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Showing 1 to 15 of 53 results Save | Export
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Kathy Gibbs; Wendi Beamish – Educational Research, 2024
Background: Over recent decades, teacher aides (TAs) have had an increasing presence in mainstream classrooms internationally, providing vital support to students and teachers on a daily basis. Although the evolution of the role has given rise to many implicit and explicit shifts in TAs' responsibilities, opportunities for TAs to develop and shape…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Aides, Teaching Experience, Teacher Attitudes
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Julianne Lynch; Glenn Auld; Joanne O'Mara; Anne Cloonan – Journal of Education Policy, 2024
Focusing on teachers' practices amid a national curriculum 'implementation' project for schools identified as having high enrolments of students experiencing disadvantage, this paper uses narrative methods to illustrate what we refer to as teachers' everyday work-for-change. Teacher interview data was generated via a longitudinal multi-site case…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Policy, Program Implementation, Disadvantaged
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Rebecca Cooper; Jared Carpendale; Blake Cutler; Amanda Berry; Ian Mitchell – Professional Development in Education, 2023
Highly Accomplished Teachers (HATs) think deeply about skilled pedagogy in ways that illuminate its complexity and the challenges of pedagogical change. The sophistication, breadth, and depth of their thinking often goes well beyond the way that teachers and their responses to professional development (PD) are typically positioned in the…
Descriptors: Barriers, Teaching Experience, Faculty Development, Teacher Competencies
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Louise Gwenneth Phillips; Melissa Cain; Jenny Ritchie; Chris Campbell; Susan Davis; Cynthia Brock; Geraldine Burke; Kathryn Coleman; Esther Joosa – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2024
The COVID-19 pandemic jolted teachers to the front line of complex, under resourced negotiation of quality distance learning, whilst also being key communicators with students and families about how to be COVID safe. Media reports debated preschool and school closures and child safety, but scarcely considered teachers. Motivated by the silencing…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Teacher Attitudes, School Closing
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Doris Testa; Nina Van Dyke – Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 2025
Responding to student demand for flexibility in the delivery of classes as well as the potential barriers and enabling factors supporting student success, universities have introduced distinctive educational models, including replacing the standard 12-week, sequential delivery of units of study with 4- or 8-week blocks of one or two units at a…
Descriptors: Block Scheduling, Success, Foreign Countries, Flexible Scheduling
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Creely, Edwin; Laletas, Stella; Fernandes, Venesser; Subban, Pearl; Southcott, Jane – Research Papers in Education, 2022
The global pandemic of 2020 has changed the ways that university academics do their work and manage their time, including teaching, engaging with graduate students, conducting research, and working with colleagues. The mode of delivery of higher education has substantially moved to the digital, and workspaces have shifted to home. Having to work…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Well Being, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Deborah Black; Gregory Hine; Shane Lavery – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2023
This study explored the challenges faced by 23 primary early career teachers (ECTs) in their second, third or fourth years of teaching. Qualitative data were collected through an online semistructured interview. Three themes were evident: parents, workload and behaviour management. These results were also reflected in the review of the literature.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Beginning Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Barriers
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Musa Nicholas John Manning – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
The study explores insights into the phenomenon of Australian lecturers' lived experiences of teaching standalone critical thinking units within associate degree courses at one university in Victoria, Melbourne, Australia. The study makes an original contribution by focusing upon the experiences of teaching staff in Australian universities in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Critical Thinking, Thinking Skills, Teaching Methods
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Kevin R. Sumayang; Kaycee Celendron; Neil P. Declaro; Deodato L. Flandez Jr. – Online Submission, 2022
This study aims to generate thorough and comprehensive review of the teacher's perspective and hands-on experience in mainstreaming LSENs in a regular classroom, including teachers' attitudes and perceptions, challenges encountered, and teaching approach in handling mainstreamed classrooms. A scoping review framework by Arksey and O'Malley's…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Mainstreaming, Inclusion, Teacher Attitudes
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Paris, Lisa F.; Lowe, Geoffrey M.; Gray, Christina; Perry, Angela; Warwick, Lara – Australian Journal of Education, 2023
Expert secondary Arts teachers are highly trained specialists well versed in face-to-face individual and group teaching pedagogies. Given the highly personalised nature of Arts teaching practice, the shift to online teaching resulting from COVID-19 lockdowns presented many with challenges for which they had little or no formal training. Many…
Descriptors: Art Education, Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Seb Dianati; Franciele Spinelli; Alicia Gazmuri Sanhueza – Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2024
Vlogs, asynchronous video blogs where individuals film themselves to share personal experiences, have been widely used in educational settings. This study explores the integration of Microsoft Flip (Flip), a vlogging platform, in higher education, focusing on its use by academics during a 3-year pilot preceding institution-wide adoption. Grounded…
Descriptors: Social Media, Video Technology, Electronic Publishing, College Faculty
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Brad McLennan; Karen L. Peel; Patrick A. Danaher; Elizabeth Burnett – Distance Education, 2024
Remote Education Tutors (RETs) enact crucial roles in Australian distance schooling, by living with families who reside in geographically isolated locations and supporting their school age children's learning. As part of a larger research project, this paper presents a study of four RETs derived from semi-structured interviews conducted in their…
Descriptors: Tutoring, Foreign Countries, Rural Areas, Place of Residence
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Van Bergen, Penny; Daniel, Emily – Australian Educational Researcher, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic has caused significant upheaval in schools in Australia and internationally. The aim of this study was to map Australian teachers' positive and negative experiences during remote and online learning. Our study took place during the first COVID-19 wave, in the early stages of lockdown. Using an online instrument, we asked 210…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes
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Edwin Creely; Michael Henderson; Danah Henriksen; Renee Crawford – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 2024
Emerging research points to the importance of developing the capacities of teachers to help their students to be creative risk takers and to learn from productive failure. Facilitating this creative risk taking in learners has been shown to require expertise and a degree of risk taking on the part of both teachers and educational leaders. This…
Descriptors: Creativity, Risk, Failure, Productivity
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Celeste Fletcher; Cassandra Iannucci; Dylan Scanlon – Curriculum Studies in Health and Physical Education, 2024
In physical education, assessment is a fundamental component of purposeful and meaningful learning experiences for students, with the predominant goal to support and enhance student learning. Implementing the use of digital technologies in physical education can also contribute to improved engagement, motivation and student learning. While there…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Student Evaluation, Educational Practices, Multiple Literacies
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