• Title/Summary/Keyword: lesson plans

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Early Childhood Teachers' Practice and Difficulties with Musical Concepts Treated in the 'Sing-a-New-Song' Activity ('새노래부르기' 활동에서 다루고 있는 유아교사의 음악적 개념과 지도의 어려움)

  • Park, Mi Kyung;Ohm, Jung Ae
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.29 no.3
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    • pp.93-113
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    • 2008
  • This study examined musical concepts of early childhood teachers with the 'Sing-a-New-Song' activity and problems teachers face in the application of musical concepts. Participants were 10 kindergarten teachers; data were collected through lesson plans, videos of classes, and interviews with teachers. Results showed that (1) selection of songs focused on words of a song rather than musical concepts; ignoring development of the musical level of the children. (2) Goal-setting ignored musical concepts. (3) Class management confused musical concepts with other concepts. (4) No evaluation of musical concepts was undertaken. Problems included teachers' lack of knowledge of musical development in young children, insufficient understanding and limited application of musical concepts, and low expectations regarding music as a subject of instruction.

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Development of a Tool to Support Learning Tasks Analysis Using the Knowledge Space Theory (지식공간론을 활용한 학습과제분석 지원도구의 개발)

  • Jo, Hyeong-Cheol;Lim, Jin-Sook;Kim, Seong-Sik
    • The Journal of Korean Association of Computer Education
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    • v.7 no.1
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    • pp.129-139
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    • 2004
  • This society is rapidly changing into an information-oriented society. As such, revolutionary and efficient teaching methods are needed in school education rather than traditional methods. To be an efficient teaching lesson, teaching plans based on learners' prior knowledge are needed. The knowledge-space theory provides the methods of efficient analysis about learners' status of knowledge. This study designs and implements the support-learning tool based on the knowledge-space theory to increase the efficiency in classroom lessons through the development of various methods of analysis of learners' knowledge status.

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What is learning in the Math Classroom?

  • Patton, Barba Aldis;Hutto, Nora Nelson
    • Proceedings of the Korea Society of Mathematical Education Conference
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    • 2010.04a
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    • pp.269-280
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    • 2010
  • What is learning in the math classroom? Does a new term need to be coined for learning? Is the term over-used and it has lost it meaning? The responses of one hundred four teacher candidates and graduate students were coded using the five levels researcher designed rubric which was modeled after Bloom's Taxonomy for depth of knowledge. The effects of understanding learning include the preparation of lesson plans, classroom instruction, the guiding of student learning, and the professional development of teacher leaders.

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Development of ICT Lesson Plans for 1st and 2nd Grade Middle School Students (중등 수학과 1,2학년 ICT활용 교수.학습과정안 개발.연구)

  • Whang, Woo-Hyung;Kim, Min-Kyoung
    • 한국정보교육학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2004.01a
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    • pp.486-494
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    • 2004
  • 본 연구는 ICT를 활용하여 수학과 교수 학습 과정안을 만드는 과정을 통하여 교원 양성기관의 교육과정에 ICT활용 교육방법의 도입과 함께 예비 수학 교사들의 ICT활용 능력을 키우고자 하는데 목적이 있다. 또한 이로써 ICT활용 교수 학습 과정안을 학교 수업에 적용함으로써 단순히 방법적 측면에서의 도구적 교체가 아닌 교육의 패러다임 변화를 통한 학습과정의 질적 개선을 추구하는데 궁극적인 목적을 둔다 수학교육론시간에 학부생을 대상으로 직접 ICT활용 교수 학습 과정안을 만들었으며 중학교 수학 1, 2학년 교과 내용을 211개의 교수학습 과정안으로 개발하였다. 이를 위하여 교과서 및 교육과정 분석 교수학습 모형정립 등의 과정을 거쳤으며 내용적 연구와 함께 과정안의 구현을 위한 기술공학적 실습 과정을 병행하였다.

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Strategic Environmental Assessment for the Master Plan of Tonkin Gulf Coastal Economic Belt Development: Lesson Learnt

  • Le, Trinh
    • Journal of Environmental Impact Assessment
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    • v.18 no.6
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    • pp.419-427
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    • 2009
  • Methodology and application of Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) for policies, plans, and programs are still new approach in Vietnam. With a support from Vietnam-Swedish Project (SEMLA) and Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MONRE), SEA for the Tonkin Gulf Coastal Economic Belt Development Plan was conducted in 2008. Lessons obtained from this SEA may contribute to improving methods and practicing SEAs for regional development. The main lessons summarized in this paper are: (i) close cooperation between the planning and environmental teams from the beginning phase of a master plan; (ii) SEA should focus not only on impacts to the natural environment but also on main issues of socio-economic aspects; (iii) approaches and methods used in SEA should be appropriate to properly predict the impacts at regional-levels and cumulative impacts; (iv) a good SEA study may be achieved when detailed data on the environment and socio-economy of the study area are available and have active engagement of stakeholders, including project affected sectors, ecologists, planners, policy makers, etc. This paper is useful for whom, those work in SEA in regional development.

