• Title/Summary/Keyword: Elective curriculum

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Aspects of Development Education Described in the Geography Syllabus and Textbooks in the State of NSW, Australia (오스트레일리아 NSW 주 지리 교육과정 및 교과서의 개발교육 특징)

  • Cho, Chul-Ki
    • Journal of the Korean association of regional geographers
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    • v.19 no.3
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    • pp.551-565
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    • 2013
  • This paper examines the aspects of development education in the Geography Syllabus in the State of NSW, Australia and geography textbooks developed by it. The aspects of development education in the Geography Syllabus and textbooks is as follows. Firstly, Development Education is implicitly described in terms of the difference of the quality of life and aid links in Geography (Mandatory) Stage 4 and Geography (Mandatory) Stage 5, but clearly in Geography Elective. Moreover, Development Geography is one of unit to learn deeply in case of Global Challenges in Stage 6. Secondly, in geography textbooks, development education is sequenced with learning of the quality of life in everyday life, understanding of diverse meaning of development and measure of development, and the role of individuals and organizations for reducing the global inequality. The implications of the findings is as follows. Firstly, geography curriculum needs to be consist of the difference of the quality of life in the middle school, and development geography in high school. Secondly, the major concepts of development education like development, measure of development and the aid etc. need to be described in the different views. Thirdly, development education needs learners to learn the interdependence and practice the global citizenship through learning of specific links of our country with others. Finally, geography textbooks should not describe the normative efforts for reducing global inequality, and treat individual practical cases as well as organizations like government and NGOs so that learners empathize with their value and attitude through individual practical cases.

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An Action Research on the Development of the University Entrepreneurship Education Program: Focusing on the Educational needs of the Learner's (대학 창업교육 프로그램 개발 실행연구: 학습자 교육 요구를 중심으로)

  • Kim, Da Hye;Sung, Chang Soo
    • Asia-Pacific Journal of Business Venturing and Entrepreneurship
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    • v.17 no.4
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    • pp.127-142
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    • 2022
  • According to social change, entrepreneurship education at university is drawing attention as a means to cultivate convergent creative competency required by the times. Currently, the number of entrepreneurship education at university is increasing every year, and quantitative expansion is taking place, but quality advancement of education remains a task. In this context, this study conducted an action research with the aim of revitalizing entrepreneurship education and upgrading quality, and developing a entrepreneurship education program suitable for general elective courses operated by universities. In the process of the study, first, through literature analysis related to entrepreneurship education at university, educational contents and teaching methods of entrepreneurship education were confirmed. Based on this, the IPA analysis was used to analyze the educational needs of students for entrepreneurship education contents and design a program that reflects this. The designed program was applied and operated to the entrepreneurship education of A University, and improvements were derived and improved by analyzing the opinions of learners in the action research process. The entrepreneurship education program developed through this study was composed as follows. The necessity of entrepreneurship education at the beginning of the lecture is sufficiently presented, and the knowledge necessary for start-up, including idea discovery and business model design, is delivered through theoretical lectures by teacher-centered method. In the second half of the lecture, students with similar interests are gathered into teams and learner-centered practical activities are operated. The contents of the activities include information on idea discovery, business model design, business plan and pitching. Practical activities for each team are conducted during class hours, and the professor advice on difficulties for each team.

A Study on the Development of Curriculum for the Department of Fisheries Processing in Fisheries Junior College (전문대학(專門大學) 수산가공과(水產加工科) 교육과정(敎育科程) 개선(改善)에 관한 연구(硏究))

  • Seong, Dae-Hwan;Choi, Jong-Duck;Kim, Jeong-Gyun
    • Journal of Fisheries and Marine Sciences Education
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    • v.2 no.1
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    • pp.15-28
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    • 1989
  • The aim of this study is to improve the curriculum for the fisheries processing department in fisheries junior college in Korea. For this study, questionaries to alumani and students of the fisheries processing department of Tong-Yeong Fisheries Junior College are made and meeting materials of professors concerned and some leading managers of food processing company. In addition, curricula of the department food processing in two year or four year colleges both domestic and foreign are refered. The results obtained can be shown as follows ; 1. Subjects of the standard laboratory work designated by the Ministry of Education and required at the practical techique examination for the food precessing technitian certificates were chosen to student compulsorily, and the other subjects necessary to acquistion of the techniques were opened in this course electively. 2. The food processing departments in nationwide twenty-three junior college open seventy-eight major subject courses. Among those subjects, we choose the subjects only related to fisheries processing ones to put stress on the features of fisheries processing department. 3. The selected courses in improved curricula of this work are total 119 credits spending 142 class-hour per weeks. Detailed curricula are as follows ; liberal arts are consist of 13 subjects-24 credits, essential major subjects 12 subjects-32 credits, elective subjects 24 subject-56 credits and interdisciplinary subjects 2 subjects-5 credits. 4. The linking system of industrial-educational co-operation have to be established to fulfil the field practice, and legal basis should be made to support these educational circumstances. 5. To make sure a live education in junior college, present education terms should be extended more than 1 year, and improved textbook, method of experiment, practice and evaluation continuously.

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Analysis of Test Items of Earth Science and the Applicants' Responses on the Items in the College Scholastic Ability Test (대학수학능력시험의 지구과학영역 문항 및 응시자 반응 분석)

  • Lee, Yang-Rak
    • Journal of the Korean earth science society
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    • v.22 no.6
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    • pp.469-479
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    • 2001
  • This study investigated the trends in the number of applicants and mean score and applicants’ responses on the test items of Earth Science in the College Scholastic Ability Test (CSAT) implemented for 3 years (1999-2001). The percentage of applicants of science track were 43.14% in 1995, but reduced through 29.5% in 2001 to 26.92% in 2002 CSAT For elective subject, about 22% of science track students applied to Earth Science II which ranked third to Biology II and Chemistry II. In 1999, test items were developed to have the expected difficulty 40 ${\sim}$ 59% (6 items) to 60 ${\sim}$ 79% (10 items). But in 2001 every 16 items were developed to have difficulty 60 ${\sim}$ 79%, which was caused by the policy of so called ‘easy CSAT’. Thus the mean score of ‘Earth Science II’ was increased from 50.26 in 1999 through 64.47 in 2000, to 67.58 in 2001. Applicants were generally very good at solving test items focusing on process skills only and familar items but poor at solving test items related to the motion of the earth and planets and sea wave, especially items calling two or more concepts. Thus special measures to cope with the decrease in applicants of science track should be provided. And it is recommended to develop test items with wider range of difficulty and to reduce test items calling process skills only. And special consideration should be given to teaching the content area with poor achievement and high actual difficulty compared to the expected.

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