Results for 'school‐university collaboration'

962 found
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  1.  54
    Validating Teacher Performativity through Lifelong School-University Collaboration.Theodore Lewis - 2013 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 45 (10):1028-1039.
    The main point of this article is that more credence should be given in teacher education to performative dimensions of teaching. I agree with David Carr that the requisite capabilities are probably best learned in actual schools. I employ Turnbull’s conception of performativity, which speaks of tacit cultural learning. Following Wilfred Carr I go back to Aristotle, and to debate between Gadamer and Habermas, before arriving at the view that expert teaching practice should be in the spirit of phronesis. The (...)
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  2. The Three R's of School-University Collaboration: Re-engaging Classroom Teachers by Reframing Social Studies Research.D. A. Dixon - 2001 - Journal of Social Studies Research 25 (2):47-54.
  3.  31
    Collaborative research approaches between universities and schools: the case of New Basic Education (NBE) in China.Zhengtao Li - 2019 - Educational Studies 46 (4):385-403.
    This article about collaborative research approaches between professors at Chinese universities and teachers in public schools examines theory–practice relationships and the cooperative interaction...
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  4. The Teaching Fellows Program: A Collaboration between Piedmont Virginia Community College and the Curry School of Education at the University of Virginia.Eleanor Vernon Wilson - 2000 - Inquiry (ERIC) 5 (1):14-21.
     
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  5. Perspectives, partnerships, and values in science education: A university and public elementary school collaboration.Stanley R. Herwitz & Marion Guerra - 1996 - Science Education 80 (1):21-34.
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  6.  25
    An Ecological Model of Inter-institutional Sustainability of an After-school Program: The La Red Mágica Community-University Partnership in Delaware.Eugene Matusov & Mark Philip Smith - 2011 - Outlines. Critical Practice Studies 13 (1):19-45.
    The purpose of the paper is to introduce a recursive model of ecological discursive sustainability, as it applies to and emerges from the history of an after-school program partnership between the School of Education at the University of Delaware, USA and the Latin American Community Center in Wilmington, Delaware, USA. This model is characterized by the development of shared ownership and collaboration between the institutional partners, the co-evolution and crossfertilization of the partners’ practices and the negotiation of institutional boundaries (...)
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  7.  87
    (1 other version)Research on the influence mechanism of university-enterprise collaboration: Evidence From five southern coastal provinces in China.Ximeng Chen, Yan Chen, Dongxue Li & Hao Dong - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Taking university-enterprise collaborative innovation in five southern coastal provinces of China as subjects, empirical research is implemented by constructing a theoretical model of the effects of interface resource integration, interface conflict management, interface connection mechanisms, and enterprise absorptive capacity on the university-enterprise collaborative innovation performance with the partial least squares structural equation modeling and fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis. A total of 245 valid questionnaires were collected from five coastal provinces in south China. The research results show that the interface resource (...)
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  8.  29
    On (not) overcoming our history of hierarchy: Complexities of university/school collaboration.Heidi B. Carlone & Sandra M. Webb - 2006 - Science Education 90 (3):544-568.
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  9.  7
    Balancing Instructional Integrity With Stakeholder Concerns in Technology-Based Educational Collaboratives: Is the Tail Wagging the Dog?James S. Lenze & Paul R. Fossum - 2000 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 20 (1):35-39.
    This article discusses ethical problems related to postsecondary–K-12 collaborative work involving instructional technologies. Technology related school-university collaboration in particular can give rise to some ethical dilemmas, due to the variety of skills, interests, and obligations of participating teachers, tech specialists, professors, and school administrators. Participants, in promoting narrow interests and concerns too immoderately, can lose sight of a learning-driven framework for decision making. Ethics are implicated, because student learning should be at the heart of the codes that guide all (...)
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  10.  49
    Kunze-Götte (E.) Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum. Deutschland. München, Antikensammlungen, ehemals Museum Antiker Kleinkunst. Band 14. Attisch-schwarzfigurige Halsamphoren. [Deutschland, Band 78.] Pp. 94, ills, pls. Munich: C.H. Beck, 2005. Cased, €88. ISBN: 3-406-53203-9. Gaunt (J.) Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum. Great Britain, Fascicule 21: Harrow School. With the collaboration of T. Mannack. Photographs by R. L. Wilkins. Pp. xx + 65, ills, pls. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005. Cased, £65. ISBN: 0-19-726306-. [REVIEW]Elizabeth Moignard - 2006 - The Classical Review 56 (02):468-.
