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1. English Language Community College Students in the Nursing Classroom: Exploring What Matters (EJ996422)

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Author(s):

Mulready-Shick, JoAnnParker, Tara L.

Source:

Community College Journal of Research and Practice, v37 n1 p37-53 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Academic AchievementStudent AttitudesClassroom EnvironmentSecond Language LearningEnglish Language LearnersNursing EducationCommunity CollegesCollege StudentsInterviewsPhenomenologyGuidelinesUrban AreasPower StructureQualitative ResearchInclusionEducational Experience

Abstract:
This qualitative study explored the lived experiences of students as English language learners in the nursing classroom. Employing interpretive phenomenological methodology, participants at an urban community college in the Northeast engaged in open-ended interviews that yielded new understandings of everyday concerns that impacted their academic success. Four themes emerged and included the ways Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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2. The Contemplative Bow in Teaching and Learning Pastoral Care (EJ996118)

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Author(s):

Koppel, Michael S.

Source:

Teaching Theology & Religion, v16 n1 p76-88 Jan 2013

Pub Date:

2013-01-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Descriptive

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Foreign CountriesTheological EducationSelf ConceptNonverbal CommunicationMandarin ChineseEnglish (Second Language)Second Language InstructionInterpersonal RelationshipContext EffectFigurative LanguageReflectionClassroom EnvironmentTeacher Student Relationship

Abstract:
This article elucidates theoretical underpinnings for the use of one's self in the pastoral theological classroom. The contemplative bow is developed as a capacious metaphor to describe appropriate self use and its necessary importance in the teaching and learning of pastoral arts in a theological curriculum. Central to the argument is the assumption that effective teaching and learning in pastor Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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3. Picking Up the Mantle of "Expert": Assigned Roles, Assertion of Identity, and Peer Recognition within a Programming Class (EJ995816)

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Author(s):

Fields, DeborahEnyedy, Noel

Source:

Mind, Culture, and Activity, v20 n2 p113-131 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Classroom EnvironmentCommunities of PracticeProgrammingExpertiseKnowledge LevelGrade 6Social StatusRoleChangeGroup DynamicsTeacher Student RelationshipPeer RelationshipRecognition (Achievement)

Abstract:
Changing an established role in a classroom is difficult. It involves constructing a new set of relations within a community. In this article we investigate how students with newly developed interest and experience in programming developed outside the classroom pick up and establish their roles as experts in programming within the classroom community. More specifically, we focus on how two 11-yea Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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4. Examining Response to a One-to-One Computer Initiative: Student and Teacher Voices (EJ995733)

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Author(s):

Storz, Mark G.Hoffman, Amy R.

Source:

RMLE Online: Research in Middle Level Education, v36 n6 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research; Tests/Questionnaires

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Teaching MethodsEducational ChangeStudent BehaviorPhenomenologyGrade 8Academic AchievementComputer Uses in EducationMiddle SchoolsInterviewsStudent AttitudesTeacher AttitudesEducational TechnologyClassroom EnvironmentInterpersonal CommunicationProfessional DevelopmentUrban SchoolsLaptop Computers

Abstract:
The impact of a one-to-one computing initiative at a Midwestern urban middle school was examined through phenomenological research techniques focusing on the voices of eighth grade students and their teachers. Analysis of transcripts from pre and post-implementation interviews of 47 students and eight teachers yielded patterns of responses to illuminate how one-to-one computing changed students' Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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5. "Stakes Is High": Culturally Relevant Practitioner Inquiry with African American Students Struggling to Pass Secondary Reading Exit Exams (EJ995635)

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Author(s):

Houchen, Diedre

Source:

Urban Education, v48 n1 p92-115 Jan 2013

Pub Date:

2013-01-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Academic AchievementExit ExaminationsHigh School StudentsAfrican American StudentsCurriculum DesignClassroom EnvironmentCulturally Relevant EducationHigh Stakes TestsReading AchievementStudent AttitudesLiteracyEnglishLanguage Arts

Abstract:
This article explores practitioner inquiry and culturally relevant pedagogy to create academic success with students facing high school exit examinations in Reading. In Florida, about one-third of African American students passed the test in 2010. Student perspectives on achievement, school processes, and engagement were incorporated with strategic practice to create a collaborative, classroom en Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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6. How Does Integrating Alternative Conceptions into Lessons Influence Pupils' Situational Emotions and Learning Achievement? (EJ995571)

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Author(s):

Franke, GaitanoBogner, Franz X.

