Refine
Year of publication
- 2015 (171) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (159)
- Part of Periodical (6)
- Review (4)
- Postprint (2)
Language
- English (115)
- German (53)
- Spanish (2)
- Multiple languages (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (171) (remove)
Keywords
- Logopädie (6)
- Zeitschrift (6)
- Computer Science Education (4)
- amerikanische Reisetagebücher (4)
- Competence Measurement (3)
- Secondary Education (3)
- Big Data (2)
- Briefwechsel (2)
- Competence Modelling (2)
- Computational thinking (2)
Institute
- Institut für Physik und Astronomie (74)
- Institut für Informatik und Computational Science (45)
- Institut für Romanistik (14)
- Vereinigung für Jüdische Studien e. V. (13)
- MenschenRechtsZentrum (8)
- Kommunalwissenschaftliches Institut (7)
- Institut für Chemie (2)
- Institut für Künste und Medien (1)
- Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät (1)
How does the Implementation of a Literacy Learning Tool Kit influence Literacy Skill Acquisition?
(2015)
This study aimed at following how teachers transfer skills
into results while using ABRA literacy software. This was done in
the second part of the pilot study whose aim was to provide equity to
control group teachers and students by exposing them to the ABRACADABRA
treatment after the end of phase 1. This opportunity was
used to follow the phase 1 teachers to see how the skills learned were
being transformed into results. A standard three-day initial training and
planning session on how to use ABRA to teach literacy was held at the
beginning of each phase for ABRA teachers (phase 1 experimental and
phase 2 delayed ABRA). Teachers were provided with teaching materials
including a tentative ABRA curriculum developed to align with the
Kenyan English Language requirements for year 1 and 3 students. Results
showed that although there was no significant difference between
the groups in vocabulary-related subscales which include word reading
and meaning as well as sentence comprehension, students in ABRACADABRA
classes improved their scores at a significantly higher rate
than students in control classes in comprehension related scores. An
average student in the ABRACADABRA group improved by 12 and
16 percentile points respectively compared to their counterparts in the
control group.
In this paper we describe the recent state of our research
project concerning computer science teachers’ knowledge on students’
cognition. We did a comprehensive analysis of textbooks, curricula
and other resources, which give teachers guidance to formulate assignments.
In comparison to other subjects there are only a few concepts
and strategies taught to prospective computer science teachers in university.
We summarize them and given an overview on our empirical
approach to measure this knowledge.
The study reported in this paper involved the employment
of specific in-class exercises using a Personal Response System (PRS).
These exercises were designed with two goals: to enhance students’
capabilities of tracing a given code and of explaining a given code in
natural language with some abstraction. The paper presents evidence
from the actual use of the PRS along with students’ subjective impressions
regarding both the use of the PRS and the special exercises. The
conclusions from the findings are followed with a short discussion on
benefits of PRS-based mental processing exercises for learning programming
and beyond.
Mentoring in a Digital World
(2015)
This paper focuses on the results of the evaluation of the first
pilot of an e-mentoring unit designed by the Hands-On ICT consortium,
funded by the EU LLL programme. The overall aim of this two-year
activity is to investigate the value for professional learning of Massive
Online Open Courses (MOOCs) and Community Online Open Courses
(COOCs) in the context of a ‘community of practice’. Three units in the
first pilot covered aspects of using digital technologies to develop creative
thinking skills. The findings in this paper relate to the fourth unit
about e-mentoring, a skill that was important to delivering the course
content in the other three units. Findings about the e-mentoring unit
included: the students’ request for detailed profiles so that participants
can get to know each other; and, the need to reconcile the different
interpretations of e-mentoring held by the participants when the course
begins. The evaluators concluded that the major issues were that: not all
professional learners would self-organise and network; and few would
wish to mentor their colleagues voluntarily. Therefore, the e-mentoring
issues will need careful consideration in pilots two and three to identify
how e-mentoring will be organised.
A project involving the composition of a number of pieces
of music by public participants revealed levels of engagement with and
mastery of complex music technologies by a number of secondary student
volunteers. This paper reports briefly on some initial findings of
that project and seeks to illuminate an understanding of computational
thinking across the curriculum.
Think logarithmically!
(2015)
We discuss here a number of algorithmic topics which we
use in our teaching and in learning of mathematics and informatics to
illustrate and document the power of logarithm in designing very efficient
algorithms and computations – logarithmic thinking is one of the
most important key competencies for solving real world practical problems.