  11. Reflections on Teacher Formation: When School and University Enter Together in a Process of Continuous Thinking.Marie-France Daniel - 1991 - Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 12 (2).
    In Quebec, a Committee on Teacher's Formation and Improvement suggested to the Ministry of Education, in 1979, that university research be carried out in collaboration with teachers and contribute to the improvement of the quality of teacher formation. The Committee proposed that university and school work together, think together and discuss together problems related to children and education.
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  12. Collaborative Research Methodologies: A Quest for Better Engagement and Results Oriented Findings Within the Institutions of Higher Learning.Colby Kumwenda - manuscript
    The expression ‘a university without research is a dignified high school’ is becoming a both local and global concern in the academia. The purpose of this paper is to assess the extent to which collaborative research methodologies can enhance integration of faculties of arts and humanities in the universities in Malawi for knowledge development and transfer. It has been argued over and over that universities are spotlighted by their outstanding work in research, developing and sharing ideas, new inventions and creativity (...)
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  13. The Collaborative Care Model: Realizing Healthcare Values and Increasing Responsiveness in the Pharmacy Workforce.Barry Maguire & Paul Forsyth - forthcoming - Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy.
    Abstract The values of the healthcare sector are fairly ubiquitous across the globe, focusing on caring and respect, patient health, excellence in care delivery, and multi-stakeholder collaboration. Many individual pharmacists embrace these core values. But their ability to honor these values is significantly determined by the nature of the system they work in. -/- The paper starts with a model of the prevailing pharmacist workforce model in Scotland, in which core roles are predominantly separated into hierarchically disaggregated jobs focused (...)
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  14.  18
    Schooling the Eye and Hand: Performative Methods of Research and Pedagogy in the Making and Knowing Project.Tillmann Taape, Pamela H. Smith & Tianna Helena Uchacz - 2020 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 43 (3):323-340.
    What are historians doing in the laboratory? Looking back over six years of collaborative work, researchers of the Making and Knowing Project at Columbia University discuss their experience with hands‐on reconstruction as a historical method. This work engages practical forms of knowledge—from pigment‐making to metal casting—recorded in the BnF Ms. Fr. 640, an anonymous French manuscript compiled in the later sixteenth century. Bodily encounters with materials and processes of the past offer insights into the material and mental worlds of early (...)
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  15.  42
    Cultural DeCoding: A humanities program for gifted and talented high school students seeking university entrance.Laura D’Olimpio, Angela McCarthy & Annette Pedersen - 2016 - Journal of Philosophy in Schools 3 (1):84-103.
    This article details Cultural DeCoding, a humanities based high school extension program for gifted and talented Year 11 and 12 students in Western Australia. The brainchild of Dr Annette Pedersen and Dr Angela McCarthy, the program runs for four days across the summer holidays before the start of the school term. The program fills a gap that exists in the education of gifted and talented secondary students who are interested in the humanities. It is comprised of sessions run by academics (...)
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  16.  15
    Architecture for Anatomy: History, Affect, and the Material Reproduction of the Body in Two Medical School Buildings.John Nott - 2023 - Body and Society 29 (2):99-129.
    Medical schools are among the most important spaces for the history of the body. It is here that students come to know the anatomical bodies of their future patients and, through a process of cognitive and embodied practice, that the knowing bodies of future clinicians are also shaped. Practical and theoretical understandings of medicine are formed in these affective and historied buildings and in collaboration with a broad material culture of education. Medical schools are, however, both under-theorised and under-historicised. (...)
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  17.  30
    Twelve Tips for Starting a Collaboration with an Art Museum.Ray Williams & Corinne Zimmermann - 2020 - Journal of Medical Humanities 41 (4):597-601.
    In recent years, collaboration between medical educators and art museum educators has emerged as an important trend. The museum environment can support a kind of professional reflection and conversation that is difficult to develop in a medical setting. Skills such as close looking, empathic communication, resilience, and cultural awareness may also be developed in the art museum when plans for the visit are developed with attention to their relevance to health professions. Working across disciplines requires identifying and cultivating a (...)