Source:

Journal of Biological Education, v47 n1 p1-11 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research; Tests/Questionnaires

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Academic AchievementAchievement TestsStudentsAnxietyClassroom EnvironmentScientific ConceptsConstructivism (Learning)Grade 10Well BeingInterestsSecondary School StudentsExperimentsGeneticsCorrelationScoresScience EducationForeign Countries

Abstract:
We examined selected situational emotions (interest, well-being and anxiety) experienced by 291 secondary school tenth graders during a hands-on gene technology lesson. Two different instruction groups (I-1, I-2) participated in the same teaching unit, in which four basic gene technology experiments were performed. Using a modified "constructivist teaching sequence", a teacher confronted group I- Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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7. Fostering Data Literacy through Preservice Teacher Inquiry in English Language Arts (EJ995080)

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Author(s):

Athanases, Steven Z.Bennett, Lisa H.Wahleithner, Juliet Michelsen

Source:

Teacher Educator, v48 n1 p8-28 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Data CollectionInformation LiteracyClassroom EnvironmentData AnalysisPreservice TeachersInquiryTeacher ResearchersLanguage ArtsEnglish CurriculumSecondary EducationDifficulty Level

Abstract:
Data literate educators can generate questions about learning in their classes; collect and analyze classroom data to answer them; and develop inferences and explanations. Two elements may promote data literacy: (a) breadth of classroom-based data collection and (b) depth of analysis. We examined these in inquiries conducted by 80 preservice teachers of secondary English in diverse classrooms ove Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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8. A Study of Critical Literacy Work with Beginning English Language Learners: An Integrated Approach (EJ994681)

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Author(s):

Lau, Sunny Man-Chu

Source:

Critical Inquiry in Language Studies, v10 n1 p1-30 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Action ResearchLiteracy EducationEnglish (Second Language)Foreign CountriesSecond Language LearningLanguage SkillsExpertiseCritical LiteracyParticipatory ResearchMiddle School StudentsImmigrantsCurriculum DevelopmentAcculturationClassroom EnvironmentEnglish Language Learners

Abstract:
This article reports some main findings of a year-long participatory action research study of critical literacy (CL) practices with middle school recent immigrant English language learners (ELLs) in Ontario, Canada. The CL program followed an integrated instructional model informed by Cummins' (2001) "Academic Expertise Framework" and Janks' (2010) synthesis model of CL as well as the poststructu Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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9. Effects of Classroom Acoustics and Self-Reported Noise Exposure on Teachers' Well-Being (EJ994228)

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Author(s):

Kristiansen, JesperPersson, RogerLund, Soren PeterShibuya, HitomiNielsen, Per Moberg

Source:

Environment and Behavior, v45 n2 p283-300 Feb 2013

Pub Date:

2013-02-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
AcousticsForeign CountriesJob SatisfactionClassroom EnvironmentWell BeingTeaching ConditionsFatigue (Biology)Teacher AttitudesTeacher Motivation

Abstract:
Beyond noise annoyance and voice problems, little is known about the effects that noise and poor classroom acoustics have on teachers' health and well-being. The aim of this field study was therefore to investigate the effects of perceived noise exposure and classroom reverberation on measures of well-being. Data on self-reported noise exposure, job satisfaction, fatigue after work, and interest Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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10. Contextual Influences on Gendered Racial Identity Development of African American Young Women (EJ989665)

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Author(s):

Thomas, Anita JonesHoxha, DenadaHacker, Jason Daniel

Source:

Journal of Black Psychology, v39 n1 p88-101 Feb 2013

Pub Date:

2013-02-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
FemalesRacial IdentificationSocializationFocus GroupsAfrican AmericansStereotypesClassroom EnvironmentSelf DeterminationSelf ConceptInterventionParent Child RelationshipHigh School Students

Abstract:
The aim of the study was to identify the contextual factors and socialization experiences most salient to the identity development of African American girls. Seventeen African American young women participated in dyadic focus groups. Themes that emerged included exposure to stereotypes, negative classroom environments, and parental and peer socialization that fostered self-determination and posit Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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