We demonstrate also how to introduce logarithm independently
of mathematical formalism using a conceptual model for reducing a
problem size by at least half. It is quite surprising that the idea, which
leads to logarithm, is present in Euclid’s algorithm described almost
2000 years before John Napier invented logarithm.
Current curricular trends require teachers in Baden-
Wuerttemberg (Germany) to integrate Computer Science (CS) into
traditional subjects, such as Physical Science. However, concrete guidelines
are missing. To fill this gap, we outline an approach where a
microcontroller is used to perform and evaluate measurements in the
Physical Science classroom.
Using the open-source Arduino platform, we expect students to acquire
and develop both CS and Physical Science competencies by using a
self-programmed microcontroller. In addition to this combined development
of competencies in Physical Science and CS, the subject matter
will be embedded in suitable contexts and learning environments,
such as weather and climate.
The poster and abstract describe the importance of teaching
information security in school. After a short description of information
security and important aspects, I will show, how information security
fits into different guidelines or models for computer science educations
and that it is therefore on of the key competencies. Afterwards I will
present you a rough insight of teaching information security in Austria.
Let’s talk about CS!
(2015)
To communicate about a science is the most important key
competence in education for any science. Without communication we
cannot teach, so teachers should reflect about the language they use in
class properly. But the language students and teachers use to communicate
about their CS courses is very heterogeneous, inconsistent and
deeply influenced by tool names. There is a big lack of research and
discussion in CS education regarding the terminology and the role of
concepts and tools in our science. We don’t have a consistent set of
terminology that we agree on to be helpful for learning our science.
This makes it nearly impossible to do research on CS competencies as
long as we have not agreed on the names we use to describe these. This
workshop intends to provide room to fill with discussion and first ideas
for future research in this field.
Participants of this workshop will be confronted exemplarily
with a considerable inconsistency of global Informatics education at
lower secondary level. More importantly, they are invited to contribute
actively on this issue in form of short case studies of their countries.
Until now, very few countries have been successful in implementing
Informatics or Computing at primary and lower secondary level. The
spectrum from digital literacy to informatics, particularly as a discipline
in its own right, has not really achieved a breakthrough and seems to
be underrepresented for these age groups. The goal of this workshop
is not only to discuss the anamnesis and diagnosis of this fragmented
field, but also to discuss and suggest viable forms of therapy in form of
setting educational standards. Making visible good practices in some
countries and comparing successful approaches are rewarding tasks for
this workshop.
Discussing and defining common educational standards on a transcontinental
level for the age group of 14 to 15 years old students in a readable,
assessable and acceptable form should keep the participants of this
workshop active beyond the limited time at the workshop.
A lot has been published about the competencies needed by
students in the 21st century (Ravenscroft et al., 2012). However, equally
important are the competencies needed by educators in the new era
of digital education. We review the key competencies for educators in
light of the new methods of teaching and learning proposed by Massive
Open Online Courses (MOOCs) and their on-campus counterparts,
Small Private Online Courses (SPOCs).
The Franciscans in Cathay
(2015)
The study analyzes the process that leads to the elaboration of the thesis of a continuity between the Medieval Asia mission and the New World mission. This effort, undertaken by the Catholic historiography of the mission during the XIX century, is the result of the impulse provided by Alexander von Humboldt’s studies about the discovery of America (Examen critique). The data about the geography of Asia collected by the missionaries-travelers working in the territory between Karakorum and Khanbalik during the XIII e XIV century reaches Christopher Colombus with the mediation of Roger Bacon, whom Humboldt himself esteems as a true cultural mediator. The conclusion of the article tries to identify reasons and modalities of the secularization of the missionary concept, i.e. the shift from the ideal of the propagation of the Christian message to a prevailing interest for cartography and topography, transformations arranged by a late medieval historiography that introduces into martyrolagia the loca toponomastica.
Der Erwerb der südamerikanischen Reisetagebücher Alexander von Humboldts durch die Staatsbibliothek Preußischer Kulturbesitz war 2014 ein bedeutendes Ereignis. In einem ersten Schritt wertet der Artikel unveröffentlichte Teile der Tagebücher und Dokumente aus dem Nachlass aus, um den „Kosmos Humboldt´scher Interessen“ zum Thema Pflanzengeographie zu umreißen, darunter auch seine Überlegungen zum Einfluss von Mensch und Tier auf die Ausbreitung von Pflanzen und die Veränderung von Vegetation. Die Einsichten des Gelehrten zur Abhängigkeit Europas von der sogenannten „Neuen Welt“ hinsichtlich der Nahrungsmittel werden ebenso behandelt. So vertrat Humboldt in seinen Ausführungen zum Thema „Was sind Barbaren?“ die These, dass Isolierung von Menschen aus der Gemeinschaft, Elend, Nahrungsmangel, klimatische Ursachen usw. „die Spuren von Zivilisation vertilgen“. Er betonte, dass es nötig sein, in einem weltweiten Wettstreit intellektueller Kräfte die Ressourcenknappheit zu überwinden.
