TY - JOUR A1 - Hermanns, Jolanda T1 - Training OC BT - A new course concept for training the application of basic concepts in organic chemistry JF - Journal of chemical education N2 - The course design "Training OC" for training the application of basic concepts consists of four topics: formula language, structure-property relations, reaction mechanisms, and complex tasks that the students should solve with the conceptual knowledge they acquired in the first three topics. A main goal of the course was to enable the students to solve reaction mechanisms. To achieve the goals of the course, several games were specially designed and used. The course was conducted at a German university with ca. 30 students who participated voluntarily. The course was evaluated by several tools: students' products were collected in the course, there were two pre/post-tests, and additionally, interviews on the strategy of designing reaction mechanisms were conducted. The performance of the teacher and the self-assessment of the students were also part of the evaluation. The results of the written exam were compared with the results of the bachelor chemistry major students. The course "Training OC" was rated very well by the students. They were of the opinion that they learned the application of basic concepts taught in this course. This is supported by the results of the evaluation and the written exams. The course concept of Training OC will therefore become a permanent part of the course "Organic Chemistry I" which will be redesigned for the next round in 2020-21. KW - Second-Year Undergraduate KW - Organic Chemistry KW - Humor/Puzzles/Games KW - Collaborative/Cooperative Learning Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jchemed.0c00567 SN - 0021-9584 SN - 1938-1328 VL - 98 IS - 2 SP - 374 EP - 384 PB - American Chemical Society. Division of Chemical Education CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hermanns, Jolanda T1 - The task navigator following the STRAKNAP concept BT - Development, application, and evaluation of a new scaffold to support nonmajor chemistry students while solving tasks in organic chemistry JF - Journal of chemical education / Division of Chemical Education, Inc., American Chemical Society N2 - Educational Scaffolding was first mentioned in 1976 by Wood et al. Several examples for scaffolding in chemistry are also known from the literature. As written scaffolds, stepped supporting tools to support students while solving problems in organic chemistry were developed, applied, and evaluated. Although the students rated the tool as very helpful, a think-aloud study showed that the support given by this scaffold was not sufficient. As a further development of stepped supporting tools, task navigators were therefore developed, applied, and evaluated. This new scaffold gives tips on strategy, knowledge, and application of knowledge after the STRAKNAP concept. The evaluation of this tool shows that the students rated the tool as being very helpful. A think-aloud study showed that the scaffold supports the students while they solve a problem. Because of the stepwise construction of the task navigators and the providing of the knowledge needed for the application, the students can solve parts of the task successfully even if they do not solve all parts correctly; the students can always start from scratch. When students use the tool regularly, their knowledge of organic chemistry increases compared to students who did not use the tool at all. The task navigator is not only a scaffold for the content of the task but also for the development of methodological competences on the field of strategies and applying knowledge. KW - First-Year Undergraduate/General KW - Organic Chemistry KW - Distance KW - Learning/Chemistry Education Research Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jchemed.0c01162 SN - 0021-9584 SN - 1938-1328 VL - 98 IS - 4 SP - 1077 EP - 1087 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hermanns, Jolanda A1 - Keller, David T1 - School-related content knowledge in organic chemistry BT - How does the Bachelor and Master studies? JF - Journal of chemical education / Division of Chemical Education, Inc., American Chemical Society N2 - In this paper the development, use, and evaluation of tasks based on the construct of school-related content knowledge are described. The tasks were used in seminars on organic chemistry for bachelor and master preservice chemistry teachers at a German university. For the evaluation a questionnaire with open and closed items was used. The tasks were rated by the preservice chemistry teachers as relevant for their future profession as a chemistry teacher if the content of the tasks is part of the school curriculum. If the content does not