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1.
在继承“注重文化内涵,考查综合素养,读写两璧(语基不考)合一,古今阅读(占诗文与现代文阅读各占40分)等分,力求鲜活大气”的传统基础上,2005年上海高考语文卷呈现出立足课改、稳中求新的鲜明特色。  相似文献   

2.
信息与通信技术(ICT)的迅猛发展和广泛运用改变了传统的知识媒介和人类的读写基础。新的读写环境要求社会个体具备新的信息素养。信息素养是一个统一连贯的有机整体,至少应包括信息搜索能力、信息读取能力、信息评估能力、信息组织能力和信息再使用能力等五种基本能力。信息素养对社会个体提出了新的认知要求,改变了社会个体的学习模式和知识积累过程,开辟了教育教学的新思路和新的科研领域。本文从观察信息与通信技术的表现形式及其影响入手,深入探对了信息素养的构成要素、认知要求及影响。  相似文献   

3.
“三全育人”理念和陶行知提出的“家庭、学校、社会”三位一体教育理念相呼应,指通过全员育人、全过程育人、全方位育人清除传统高校思想道德教育存在的盲区,让思想教育、职业教育(技能教育、知识教育)、素养教育充分渗透到大学生的生活和学习中。文章在“三全育人”视角下对高职大学生职业素养培育展开论述,对“三全育人”的内涵、高职大学生职业素养组成、现状展开分析,并讨论职业素养培养的有效途径。  相似文献   

4.
“科学态度与责任”是义务教育化学课程四条核心素养之一。依据《义务教育化学课程标准(2022年版)》中对“科学态度与责任”核心素养的内涵、课程目标定位、学业质量标准描述,着重从义务教育化学课程中“科学态度与责任”素养的内涵、特点、课程内容指向等角度解读与分析,以期为初中化学教师深入领会“科学态度与责任”素养的内涵,以及在教学实践中有效落实“科学态度与责任”素养发挥积极作用。  相似文献   

5.
随着新时期“科教兴国、人才强国”战略的不断推进,全民科学素质建设迎来了新的历史起点,小学科学课程的学科地位、教育目标均有明显提升,迎来了科学素养教育的新浪潮。生态课堂作为一种将生态学原理与教学实践活动相结合的新教育模式,为素养培育内涵融入学科教学提供新思路。本研究反思了当下建立素养锚点的难点,指出了教学模式转型痛点,并就新课标核心素养下的生态课堂模式提出了活用教材教法、盘活课堂氛围、运活“教—学—评”机制、引入源头活水等路径,为助推科学教育提质增效提供循证策略参考。  相似文献   

6.
我国媒介素养教育是现代美育发展的新探讨,一定程度上也是现代电子技术媒体发展的产物。“仁学”思想是以孔子为代表的儒家思想的核心,体现在社会生活的各个方面。本文在认识“仁学”思想和“媒介素养教育”的内涵的基础上,从“信”和“义”两个方面批判了现代媒介“仁学”思想的缺失;提出传统的儒家思想“仁学”在现代美育中有着积极的意义,将中国的古老的传统文化与现代的先进教育理念相融合,重点论述了“仁学”在成年人媒介素养教育、未成年人媒介素养教育和大学媒介素养教育三个层次中的理念应用可行性。  相似文献   

7.
《义务教育数学课程标准(2022年版)》的修订坚持素养立意,强化了数学课程的育人导向。本文主要从核心素养的内涵、具体表现、“四基”“四能”和“情感、态度与价值观”的内涵及其关系等方面解读核心素养导向下的数学课程目标体系的建构,从而为小学数学教育工作者研读新课标提供参考。  相似文献   

8.
李雪霞 《小学生》2023,(4):22-24
“读写结合”不是一个新鲜的话题,但它是提升学生语文核心素养的关键实践活动。本文在认真分析当前语文教学现状的基础上,提出了树立“指向写作”的文本解读意识、构建“读写结合”的阅读课堂教学模式、在课内搭建读写的桥梁、在课外阅读指导中进行读写结合等四种教学策略。  相似文献   

9.
新课标提出了“科学素养”和“化学素养”的概念。尽管新课标没有对此作进一步的阐述,但是根据新课程的教学理念,不难理解,此处的“化学素养”应该是指“化学专业素养”。根据化学的学科特点,“化学专业素养”的内涵是极其丰富的,主要指:(1)学生对化学核心概念的正确表征;(2)认识学科的特点,理解物质存在和物质变化普遍性、特殊性、局限性;(3)认识物质变化的化学环境;  相似文献   