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  18. A Collaborative Auto- Ethnographical Study on the Emerging Phenomena of the 21st Century Practice- Teaching Journey.Louie Gula & Jayrome Lleva Nuñez - 2022 - Partners Universal International Research Journal 1 (2):80-91.
    This research study aims to highlight the personal experiences encountered by the participants, compare the differences between both narrations, and lastly identify common phenomena. This study utilized the auto-ethnographical research study. Ellis and Bochner (2000) describe autoethnography as "an autobiographical form of writing that exhibits several levels of awareness, linking the personal to the cultural". Autoethnography may include a wide variety of topics, from personal research experiences to parallel explorations of the researcher's and participants' experiences, as well as the researcher's (...)
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  19.  13
    Between the Library and Lectures: How Can Nature Be Integrated Into University Infrastructure to Improve Students’ Mental Health.Francesca Boyd - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The university campus provides the backdrop to a student’s education and social journey. For many students, the transition from secondary school through to graduation can be one of upheaval, geographical, financial and social change. Evidence suggests increasing levels of mental health difficulties among UK university students. The university campus is a possible resource to mitigate wellbeing issues through facilitating the salutogenic effects of engagement with nature. This mixed method research examines the opportunity to integrate nature through interventions for University of (...)
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  20.  8
    Essays in legal theory: a collaborative work.Denis James Galligan (ed.) - 1984 - Beaverton, OR: Exclusive distributor, ISBS.
    A significant development in law schools in recent years is the reflowering, or in many cases the first flowering, of interest in legal theory. This may take the form of a greater concern with the jurisprudential and philosophical basis of law; alternatively, it may be represented in attempts to bring to bear on legal issues the knowledge and insights developed in other disciplines. Both directions branch into a multitude of sub-disciplines, any one of which offers rich pickings to the legal (...)
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  21.  16
    Developing a State University System Model to Diversify Faculty in the Biomedical Sciences.Robin Herlands Cresiski, Cynthia Anne Ghent, Janet C. Rutledge, Wendy Y. Carter-Veale, Jennifer Aumiller, John Carlo Bertot, Blessing Enekwe, Erin Golembewski, Yarazeth Medina & Michael S. Scott - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Amid increasing demands from students and the public, universities have recently reinvigorated their efforts to increase the number of faculty from underrepresented populations. Although a myriad of piecemeal programs targeting individual recruitment and development have been piloted at several institutions, overall growth in faculty diversity remains almost negligible and highly localized. To bring about genuine change, we hypothesize a consortia approach that links individuals to hiring opportunities within a state university system might be more effective. Here we present a case (...)
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  22.  2
    Teaching Grassroots Health Law, Policy and Advocacy: Service and Collaborative Learning.Sidney D. Watson - 2024 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 52 (2):506-511.
    This column describes the history, mission, and work of Saint Louis University School of Law’s service-learning course Health Law, Policy and Advocacy: Grassroots Advocacy. Grassroots Advocacy allows law students to work with advocacy organizations on state and federal health policy initiatives, engaging in legislative and administrative advocacy and public education. The course uses community collaboration, community-led advocacy, and collaborative learning to train the next generation of health policy advocates for Missouri and the nation.
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  23.  37
    Technology arts education in South Africa: Mutant collaborations.Christo Doherty & Tegan Bristow - 2014 - Technoetic Arts 12 (2):237-249.
    This article addresses Technology Arts Education in South Africa, in particular the case of the development and mutant growth of the Digital Arts department at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg from 2003 to present. The article addresses the difficulties of working in a strongly discipline-orientated university system, and the small but fascinating successes that have led to major developments in the department. The focus is on the mechanisms of collaboration that have both evolved and been purposefully put (...)
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  24.  37
    America COMPETES at 5 years: An Analysis of Research-Intensive Universities’ RCR Training Plans.Trisha Phillips, Franchesca Nestor, Gillian Beach & Elizabeth Heitman - 2018 - Science and Engineering Ethics 24 (1):227-249.
    This project evaluates the impact of the National Science Foundation's policy to promote education in the responsible conduct of research. To determine whether this policy resulted in meaningful RCR educational experiences, our study examined the instructional plans developed by individual universities in response to the mandate. Using a sample of 108 U.S. institutions classified as Carnegie “very high research activity”, we analyzed all publicly available NSF RCR training plans in light of the consensus best practices in RCR education that were (...)
