tertiary education commission
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2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Guinibert

Due to the recent widespread adoption of technologies such as the internet, social media, and digital image capture and creation, the average person today needs to decode and process information from many different formats and media to fully participate in the contemporary world (Tertiary Education Commission, 2008; Hanifan, 2008). This study aimed to address this need by exploring how the visuals one encounters every day can be leveraged as opportunities for learning visual literacy. The aim operates on the presupposition that a person is surrounded by visuals in their everyday environment which they could potentially analyse to deepen their knowledge. However, learning from visuals in one’s environment is often beyond the capabilities of novice learners, due to a lack of learning support in this informal learning setting. Therefore, this study propositioned a learning model of visual skills based on mobile learning (m-learning) and rhizomatic learning. M-learning allows learners to learn in multiple contexts, across time and space, through social and content interactions, using personal electronic devices so that learning can be available everywhere and every time (Crompton, 2013; Georgiev, Georgieva, & Smrikarov, 2004). This leads to learning that can be more situated in a learner’s surroundings (Gikas & Grant, 2013), which is an attractive proposition when considering how learners can learn from life’s everyday imagery when they are separated from traditional learning support.  In rhizomatic learning, the curriculum is not predefined by experts or teachers, instead, “community acts as the curriculum, spontaneously shaping, constructing, and reconstructing itself and the subject of its learning in the same way that the rhizome responds to changing environmental conditions” (Cormier, 2008, p. 5). In this way, rhizomatic learning communities can provide crowd-sourced peer support as ubiquitous as imagery is. The learning model proposed in this presentation was arrived at by utilising a practice-based research approach. The learning model was implemented and tested as prototype for an app. Usability testing and interviews were used to qualitatively evaluate the prototype, as well as the underlying learning model. The outcomes of the study demonstrate that visual literacy can be achieved by novice learners from contingent learning encounters in informal learning environments through collaboration and by providing context-aware learning support. The presentation will focus on the outcome of the study, which is the learning model and its pedagogical assumptions. References:  Cormier, D, (2008) Rhizomatic Education: Community as Curriculum. Innovate: Journal of Online Education, 4(5), article 2. Retrieved from https://nsuworks.nova.edu/innovate/vol4/iss5/2 Crompton, H. (2013). A historical overview of m-learning: Toward learner-centered education. In Zane L. Berge, and Lin Muilenburg (Ed.), Handbook of Mobile Education (pp. 3–14). New York, NY: Routledge. Georgiev, T., Georgieva, E., & Smrikarov, A. (2004). M-learning: A new stage of e-learning. In International Conference on Computer Systems and Technologies-CompSysTech(pp. 1–5). Retrieved from http://ecet.ecs.uni-ruse.bg/cst04/Docs/sIV/428.pdf Gikas, J., & Grant, M. M. (2013). Mobile computing devices in higher education: Student perspectives on learning with cellphones, smartphones & social media. The Internet and Higher Education, 19, 18–26. doi:10.1016/j.iheduc.2013.06.002 Hanifan, T. (2008). It’s more than reading and writing: The nature and extent of adult’s literacy issues. In John Benseman, Alison Sutton and Diana Coben (Eds.), Facing the challenge: Foundation learning for adults in Aotearoa New Zealand(pp. 125–135). Auckland, New Zealand: Dunmore Pub. Tertiary Education Commission. (2008). Learning progressions: For adult literacy. Wellington, New Zealand: Learning Media. Retrieved from https://ako.ac.nz/knowledge-centre/learning-progressions-for-adult-literacy/    


Author(s):  
John Clark

The year 2004 was a watershed one for teacher education. The first results from the Performance Based Research Fund (PBRF) were announced, a Tertiary Education Commission report suggested that there should be clearer differences between the various tertiary education institutions, and two universities/ colleges of education have merged, with the remaining two pairs in negotiation. These events have brought particularly strong new pressures to bear upon teacher education. Research has assumed greater importance, both as a means to increased productivity and in its role as an underpinning to good teaching. That teaching be research-directed is both a legislative requirement and a philosophical imperative. One of the most elegant justifications is to be found in the Canterbury Declaration of 1945 where the hand of Karl Popper is clearly evident. In this article the legacy of his views for teacher education are explored in relation to PBRF and the institutional mergers.


2004 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 231-233
Author(s):  
David Venables

"Polytechnics have tightend up their own regimes, making their own demands of journalism teachers in terms of internal reporting procedures, restrcturings, etc. Universities have now entered the fray bigtime, i.e. the Wellington Polytechnic takeover, Auckland Institute of Technology's redesignation as Auckland University of Technology. The Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) has sent a nasty shock through everyone's lives, lacing greater emphasis on increasing reasearch outputs. Rather than lessening with the years, the persssure on journalism educators has, if anything, become greater. I sometimes wonder why we do it..."


2002 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 104-119
Author(s):  
Chris Duke

This article sketches distinctive and partly unique features of New Zealand society, its recent history, and its adult, community and tertiary education system, as a prelude to considering linkages. The absence of a distinct further education (FE) sector analogous to the British further education colleges (FECs) or Australian technical and further education (TAFE) institutes combined with a recent period of extreme economic rationalism to privilege competition over collaboration. A sharp change of direction in 1999 is leading into a new more planned tertiary system under a Tertiary Education Commission in 2002. This is likely to reward and drive up inter-institutional collaboration, probably also more sharply differentiating roles within the more planned tertiary sector. The article concludes by reflecting on distinctive strengths and shortcomings, and on lessons from New Zealand of possible interest elsewhere.


1986 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
James Steele

<span>Just before going to press with this edition of the </span><em>Australian Journal of Educational Technology</em><span>, the Commonwealth Tertiary Education Commission released its </span><em>Review of Efficiency and Effectiveness in Higher Education</em><span>. This article looks at the </span><em>Review</em><span> in terms of what it says about external studies and about the use of technology in higher education.</span>


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