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Sin duda, la multirreferencialidad representa una de las más importantes estrategias con la que los profesores cuentan para reconstruir y transformar las teorías y prácticas tanto educativas como curriculares y, en consecuencia, los aprendizajes de los estudiantes. Los textos compilados en esta obra pretenden servir como guía didáctica para la re exión crítica y propositiva del quehacer docente y suministrar una bibliografía especializada en torno a tres aspectos fundamentales: epistemologías emergentes, pedagogías latinoamericanas y educación siglo XXI. El quinto libro de la serie "Estudios multirreferenciales sobre educación y currículo", al igual que los otros, está dirigido a quienes forman y se forman como docentes, a quienes ejercen la profesión o la gestión de instituciones educativas y a investigadores del tema. Los autores del libro pertenecen al programa de Doctorado en Ciencias de Educación de la Facultad de Educación de la Universidad de San Buenaventura, Medellín.
La multirreferencialidad representa, sin duda, una de las más importantes estrategias para reconstruir y transformar las teorías y prácticas, tanto educativas como curriculares, asunto que ha retado a los diversos actores de la educación en la situación global de pandemia. Los textos compilados en esta obra pretenden servir como guía didáctica para la reflexión crítica y propositiva del quehacer docente y suministrar una bibliografía especializada en torno a tres aspectos: epistemologías emergentes, pedagogías latinoamericanas y educación siglo XXI. Este libro está dirigido a quienes forman y se forman como docentes, a quienes ejercen la profesión o la gestión de instituciones educativas y a quienes investigan sobre estos temas. Los autores de esta compilación pertenecen al doctorado en Ciencias de la Educación de la Facultad de Educación de la Universidad de San Buenaventura, Medellín.
This volume focuses on evidence-based practices (EBPs) , supported, sound research studies documenting their effectiveness with a target population. As such, EBPs have significant potential to improve the outcomes of learners with learning and behavioral disorders.
The concept of evidence-based practice is helping early educators, special educators, early interventionists, child care professionals, mental health professionals, social workers, health-care professionals, and others work together more effectively to transform the services provided to children and families. This unique book defines the evidence-based practice movement and explains how it is empowering professionals to deliver the most effective interventions available. The authors examine how evidence-based practice is changing the way research is conducted, how research findings can be applied to solve real-world problems, and how research can be used to inform critical policy decisions.
A collection of chapters investigating the important role played by PE and sport in independent schools, from contributors including former Olympic medallists Roger Black and Jonathan Edwards, Rugby World Cup winning coach Sir Clive Woodward and Baroness Campbell, Chair of UK Sport. Edited by Dr Malcolm Tozer, former director of PE and housemaster at Uppingham School.
Internationally known educator Max van Manen provides phenomenological guidance on how teachers, parents, and other child care workers can act pedagogically with sensitivity, tact, respect, and attentiveness, to create a positive influence that is felt throughout the young person’s life and adulthood.
Teachers Investigate Their Work introduces the methods and concepts of action research through examples drawn from studies carried out by teachers. The book is arranged as a handbook with numerous sub-headings for easy reference and fourty-one practical methods and strategies to put into action, some of them flagged as suitable `starters'. Throughout the book, the authors draw on their international practical experience of action research, working in close collaboration with teachers. It is an essential guide for teachers, senior staff and co-ordinators of teacher professional development who are interested in investigating their own practice in order to improve it.
With the increasing interdependence and harmonization of educational systems and achievement expectations, the necessity to cooperate across national borders and differences is becoming more evident. A serious problem that has not received sufficient attention arises from different concepts of the planning and implementation of teaching. Two basic models predominate internationally: the Anglo-Saxon tradition of curriculum and the Continental European tradition of Didaktik. Didaktik and/or Curriculum presents core issues of an international dialogue aiming at a comparative analysis of both traditions as an indispensable precondition for mutual understanding and successful cooperation.
The essays in this volume examine teachers, teaching practice, knowledge and skill, and a range of methodologies are explained. The professional skills and knowledge that teachers need is explored.
The change from a student role to a teacher role can be one of the most abrupt and stressful transitions in working life but the process of socialization does not end when the student becomes a fully qualified teacher, as many writers, laymen and sociologists, would have us believe. Colin Lacey argues that socialization is a partial and rarely homogenous process. He illustrates this from a wide variety of interesting case material to show how student teachers adapt their responses to the classroom situation.