On Optimal Conditions in Setting Up Tasks for the Elementary Classroom: A Case Study of Two Classes

  • Kim, Jin-Seok
    • English Language & Literature Teaching
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    • v.18 no.3
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    • pp.121-134
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    • 2012
  • The purpose of this study is to investigate the optimal conditions for designing tasks appropriate to the elementary classroom based on the correspondence with the national curriculum, integration among four skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing), authenticity, and interactivity. For this study, two primary English teachers volunteered to participate in the case study conducted in the spring semester of the 2012 school year. Each class observed was composed of 29 and 30 sixth graders (12-year-old learners). Data were collected through classroom observation and lesson plans. Optimality theory was used to analyze data from the lessons. From the findings, the overall ranking of constraints is Curriculum ${\gg}$ Integration ${\gg}$ Authenticity ${\gg}$ Interactivity. It is also shown that for teacher 'L', the tasks such as 'guessing game', 'photo of me', and 'role play' were appropriate to help students ask questions and give reasons for their choices. As for teacher 'C', the tasks such as 'hand spans', 'transport survey', and 'picture telling' needed to be considered in order to help students understand and write comparative sentences.

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The 'Open Approach' to Teaching School Mathematics

  • Becker Jerry P.;Epstein Judith
    • Research in Mathematical Education
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    • v.10 no.3 s.27
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    • pp.151-167
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    • 2006
  • The open approach to teaching school mathematics in the United States is an outcome of the collaboration of Japanese and U. S. researchers. We examine the approach by illustrating its three aspects: 1) Open process (there is more than one way to arrive at the solution to a problem; 2) Open-ended problems (a problem can have several of many correct answers), and 3) What the Japanese call 'from problem to problem' or problem formulation (students draw on their own thinking to formulate new problems). Using our understanding of the Japanese open approach to teaching mathematics, we adapt selected methods to teach mathematics more effectively in the United States. Much of this approach is new to U. S. mathematics teachers, in that it has teachers working together in groups on lesson plans, and through a series of discussions and revisions, results in a greatly improved, effective plan. It also has teachers actively observing individual students or groups of students as they work on a problem, and then later comparing and discussing the students' work.

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The 'Open Approach' to Teaching School Mathematics

  • Becker Jerry P.
    • Proceedings of the Korea Society of Mathematical Education Conference
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    • 2006.10a
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    • pp.45-62
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    • 2006
  • The open approach to teaching school mathematics in the United States is an outcome of the collaboration of Japanese and U.S. researchers. We examine the approach by illustrating its three aspects: open process (there is more than one way to arrive at the solution to a problem; 2) open-ended problems (a problem can have several of many correct answers), and 3) what the Japanese call 'from problem to problem' or problem formulation (students draw on their own thinking to formulate new problems). Using our understanding of the Japanese open approach to teaching mathematics, we adapt selected methods to teach mathematics more effectively in the United States. Much of this approach is new to U.S. mathematics teachers, in that it has teachers working together in groups on lesson plans, and through a series of discussions and revisions, results in a greatly improved, effective plan. It also has teachers actively observing individual students or groups of students as they work on a problem, and then later comparing and discussing the students' work.

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A Study on Mathematics for Elementary Teachers (part 2) - An Analysis of Textbooks for Liberal Mathematics in Elementary Teacher's Colleges and Groping for Syllabus of Mathematics for Elementary Teachers (초등학교 교직수학에 관한 연구(2) - 교육대학교 교양수학 교재 분석 및 초등학교 교직수학 교수요목 탐색)

  • 정은실;박교식
    • Journal of Educational Research in Mathematics
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    • v.10 no.1
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    • pp.115-137
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    • 2000
  • In this paper, we tried to analyze 7 textbooks for liberal mathematics in elementary teacher's colleges in Korea and 3 foreign textbooks (2 American textbooks and 1 Japan textbook) which are believed to be used for pre-service education. We tried also to analyze in 3 lesson plans in homepages of Japan teacher's colleges. Next we tried to grope for syllabus of Mathematics for Elementary Teachers, and we suggested one syllabus. But we think that syllabus as a tentative one. So, it must be criticized by other researchers to be better one.

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Extending Interactions through Communicative Technology: Bridging Mathematics Classrooms via Skype

  • Yeo, Sheunghyun
    • Research in Mathematical Education
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    • v.21 no.1
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    • pp.15-34
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    • 2018
  • This paper describes how communicative technology between two classrooms located in different sociocultural contexts was used to support mathematics instruction. I analyzed what interactions emerged using the communicative technology, how sociocultural differences were leveraged to construct mathematical knowledge, and how students built this knowledge together across urban and rural classrooms. The results show that reciprocal interactions emerged. Teachers co-designed lesson plans and tasks with consideration of the different classroom social contexts. Based on those teachers' interactions, students had opportunities to justify their ideas and to prepare answers before the connected discussions, and a wide spectrum of ideas was synthesized as collaborative knowledge. These findings suggest that communicative technology has the potential to enhance learning opportunities for students across different social contexts.