10.
读写结合作为一条行之有效的教学原则一直以来广受重视。读写结合不仅具有深厚的实践基础,同时还有丰富的理论依据。以往读写结合的具体做法主要有多读多写、阅读习作化等,在新课标的新要求下,读写结合又有了一些新的内涵。  相似文献   

11.
This article looks at adult women's experiences of literacy and literacy learning in a remote area of Western Nepal. As part of a research degree at Sussex University, I spent eight months living in a small village community where an American aid agency was implementing a development programme, comprising of a literacy class with follow-up income-generating activities for women. Drawing on an “ideological” approach to literacy research, I investigated how women and men of differing ages and economic backgrounds used literacy in their everyday lives. My research aimed to move away from the simple polarisation of women and men, traditional and developed, to analyse what meanings of literacy and gender were shared or disputed between different groups of people and how they reacted to literacy interventions by a foreign aid agency.By looking at three main kinds of literacy practices which so-called “illiterate” women participated in—existing everyday practices such as religious reading; new everyday practices such as account keeping introduced by the aid agency; and the literacy class which ran every evening in the village—this article analyses how women reacted to different kinds of literacies and what they gained from attending a literacy class. Everyday literacies tended to be seen as separate or even in opposition to the literacy class or new practices since they were learnt informally in the home. Many new literacy practices, such as form filling or keeping minutes, were viewed by both men and women as symbolic of the agency's authority but not necessarily useful. The literacy class introduced women to new roles as “class participants” and more participatory methods of teaching, but they preferred the kind of education seen in local schools so encouraged the teacher to adopt chanting methods and mirror the hierarchical teacher–pupil relationship.Though the women contested the dominant model of literacy and gender presented to them by the aid agency—that reading and writing would help in their existing role as mothers or wives or were useful for income generating—they wanted to become “educated” by attending the literacy class. They felt they gained a new identity through becoming literate and valued the additional social space that the class gave them as a group of women from differing backgrounds. Certain new practices like creative writing, though imposed by the aid agency, were welcomed by women at the class as enabling them to have a new voice.  相似文献   

12.
While much has been written about the implications for ‘literacy’ of practices surrounding digital technologies, there has been surprisingly little research investigating new literacies in primary classrooms. This review examines the kinds of understandings that have been generated through studies of primary literacy and technology reported during the period 2000–2006. It uses Green's distinction between ‘operational’, ‘cultural’ and ‘critical’ dimensions of primary literacy to investigate the focus and methodology of 38 empirical studies. It explores ways in which research may be informed by assumptions and practices associated with print literacy, but also highlights the kinds of studies which are beginning to investigate the implications of digital texts for primary education. The paper concludes by arguing for further ethnographic and phenomenological studies of classroom literacy practices in order to explore the complex contexts which surround and are mediated by digital texts.  相似文献   

13.
What do literacy events look and feel like for doctoral students, and how do these events overlap intertextually, materially and relationally? The last three decades have seen a rapid diversification in doctoral education where new opportunities for study, combined with an increasingly competitive landscape, have disrupted what it means to undertake a doctorate, as well as reshaping the literacy practices that comprise doctoral experiences in new ways that have not been fully explored. To understand literacies in new ways, we put to work the construct of literacy-as-event, and engage ideas from assemblage theory, to theorise the relationality of literacy practices. Crucially, our study seeks to examine how literacies are emergent and entangled within a wider network of relations. This article draws on data from interviews involving critical incidents with 12 doctoral students, in order to unpack the literacy moments, beyond the thesis, that comprise students' experiences. Our data suggest that we can understand doctoral literacies, not as bounded occurrences, but as assemblages of practices. We contend that thinking with concepts of assemblage and of event offers new insights into the evolving experiences of doctoral students, as well as offering an enriched understanding of literacies and literacy research.  相似文献   

14.
Book Review     
This paper is a critical review of some recent literature around the ‘literacies of the digital’ in schools and higher education. It discusses the question: ‘what does the conjoining of the terms “digital” and “literacy” add to our understanding of teaching and learning in higher education’? It explores the continuing role of critical literacy in relation to the idea that digital literacies are transformative for pedagogy in this sector.  相似文献   

15.
Due to the rapid advancements of information and communication technologies (ICTs), educational researchers argue that multimodal and new literacies should become common practices in schools. As new ICTs emerge and evolve, students need the new literacies skills and practices to successfully participate fully in the civic life of a global community. Are teachers prepared to integrate ICTs in the classroom to develop students’ new literacies skills? The purpose of this study is to suggest a new literacies framework that guides ICTs integration and supports scientific inquiry, as well as investigate middle school teachers’ confidence to practice new literacies in science classrooms. The study adopted mixed-methodology design, surveyed 32 middle school science teachers’ ICTs and new literacies skills, and randomly observed 15 teachers’ new literacies practices in the classrooms. The results revealed that even though teachers have high confidence in using ICTs, the meaningful technology integration and new literacies practices were scarcely observed in their classroom practices.  相似文献   

