tertiary study
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francisco Vinicius Nascimento da Silva ◽  
Pedro Henrique Araújo de Brito ◽  
Ricardo Antônio Rebouças Celestino ◽  
Haniel Gomes Cavalcante ◽  
Daniel Gleison Moreira Lira ◽  
...  

The aim of this work is to carry out a tertiary study on the use of Augmented Reality (AR) in education, based on a set of five research questions. This review will greatly benefit researchers who wish to conduct research on the topic for the first time. In addition, this study extends to new researchers due to the compilation of important information that was collected through Systematic Literature Reviews RSL. It was concluded that the research questions were answered based on the findings and it is also possible to observe the expansion of technologies, AR research fields and target audience by each author.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Lynne Wenden

<p>There are complex challenges facing music students majoring in performance in New Zealand as they transition from secondary to tertiary study. As a result of their pretertiary experiences, these students form identities and develop subjectivities that are often discordant with notions of a broadly conceived degree-level education. Through exploring transition using ethnographic and interpretive approaches, it is clear that significant numbers of performance students are not engaging with the more theoretical aspects of their music degrees and can in fact be actively resistant to acquiring knowledge in areas of the curriculum that they perceive as falling outside those necessary to become a performer. This research suggests that education systems in secondary schools in New Zealand contribute considerably to these student subjectivities as despite individual levels of knowledge that students bring to their tertiary studies, these systems result in significant homogenous subjectivities and approaches. More generally, secondary schools appear unable to consistently prepare music students for their tertiary music studies for reasons that include curricula that is: widely interpreted, compartmentalised, heavily weighted towards assessments, and, in terms of performance assessments, lacking in validity.  In ‘talking about transition’ within a New Zealand context, questions arise concerning pre-determined educational practices, which present unnecessary and prohibitive hurdles that can serve to culturally alienate our own students. For this reason and others, this research suggests these students will benefit from socio-culturally relevant pedagogical practice in addition to systems that provide accessible, manageable, and meaningful connections between secondary and tertiary levels of knowledge. Research findings also suggest that improved communication between education sectors and between institutions and students is key to empowering students with regard to their own learning.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Lynne Wenden

<p>There are complex challenges facing music students majoring in performance in New Zealand as they transition from secondary to tertiary study. As a result of their pretertiary experiences, these students form identities and develop subjectivities that are often discordant with notions of a broadly conceived degree-level education. Through exploring transition using ethnographic and interpretive approaches, it is clear that significant numbers of performance students are not engaging with the more theoretical aspects of their music degrees and can in fact be actively resistant to acquiring knowledge in areas of the curriculum that they perceive as falling outside those necessary to become a performer. This research suggests that education systems in secondary schools in New Zealand contribute considerably to these student subjectivities as despite individual levels of knowledge that students bring to their tertiary studies, these systems result in significant homogenous subjectivities and approaches. More generally, secondary schools appear unable to consistently prepare music students for their tertiary music studies for reasons that include curricula that is: widely interpreted, compartmentalised, heavily weighted towards assessments, and, in terms of performance assessments, lacking in validity.  In ‘talking about transition’ within a New Zealand context, questions arise concerning pre-determined educational practices, which present unnecessary and prohibitive hurdles that can serve to culturally alienate our own students. For this reason and others, this research suggests these students will benefit from socio-culturally relevant pedagogical practice in addition to systems that provide accessible, manageable, and meaningful connections between secondary and tertiary levels of knowledge. Research findings also suggest that improved communication between education sectors and between institutions and students is key to empowering students with regard to their own learning.</p>


Author(s):  
Kécia Souza Santana Santos ◽  
Larissa Barbosa Leoncio Pinheiro ◽  
Rita Suzana Pitangueira Maciel
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Huynh Khanh Vi Tran ◽  
Michael Unterkalmsteiner ◽  
Jürgen Börstler ◽  
Nauman bin Ali
Keyword(s):  

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