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  25.  16
    Tearing Down the Silos: An Interdisciplinary, Practice-Based Approach to Graduate School Education.Elizabeth Van Nostrand - 2016 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 44 (s1):69-75.
    “Law in Public Health Practice” is an interdisciplinary, practice-based course in which the University of Pittsburgh's Graduate School of Public Health, its School of Law, and the Allegheny County Health Department work collaboratively to identify an issue needing the expertise of multiple disciplines. For the first iteration, students in over four disciplines explored the possible regulation of tattoo parlors. The lessons learned are adaptable to any topic that engages students in more than one discipline to address real-world public health problems.
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  26.  1
    Developing ethical formation through literature and philosophy in school.Lisa Rygaard Frost Kristensen - 2024 - Journal of Philosophy in Schools 11 (2):61-78.
    When working with literature in the philosophical classroom, teachers can take pupils on journeys through time, history, other cultures, and fictional universes. Since literature invites readers into the lives and minds of others, the pupils can try on another person’s thoughts, emotions, life experiences, perspectives, attitudes, and worldviews. Thus, literature offers a unique window of experiences that has great potential for the philosophical classroom. In this—primarily theoretical—article, it is argued that the combination of literature and philosophy is valuable when practicing (...)
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  27.  19
    Animation Program History in Fine ART Schools of China.Yang Cao - 2014 - Asian Culture and History 6 (2):16-20.
    The animation industry of China has developed windingly almost 50 years in 20 century, finally obtained the eruption -like growth in the beginning 21st century. Talent cultivation is one of the important elements of Chinese Animation industry, thus animation education also obtained the stimulation. More and more fine art schools began to have animation program after 2000. This paper studies a brief history of animation professionals in Fine Art Schools of China, and the relationship between fine art schools and animation (...)
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  28.  25
    Establishment of a collaborative research ethics training program to prepare the next generation of ethics researchers in Mali.Seydou Doumbia, Heather E. Rosen, Nino Paichadze, Housseini Dolo, Djeneba Dabitao, Zana Lamissa Sanogo, Karim Traore, Bassirou Diarra, Yeya dit Sadio Sarro, Awa Keita, Seydou Samake, Cheick Oumar Tangara, Hamadoun Sangho, Samba Ibrahim Diop, Mahamadou Diakite, Adnan A. Hyder & Paul Ndebele - 2023 - International Journal of Ethics Education 8 (2):309-319.
    Background: Despite an increase in health research conducted in Africa, there are still inadequate human resources with research ethics training and lack of local long-term training opportunities in research ethics. A research ethics training program named United States-Mali Research Ethics Training Program (US-Mali RETP) was established through a partnership between the George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health (GWSPH), USA and University of Sciences, Techniques & Technologies of Bamako (USTTB), to address the critical need for improved bioethics training, (...)
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  29. Teachers, professional associates, and secondary school principals on the effectiveness of implementing inclusive education for students with disabilities.Koraljka Bakota, Katarina Pavičić Dokoza & Marija Žagmešter Kemfelja - 2024 - Metodicki Ogledi 31 (1):225-254.
    Inclusive education is an educational approach that advocates the inclusion of all students in the education system, regardless of their different abilities. Since the main stakeholders of inclusive education are teachers, professional associates, and school principals, their opinion is crucial for the successful implementation of this complicated process. The aim of this study was to investigate the views of teachers, professional associates and principals in secondary schools (N=517) on the effectiveness of inclusive education implementation in secondary schools in the Republic (...)
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  30. Wendell Stanley's dream of a free-standing biochemistry department at the University of California, Berkeley.Angela N. H. Creager - 1996 - Journal of the History of Biology 29 (3):331-360.
    Scientists and historians have often presumed that the divide between biochemistry and molecular biology is fundamentally epistemological.100 The historiography of molecular biology as promulgated by Max Delbrück's phage disciples similarly emphasizes inherent differences between the archaic tradition of biochemistry and the approach of phage geneticists, the ur molecular biologists. A historical analysis of the development of both disciplines at Berkeley mitigates against accepting predestined differences, and underscores the similarities between the postwar development of biochemistry and the emergence of molecular biology (...)