16.
Teacher education is in the grip of change. Due to the new Australian Curriculum, no longer is it possible to plan and implement lessons without considering the inclusion of Information and Communication Technologies. Simply knowing about the latest technology gadgets is not enough. Information literacy is essential in today’s information-rich learning and working environment. Students and teachers must be able to engage with diverse learning technologies efficiently and effectively in the search for the “right information” at the “right time” for the “right purpose”. Key information literacy and inquiry skills have been recognised as vital learning goals by the Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority and the International Society for Technology in Education and are thus critical in science teacher education. This paper examines the overlap of technology, pedagogy and science content in the Technological Pedagogical and Content Knowledge (TPACK) framework and its affordances for science educators, at the intersection between technology knowledge, science pedagogy (information literacy and inquiry) and science content knowledge. Following an introduction of the TPACK framework for science education, the paper reports the research findings, which illustrate that 90% of pre-service teachers thought the experimental unit improved their understanding of the inquiry process, 88% reported more confidence in their understanding of science concepts and 94% of students reported an increase in their knowledge and confidence of Web 2.0 tools in supporting scientific inquiry in science. The implications of this study are that the online inquiry improved students’ knowledge and confidence in the skills and processes associated with inquiry and in science concepts.  相似文献   

17.
This paper reports the findings of a study of the literacy perceptions and practices of general primary teachers (Key Stage 2) and post‐primary science teachers (Key Stage 3) within two clusters of schools. The study also explores the possible impact on pupils of any difference in the language climate which may accompany them on their journey across this curricular interface. Interviews with science managers and teachers suggest a quite restricted view of literacy is taken in both phases of schooling with no evidence of any practices which may support the notion of curricular continuity. The different approaches to the introduction of scientific terminology, writing, reading and classroom discussion were reflected in pupils' accounts of their experience and clearly posed a problem for some. We suggest there would be merit in teachers adopting a much wider perspective on literacy which recognises the opportunities for developing the interrelated strands of “general literacy” and “the discourses of science” alongside “learning through language”. By addressing each of these domains, and sharing practice across the key stages, a more comprehensive and coherent approach to “language, literacy and science learning” may result, in turn helping minimise the adverse effects of “language climate change”.  相似文献   

18.
Lynne Wiltse 《Literacy》2015,49(2):60-68
In this paper, I report on a school‐university collaborative research project that investigated which practices and knowledges of Canadian Aboriginal students not acknowledged in school may provide these students with access to school literacy practices. The study, which took place in a small city in Western Canada, examined ways to merge the out‐of‐school literacy resources with school literacy practices for minority language learners who struggle with academic literacies. Drawing on the third space theory, in conjunction with the concept of “funds of knowledge,” I explain how students' linguistic and cultural resources from home and community networks were utilised to reshape school literacy practices through their involvement in the Heritage Fair programme. I analyse a representative case study of Darius, a 10‐year‐old boy who explored his familial hunting practices for his Heritage Fair project. This illustrative exemplar, “Not just sunny days,” highlights the ways in which children's out‐of‐school lives can be used as a scaffold for literacy learning. In conclusion, I discuss implications for educators and researchers working to improve literacy learning for minority students by connecting school learning to children's out‐of‐school learning.  相似文献   

19.
The need to prepare literacy teachers to integrate new literacies into their teaching practices is becoming increasingly urgent. This is because the advent of the computer is fundamentally changing the notion of literacy and also profoundly shifting literacy instruction and the way students learn. The research objective of this study was, therefore, to examine preservice teachers' (N = 48) knowledge of and perceptions of their teacher education preparation to teach multimodality/multiliteracies. Data were collected through qualitative and quantitative responses from the participants. Results of the data analysis suggested that the participants were aware of the impact of the new communication technologies on literacy forms, practices, knowledge, and literacy learning and instruction. However, the participants did not only express concerns regarding the adequacy of their preparation to teach new literacies, they also noted the constraints coming from schools and school districts. The implications of the findings are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
《The Educational forum》2012,76(4):510-523
Abstract

The disengagement of working-class boys from education continues to be a major issue in the United Kingdom; however, there has been little educational research in working-class boys’ identity work surrounding learning practices where boys actively engage. This article attempts to address how identities are influenced by new literacies, specifically DJ-ing and MC-ing. Through these new literacies, our participants invert the “bad boy,” anti-school, masculine identity in favor of teaching one another and enjoying a challenge  相似文献   

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