Current Search: Curriculum change (x)
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- Title
- Effects of curriculum course modifications on the science achievement of at-risk science students.
- Creator
- Matamoros, Angelica Llopiz., Florida Atlantic University, Gray, Mary B., Morris, John D.
- Abstract/Description
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The purpose of this research study was to explore the academic effectiveness of a dropout prevention science course code modification (Environmental Earth Science) when compared with the regular dropout prevention course (Fundamental Earth/Space Science). Academic achievement of at-risk students enrolled in both the regular and the course modification class was measured by their performance on two subscales (process and recall skills) of the district's achievement test in Fundamental Earth...
Show moreThe purpose of this research study was to explore the academic effectiveness of a dropout prevention science course code modification (Environmental Earth Science) when compared with the regular dropout prevention course (Fundamental Earth/Space Science). Academic achievement of at-risk students enrolled in both the regular and the course modification class was measured by their performance on two subscales (process and recall skills) of the district's achievement test in Fundamental Earth/Space and Fundamental Environmental Science. The modified curriculum integrated the curriculum frameworks and performance standards of Fundamental Earth/Space Science and those of Fundamental Environmental Science to produce an interdisciplinary unit of instruction that enabled students to earn two credits (Earth/Space and Environmental Science) in one year of study. The course featured an integrated approach to instruction with emphasis on hands-on and process skills. The 274 subjects of this study represented the entire population of dropout prevention students in the Broward County School System enrolled in both dropout prevention Fundamental Earth/Space Science and Fundamental Environmental Earth Science for the 1990-91 school year. A 3 x 2 x 2 factorial analysis of variance (ANOVA) design was used to examine main effects due to type of curriculum, gender, and race as well as all possible interactions among these independent variables. Analyses revealed that there was a significant difference in student academic performance for each of the independent variables that was not moderated by the interactions of these variables. Students in the course modification curriculum of either gender and of all race/ethnicity groups performed significantly better (p <.05) on both subscales (process and recall) of the district's achievement examinations than students in the regular dropout prevention curriculum.
Show less - Date Issued
- 1992
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/12314
- Subject Headings
- Dropout behavior, Prediction of, Science--Study and teaching, Curriculum change
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- An exploratory study of the perceptions and experiences of selected educators on the infusion of multicultural education into the language arts curriculum in Broward County, Florida, public schools.
- Creator
- Lawrence, Audrey Elaine., Florida Atlantic University, Urich, Ted R.
- Abstract/Description
-
The purpose of this study was to investigate and to explore the perceptions and experiences of selected educators on the infusion of multicultural education into the language arts curriculum in Broward County, Florida, Public Schools. This study also sought to discover the best practices of those language arts teachers who did infuse multicultural education into their curriculum. Little empirical data exists which elicits the views of language arts teachers about the infusion of multicultural...
Show moreThe purpose of this study was to investigate and to explore the perceptions and experiences of selected educators on the infusion of multicultural education into the language arts curriculum in Broward County, Florida, Public Schools. This study also sought to discover the best practices of those language arts teachers who did infuse multicultural education into their curriculum. Little empirical data exists which elicits the views of language arts teachers about the infusion of multicultural education into the curriculum. Limited research on the middle school level is available. A qualitative single-case study design was used. The study was conducted at multiple sites; and the primary sources of data were interviews, document analyses, and researcher participant and nonparticipant observations. The sample of 48 participants was selected from 9 Broward County, Florida, Public Schools, including 6 middle schools. The sample included middle school language arts teachers, as well as principals, assistant principals, media specialists, teachers of English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL), directors of multicultural education, and multicultural resource teachers. Based on the analysis of data, the perspectives and experiences of most teachers were multidimensional. Eight categories of findings relating to the perspectives of language arts teachers on the impact of multicultural education into the curriculum emerged: (a) multicultural education implementation; (b) the theoretical approaches used by language arts teachers to infuse multicultural education into the curriculum; (c) the impact of multicultural education on students, teachers, and the instructional process; (d) social and organizational factors that impact the infusion process; (e) the availability of resources, the authenticity of materials, and challenges encountered in the infusion process; (f) teacher needs; (g) the significance of the affective domain factors that teachers bring to the experience; (h) and standards and matrices. Overall, the participants in this study felt that the experience of teaching and learning from a multicultural perspective was enormously valuable to the self-concept, academic achievement, and the cultural appreciation among their students. The findings indicate that the curriculum that is presented or practiced is gradually moving beyond the lowest level of the additive approach toward a multicultural approach to infusion as suggested in the literature. Most practitioners are at Grant and Sleeter's (1999) single-group studies approach to multicultural education infusion which looks at the infusion of a single ethnic group.
Show less - Date Issued
- 1999
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/12607
- Subject Headings
- Language arts (Middle school)--Curricula, Multicultural education, Middle school teachers--Florida--Attitudes, Curriculum change
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- CONSIDERING THE AFFECTIVE POTENTIALS OF THE EMOTIONAL APPEAL IN PERSUASIVE DISCOURSE THROUGH MULTIMODALITY IN THE FIRST-YEAR COMPOSITION CLASSROOM.
- Creator
- Bain, Kimberly A., Barrios, Barclay, Florida Atlantic University, Department of English, Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters
- Abstract/Description
-
In identifying ways to create inclusive spaces in the classroom, instructors should not be limited by singular modes of discourse to engage students. Particularly when teaching first-year students who seek to invent the university and claim their intellectual space within it, these considerations must be deeply integrated into the course curriculum and not seen as an extended project to be optional or added at the end of a semester. Rather, instructors must find ways to integrate multimodal...
Show moreIn identifying ways to create inclusive spaces in the classroom, instructors should not be limited by singular modes of discourse to engage students. Particularly when teaching first-year students who seek to invent the university and claim their intellectual space within it, these considerations must be deeply integrated into the course curriculum and not seen as an extended project to be optional or added at the end of a semester. Rather, instructors must find ways to integrate multimodal discourses in the first-year composition course as a foundation of learning. One way to do this is to engage students in multimodal practices of rhetorical appeals. This dissertation examines the theories and practices of emotional appeal, namely pathos, to construct meaning-making opportunities that transcend gatekeeping endeavors of singular modes of persuasion. Through the transmission of affect, students can be given the opportunity to affectively respond through various modes of discourse in applying emotional appeal to practices of persuasion.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2024
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00014381
- Subject Headings
- Education, Composition (Language arts)--Study and teaching (Higher), Curriculum change
- Format
- Document (PDF)