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  31. The Digital Dictionary of Buddhism [DDB]: A Model for the Sustainable Development of a Collaborative, Field-wide Web Reference Service.A. Charles Muller - unknown
    The Digital Dictionary of Buddhism [DDB] (http://buddhism-dict.net/ddb), now on the Web for more than 15 years, has become a primary reference work for the field of Buddhist Studies. Containing over 53,000 entries, it is subscribed to by more than 30 university libraries (http://www.buddhism-dict.net/ddb/subscribing_libraries.html), and supported by the contributions of over 70 specialists, many of these recognized leaders in the field. It can perhaps be described as example of the type of web resource that has reached a degree of status and (...)
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  32.  38
    A.R.L. Gurland, the Frankfurt School, and the Critical Theory of Antisemitism.Kevin S. Amidon & Mark P. Worrell - 2008 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2008 (144):129-147.
    “Just for the record, however: I don't hate Communists.” So wrote Arcadius Rudolph Lang Gurland to his longtime friend, colleague, and collaborator Otto Kirchheimer in 1958.1 Behind this straightforward statement lay over thirty years of Gurland's experience as a passionate scholar, spokesperson, and advocate of that most dialectical of the many forms of socialist politics, revolutionary social democracy. Throughout his peripatetic life of near-constant exile in Russia, Germany, France, and the United States as student, journalist, theoretician, researcher, writer, teacher, and (...)
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  33.  6
    Pedagogy of Multiliteracies: Rewriting Goldilocks.Heather Lotherington - 2011 - Routledge.
    A CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title 2012! Based on case studies from public schools in Toronto, Canada, this book chronicles an inspiring five-year journey to develop thinking about and teaching literacy for the 21st century. The research, which was classroom-based and developed by public school teachers in collaboration with university researchers, was stimulated by an ethnographic study at Joyce Public School to track children learning to read in an era of multiliteracies. Following the kindergarteners' interest in Goldilocks and the Three (...)
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  34. Values, virtues and catholic identity.Frances Baker - 2019 - The Australasian Catholic Record 96 (1):3.
    'Catholic identity' is a phrase with which we have become quite familiar in the last few years, not least with the development of the Enhancing Catholic School Identity collaborative research project between the Catholic Education Commission of Victoria Ltd and the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. Several tertiary institutions including Australian Catholic University and the University of Divinity offer a range of units and seminars that focus on enhancing Catholic institutional identity.
     
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  35.  9
    Impact of Financial Stress on Academic Performance of University Students in South East Nigeria.Anuli R. Ogbuagu, Precious I. Ohalete, Chinyere T. Nwaoga, Favour C. Uroko & Ahamba Kenneth Onyeanuna - 2025 - Human Affairs 35 (1):119-136.
    The purpose of this study is to examine how financial stress affects academic performance among university students in South East Nigeria. By using descriptive statistics and the Chi-Square model, we examined the relationship between financial stress and academic outcomes among 250 participants from five South Eastern universities. Several key factors contributing to financial stress were examined such as students’ monthly income, medical bills cost, ability to save, academic materials cost, student borrowing levels, and cost of feeding. The findings indicate that (...)
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  36. Educação Ambiental no Programa Institucional de Bolsas de Iniciação a docência: trabalho colaborativo entre universidade e escola pública no interior da Bahia.Silvana do Nascimento Silva & Graça Carvalho - 2015 - Saberes Em Perspectiva 5 (12):7-26.
    The programme PIBID-EA intends to closer licensees of undergraduate teaching courses with the reality of public schools. By promoting the teacher-researcher training on the basis of implementing collaborative actions between universities and partner schools it aims at encouraging critical questioning of environmental issues, providing appropriate conditions for PIBID-EA-grant fellows initiate school teaching. University lecturers, elementary school supervisors and the school community collaborate in partnership to improve knowledge and develop values and skills for students acting in favour of sustainable society, where (...)
     
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  37.  44
    Medical ethics education in Australian and New Zealand (ANZ) medical schools: a mixed methods study to review how medical ethics is taught in ANZ medical programs.Adrienne Torda & Jack George Mangos - 2020 - International Journal of Ethics Education 5 (2):211-224.
    The objective of this study was to review the design and delivery of medical ethics education within medical programs across Australia and New Zealand, how current teaching has been informed by the proposed core curriculum published in 2001 by the ATEAM and how it could look moving forward. We conducted a mixed methods study using an online questionnaire consisting of 51 items. This included both binary and open-ended questions to categorise and explore similarities and differences in medical ethics curricula in (...)