Lo pintoresco se puede definir como un sentimiento que invita al espectador de una escena particular a reproducirla en un cuadro, algo que permitió a los viajeros del siglo XIX transportar las imágenes como posesiones, especialmente a través de la publicación de un Atlas Pittoresque. Cada una de esas imágenes es un testimonio de los viajes y sus historias cruzadas. Este es el caso de la lámina III, Vista de la Plaza Mayor de México, que forma parte de la obra Vues des Cordillères et Monuments des Peuples Indigènes de l’Amérique, una imagen que ilustra las redes de intercambio que se sucedían entre artistas y científicos a través de los viajes y expediciones.
Die Reisetagebücher der Amerika-Reise (1799-1804) stellen ein Kompendium an schriftlichen Einträgen, Tabellen, Diagrammen und Zeichnungen dar, das in der Tradition römischer Papiermuseen des 17. Jhs. steht. Sie können als Mikrokosmen kleiner Kunstkammern aufgefasst werden, in denen Naturobjekte, Kunstwerke und Arbeitsmittel einen gemeinsamen Reflexionsraum bilden. Im Zentrum des vorliegenden Beitrags steht Humboldts Auffassung einer gestalteten Bestimmung von Landschaft vermittels besonders einprägsamer Bildformen. Auf erstaunliche Weise nähert sich Humboldts Ästhetik der Gesamtsicht von Natur Charles Darwins Begriff der natürlichen Schönheit an. In den Reisetagebüchern zeigt sich ein heterogener, von Lebendigkeit zeugender Charakter, der sowohl durch das unterschiedliche Format der einzelnen Hefte, als auch durch die inkonsistente Behandlung des Papiers erreicht wird. Dieser bewegliche Zug setzt sich in zahlreichen Zetteln, Briefen und weiteren Texten fort als ein eigenes Prinzip von Evolution.
En este breve ensayo propongo que en la ascensión al Teide Alexander von Humboldt pudo adquirir una perspectiva integral, que le sirvió como marco de comunicación científica para aunar la multitud de datos que se había dispuesto a recoger en su breve estancia en la isla. Más aun, de ahí en adelante este marco además le serviría para darle sentido de conjunto a las incontables y diversas informaciones que recogería en los restantes cinco años de viaje. Para poner en evidencia el enfoque de la visita a Tenerife de Humboldt, analizo su relato de la ascensión al Teide suponiendo que está estructurado según los relatos de viajes épicos y peregrinaciones.
Humboldts Hefte
(2015)
Der 2013 geglückte Ankauf der Amerikanischen Tagebücher durch ein Konsortium öffentlicher und privater Geldgeber hat es nicht nur ermöglicht, Alexander von Humboldts Reisemanuskripte zum ersten Mal einer breiten interessierten Öffentlichkeit vorzustellen, sondern wirft auch ein besonderer Licht auf die Geschichte ihrer Rezeption und Erforschung. Welche Phasen der Arbeit und Auswertung der Tagebücher lassen sich nachzeichnen? Und an welchem Punkt steht die Humboldt-Forschung in dieser Frage heute?
Networking knowledge
(2015)
Global citizenship and diversity are well-represented concepts in today’s higher education. Learning outcomes and competencies are designed to sensitize students to the many cultural backgrounds of U.S. learning institutions. Nevertheless, true globality, as represented through diverse discourses and perspectives of the world, still seems neglected in curricula and course assignments. This article explores the possibilities offered through a new shared space in education where different forms of networked knowledge and multifaceted perspectives can build a global platform of exchange in a diverse student population. The universal science concept described by Alexander von Humboldt at the beginning of the 19th Century illuminates this intertwined approach to knowledge of the world, which has the potential to positively impact contemporary curricula and course design. Von Humboldt’s writings emphasize inclusion and interplay among cultures and natural phenomena. By inviting our students to be active representatives of diverse discourses, these interconnecting links will become more transparent. In turn, productive forms of knowing about the world may enrich current learning objectives and thereby reflect a true global citizenship as it evolves in a new shared space of education. Keywords: global citizenship, plurality, diverse discourses, multicultural education.