belong to the school curriculum, they rated the nature of the tasks still as relevant; they seem to recognize the importance of conceptual knowledge for their future profession. However, the master's preservice teachers argued with this conceptual knowledge more often than the bachelor's preservice teachers. Although the study is cross-sectional, a certain shift from the focus on the content to conceptual knowledge from bachelor's to master's preservice teachers can be observed. KW - Organic Chemistry KW - Second-Year Undergraduate KW - Analogies/Transfer Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jchemed.0c01415 SN - 0021-9584 SN - 1938-1328 VL - 98 IS - 3 SP - 763 EP - 773 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - RPRT A1 - Apelojg, Benjamin A1 - Bosse, Stefanie A1 - Geschke, Doreen A1 - Hausner, Christian A1 - Jennek, Julia A1 - Liebner, Saskia A1 - Lipka, Marlies A1 - Marx, Alexandra A1 - Plötner, Kathleen A1 - Reimann, Christina A1 - Sievert, Florian A1 - Spörer, Nadine A1 - Teke, Gülay A1 - Völkner, Katrin A1 - Wabnitz, Juliane A1 - Waschke, Lene A1 - Zielke, Sonja A1 - Zrenner, Laura ED - Spörer, Nadine ED - Völkner, Katrin T1 - Rahmenkonzept der Universitätsschule Potsdam N2 - Das Rahmenkonzept der Universitätsschule Potsdam beschreibt die Wertegrundlage und das pädagogisch-didaktische sowie das wissenschaftliche Fundament einer zu gründenden Universitätsschule Potsdam. Wie andere Universitätsschulen soll sich auch diese Schule durch eine enge und institutionalisierte Beziehung zwischen Schule und Universität auszeichnen, die den ständigen Wissenstransfer zwischen Schulpraxis, Wissenschaft, Lehrkräftebildung und Schulverwaltung unterstützt. Das Rahmenkonzept legt die Grundlagen für eine inklusive Schule, deren Schüler:innen einen Querschnitt der Gesellschaft abbilden, und die in ungleichheitssensiblen Bildungsangeboten alle Bildungsabschlüsse des Landes Brandenburg anbietet. Die Universitätsschule soll den starken Segregationsprozessen in Potsdam entgegenwirken. Im Leitbild werden die Grundwerte (Nachhaltigkeit, Inklusion und Bildungsgerechtigkeit, Menschenrechte und Demokratie, Gemeinschaft, Ganzheitlichkeit) und die Bildungsziele (Transferfähigkeit, kritisch-reflexives Denken und lebensbegleitendes Lernen, Diversitätsbewusstsein und Transkulturalität, Selbstkompetenz und Beziehungskompetenz, Kulturtechniken und digitale Kompetenz) der Universitätsschule dargestellt. Das Pädagogische Konzept veranschaulicht, wie Werte und Bildungsziele in den Bereichen Schulform, Schulkultur, Lernkultur sowie Lernorte und Lernumgebung ausgestaltet werden können. Schließlich wird die Universitätsschule als lernende und lehrende Institution beschrieben, die ein Ort des Transfers von Bildungsinnovationen ist. Dafür soll eine Transferwerkstatt in der Schule verankert werden, die den Wissensaustausch der schulrelevanten Akteur:innen unterstützt und gestaltet. KW - Universitätsschule KW - Bildungsgerechtigkeit KW - Forschung-Praxis-Kooperation KW - Wissenstransfer KW - Lehrkräftebildung Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-491380 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kayser, Daniela Niesta A1 - Vock, Miriam A1 - Wojciechowicz, Anna Aleksandra T1 - Example of best practice BT - refugee teachers at the University of Potsdam. A requalification program for newly arrived teachers in Germany JF - Intercultural education N2 - The Refugee Teachers Program, established at the University of Potsdam, Brandenburg, in 2016, represents a successful model for training and integrating individuals with foreign teaching qualifications through an 18-month teaching and language course. Initially created to help meet the demand for teachers in Germany, the Refugee Teachers Program has been further refined over the course of the last three years in the light of expert meetings, theoretical considerations, and negotiations with the Brandenburg Ministry of Education. This was the first program of its kind in Germany, following an influx of people being forced to migrate from countries such as Syria, Afghanistan, and Iraq in 2015. The program responded to these international events by providing training, work, and refuge for migrants who already had teaching experience in their home countries. More than 85 participants successfully completed the program and many have taken up newly created positions as teachers and pedagogical assistants in German schools. However, a number of hurdles still remain before most of the program's graduates can be granted full employment as teachers in Germany. Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/14675986.2021.1851513 SN - 1467-5986 SN - 1469-8439 VL - 32 IS - 1 SP - 108 EP - 118 PB - Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group CY - Abingdon ER -