitative findings, the overall implementation of asynchronous instruction in the course was "excellent." Specifically, the level of implementation was "very satisfactory" in terms of Content and Course Evaluation, while "excellent" in terms of Instructional Design, Student Assessment, and Technology. There was no significant difference in the level of implementation of the course asynchronous instruction when analyzed by specialization. Moreover, based on the qualitative analysis, the learning experiences of students in asynchronous instruction were both positive and negative that implied two-way learning experiences. The general recommendation gleaned from the students was science, technology, and society asynchronous delivery improvement that covered teacher improvement, SIM improvement, and assessment tool improvement. The general recommendations of this study were improving asynchronous instruction delivery through teachers training proposals, modification of self-instructional materials, increasing the awareness and effective use of the varied assessment tools in sustaining the needs and interest of students in studying the course, creating a safe learning environment for the students, and conducting future researches to reveal significant factors which affect the learning experiences of students and the other points that the current researchers have not yet explored.</p><p> </p><p><strong> Article visualizations:</strong></p><p><img src="/-counters-/edu_01/0893/a.php" alt="Hit counter" /></p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 696-713 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cosmin I Nada ◽  
Catherine Montgomery ◽  
Helena C Araújo

Despite the increase of research on international students, the complexity of their learning experiences is yet to be fully understood. This study seeks to provide an expanded vision of their learning by considering students’ experiences beyond formal educational spaces, focusing especially on their out-of-classroom experiences. To achieve this, the narratives of 12 international students in Portugal were analysed in light of the theory of transformative learning. The results indicate that all students experienced particular forms of learning as an outcome of their international experience and were engaged in transformative learning processes. Moreover, the theory of transformative learning proved to be an appropriate analytical tool for understanding the learning narratives of international higher education students. Through the analysis of the transformative effects of engaging with a foreign cultural context, this paper makes a contribution to the ongoing debate on transformative learning and the experience of international students in the European context.


2016 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 443-467 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bawaka Country ◽  
Sarah Wright ◽  
Kate Lloyd ◽  
Sandie Suchet-Pearson ◽  
Laklak Burarrwanga ◽  
...  

In this article, we discuss how human and more-than-human agencies, experienced and interpreted through emotions and sensory experiences, actively shape and enable transformative learning for tourists. We examine the narratives of two visitors to Bawaka Cultural Enterprises, an Indigenous-run tourism venture in North East Arnhem Land, northern Australia. We attend particularly to the more-than-human place of Bawaka and the ways the visitors are drawn into what is known as Bawaka Country. Indeed, transformation occurs as the visitors co-become with Country, become part of its ongoing co-constitution. We also examine the limits to transformations forged through such immersive tourism experiences. Ultimately, we suggest that for these visitors, more-than-human agencies create transformative learning experiences which build emotional and affective connections with people, places and causes. We argue that even though these connections may become diluted over time and distance, embodied and remembered experiences remain meaningful, having the potential to unsettle, connect and transform.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Esnati Macharaga ◽  

The purpose of this study was to explore the transformative learning experiences of 40 vocationally interested and vocationally disinterested pre-service teachers in four selected teacher training colleges in Zimbabwe. This multi-site case study was guided by Mezirow’s tenphase Transformative Learning Theory to understand and unpack the pre-service teachers’ transformative learning experiences, how they understood their transformative learning, and the forms of support offered by the institutional communities that enhanced their transformative learning experiences. Having employed a multi-modal approach which involved focus group discussions, individual face-to-face interviews and continuum drawings and discussions to generate data, a qualitative data analysis strategy using open coding was adopted. Findings suggested that student teachers experienced transformative learning through two major avenues: disorienting dilemmas and learning experiences. While the majority of the pre-service teachers, both the vocationally interested and the vocationally disinterested, experienced transformative learning in teacher education, this thesis found that some did not experience transformation. From the findings, the pre-service teachers investigated understood their transformative learning as embracing two domains: transformative learning as change (of perceptions, views, attitudes and beliefs and understanding of the teaching profession); and transformative learning as the acquisition of knowledge and skills. Such change and knowledge acquisition gave rise to personal awareness that created new ways of thinking and seeing the world. Infrastructural (libraries, theatres, halls of residence), material (computers, books) and human (staff, peers) resources, as well as spiritual support, emerged as critical for enhancing student teachers’ transformative learning. However, where infrastructural resources offered inadequate spaces, particularly in private institutions, this tended to limit the pre-service teachers’ transformative learning experiences. This study thus recommends the provision of adequate and spacious learning spaces to foster student teacher transformative learning. Drawing on Mezirow’s ten-stage Transformative Learning Theory, it is argued that vocationally interested and vocationally disinterested pre-service teachers experienced transformative learning differently. Although the transformative learning phases were sequential and undeviating in Mezirow’s Transformative Learning Theory, for the pre-service teachers investigated, the transformative learning experiences were neither linear nor experienced by having passed through all ten stages. This thesis discovered that vocationally interested pre-teachers achieved transformative learning having passed through fewer stages of Mezirow’s Transformative Learning Theory, while their vocationally disinterested counterparts had to move through more stages to realise shifts in their paradigms. The thesis suggests a need for comprehensive longitudinal studies, drawing on this framework to trace the transformative learning journeys of pre-service teachers from first year to third year, to understand their transformative learning experiences as well as establish whether or not all of them experience perspective changes at the end of their teacher training


Author(s):  
Crystal Morton ◽  
Danielle Tate McMillan ◽  
Winterbourne Harrison-Jones

Though the formal and informal mathematics learning experiences of Black girls are gaining more visibility in the literature, there is still a paucity of research around Black girls’ mathematics learning experiences. Black girls face unique challenges as learners in K–12 educational spaces because of their marginalized racial and gender identities. The interplay of race and racism unfolds in complex ways in Black girls’ learning experiences. This interplay hinders their development as mathematics learners and limits their access to transformative learning. As early as elementary school, Black girls are labeled as having limited mathematics knowledge and are often disproportionately placed in “lower level classrooms” devoid of any rigorous and transformative learning experiences. Teachers spend more time socially correcting Black girls rather than building on their brilliance. Even though Black girls value mathematics more and have higher confidence in mathematics than their White counterparts, they are still held to lower expectations by their teachers and are less likely to complete an advanced mathematics course. Nationally and globally, mathematics serves as an academic gatekeeper into every avenue of the labor market and higher education opportunities. Thus, the lack of opportunities Black girls have to engage in rigorous and transformative mathematics potentially locks them out of higher education opportunities and STEM-based careers. The mathematics learning experiences of Black girls move beyond challenges in K–12 spaces to limiting life choices and individual and community progress. To improve the formal and informal mathematics learning experiences of Black girls, we must understand their unique learning experiences more fully.


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