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  38.  39
    Enseignement religieux et transmission croyante.Claude Demissy - 2012 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 68 (2):379-405.
    Claude Demissy | Résumé : Cet article différencie l’enseignement religieux à école publique, de la pédagogique d’une communauté croyante. Un programme d’enseignement religieux peut se concevoir en respectant les finalités d’une école publique démocratique. L’Université a développé ce modèle, puisque les sciences religieuses respectent les critères des sciences humaines. Mais les sciences de l’éducation ont montré que l’enseignement n’est pas un décalque appauvri du savoir savant. L’appel exclusif aux sciences religieuses présente des limites qui peuvent être atténuées par une (...) constructive avec les théologies actuelles. L’article analyse des documents produits en Europe pour l’école primaire et montre les choix axiologiques de chacun d’eux. Plus la pédagogie est centrée sur le vécu de l’enfant, plus la démarche semble entrer dans le champ des théologies particulières. Mais sur ce point, la différence avec une communauté croyante n’est pas doctrinale, mais pédagogique. En effet, les institutions religieuses ont une vocation célébrante. Cela devrait leur permettre de mettre en oeuvre une pédagogie active et diversifiée. Cette dernière s’appuie sur les activités des enfants et ne se focalise pas sur un savoir à transmettre. |: This article shows the difference between religious education in a government school and teaching in a religious community. A religious education programme can be conceived to respect the purposes of a government school. Universities have developed this model since religious sciences respect the criteria of the humanities. However, educational sciences have shown that teaching is not just a simple copy of the specialist knowledge learnt at university. Drawing exclusively from religious sciences presents limits which can be attenuated by a constructive collaboration with contemporary theology. This article analyses documents produced in Europe for primary schools and shows the fundamental choices of each one. The more the educational methods are centred on the child’s experience, the more the approach seems to go towards a specific type of theology. On this point however the difference with a religious community is not a case of doctrine but one of educational method. Indeed, religious institutions have a vocation to celebrate. That should allow them to put in place active and diversified teaching methods. These are based upon children’s activities and do not focus on the simple teaching of facts. (shrink)
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  39. School-based collaborations: Building an authentic model for problem-based instruction.J. W. Saye - 1999 - Journal of Social Studies Research 23 (2):11-18.
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  40.  29
    Does growing up with a physician influence the ethics of medical students’ relationships with the pharmaceutical industry? The cases of the US and Poland.Marta Makowska - 2017 - BMC Medical Ethics 18 (1):49.
    Medical schools have a major impact on future doctors’ ethics and their attitudes towards cooperation with the pharmaceutical industry. From childhood, medical students who are related to a physician are exposed to the characteristics of a medical career and learn its professional ethics not only in school but also in the family setting. The present paper sought to answer the research question: ‘How does growing up with a physician influence medical students' perceptions of conflicts of interest in their relationships with (...)
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  41.  17
    The role of school-community collaboration in enhancing students’ civic engagement.Francesca Rapanà, Marcella Milana & Rita Marzoli - 2021 - ENCYCLOPAIDEIA 25 (60):25-43.
    This article presents and discusses the results of a systematic review on the role of schools in enhancing students’ civic engagement through collaboration with community. Based on the analysis of 21 selected studies, the authors inductively identified the main educational practices aimed at improving civic engagement. The results show that these practices are aimed primarily at school-age students, and only to a limited extent to adult students, as well as that they mostly involve the ‘local’ more than the ‘global’ (...)
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  42. Remarks at New School University's Sixty-seventh Commencement Ceremony.John Hollander - 2003 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 70 (2):333-338.
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  43.  18
    The Navigator Podcast - Episode 1: Mind Over Machine.Lucien von Schomberg, Jane Harrington, Ghislaine Boddington & Carl Thomas - unknown
    The University of Greenwich Generator is setting sail on a thrilling new journey of knowledge exchange with the launch of its first-ever podcast the Navigator. Crafted in collaboration with Lucien von Schomberg, Senior Lecturer in Creativity and Innovation at Greenwich Business School it promises to be an exciting platform for innovation, entrepreneurship, and thought-provoking conversation. The podcast aims to bridge the gap between academic insights and real-world issues in an easily digestible way. Through engaging conversations, listeners can expect to (...)
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  44.  14
    Working With the Encounter: A Descriptive Account and Case Analysis of School-Based Collaborative Mental Health Care for Refugee Children in Leuven, Belgium.Caroline Spaas, Siel Verbiest, Sofie de Smet, Ruth Kevers, Lies Missotten & Lucia De Haene - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Scholars increasingly point toward schools as meaningful contexts in which to provide psychosocial care for refugee children. Collaborative mental health care in school forms a particular practice of school-based mental health care provision. Developed in Canada and inspired by systemic intervention approaches, collaborative mental health care in schools involves the formation of an interdisciplinary care network, in which mental health care providers and school partners collaborate with each other and the refugee family in a joint assessment of child development and (...)
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  45.  10
    Researching Schools: Stories From a Schools-University Partnership for Educational Research.Colleen McLaughlin, Kristine Black Hawkins, Sue Brindley, Donald McIntyre & Keith Taber - 2006 - Routledge.
    Presenting the work of a highly innovative partnership between the University of Cambridge Faculty of Education and eight secondary schools, this book explores this networked learning community which has helped to define the use and production of educational knowledge and research within and between various partners. This book examines the central questions and gives examples of the outcomes of the development that will assist any researchers, especially teachers undertaking research, to develop school-university partnerships. Stories and examples from practitioners and others (...)
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  46.  4
    Genital Modifications in Prepubescent Minors: When May Clinicians Ethically Proceed?The Brussels Collaboration on Bodily Integrity - forthcoming - American Journal of Bioethics:1-50.
    When is it ethically permissible for clinicians to surgically intervene into the genitals of a legal minor? We distinguish between voluntary and nonvoluntary procedures and focus on nonvoluntary procedures, specifically in prepubescent minors (“children”). We do not address procedures in adolescence or adulthood. With respect to children categorized as female at birth who have no apparent differences of sex development (i.e., non-intersex or “endosex” females) there is a near-universal ethical consensus in the Global North. This consensus holds that clinicians may (...)
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  47.  98
    A User's Guide to Capitalism and Schizophrenia: Deviations From Deleuze and Guattari.Brian Massumi - 1992 - MIT Press.
    A User's Guide to Capitalism and Schizophrenia is a playful and emphatically practical elaboration of the major collaborative work of the French philosophers Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari. When read along with its rigorous textual notes, the book also becomes the richest scholarly treatment of Deleuze's entire philosophical oeuvre available in any language. Finally, the dozens of explicit examples that Brian Massumi furnishes from contemporary artistic, scientific, and popular urban culture make the book an important, perhaps even central text within (...)
  48.  43
    Making the Humanities Scientific: Brentano’s Project of Philosophy as Science.Carlo Ierna - 2014 - In Rens Bod, Jaap Maat & Thijs Weststeijn (eds.), The Making of the Humanities. Volume III: The Making of the Modern Humanities. Amsterdam University Press. pp. 543-554.
    On July 14, 1866 Franz Brentano stepped up to the pulpit to defend his thesis that “the true method of philosophy is none other than that of the natural sciences”. This thesis bound his first students to him and became the north star of his school, against the complex background of the progress and specialization of the natural sciences as well as the growth and professionalization of universities. I will discuss the project of the renewal of philosophy as science in (...)
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  49.  12
    Facing forward: art & theory from a future perspective.Hendrik Folkerts, Christoph Lindner & Margriet Schavemaker (eds.) - 2015 - Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
    The project 'Facing Forward' started with a collaboration between five institutions: the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, the Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis at the University of Amsterdam, De Appel arts centre, W139, the Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam and the art magazine Metroplis M. Having previously organized the lecture series and publications 'Right About Now: Art & Theory in the 1990s' (2005/2006) and 'Now is the Time: Art & Theory in the 21st Century' (2008/2009), the organizing committee decided to take the (...)
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  50.  6
    The Art and Science of Partnership: Catalytic Cases of School, University, and Community Renewal.Thomas Stewart Poetter & Jean F. Eagle (eds.) - 2008 - Upa.
    This book conveys 12 case studies about projects taking place in a School/University/Community Partnership Network in southwest Ohio. Participants partner to better the education experiences and the lives of community members in the region. This book shows how educational and community partnerships take shape and how they look in practice.
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