Monthly Archive for May, 2010

Latest Learning Journal papers

learning

The latest issue of The International Journal of Learning includes:

    The Teacher’s Unions’ Last Stand

    23racespan-articlelargeBy Stephen Brill, in The New York Times

    Michael Mulgrew is an affable former Brooklyn vocational-high-school teacher who took over last year as head of New York City’s United Federation of Teachers when his predecessor, Randi Weingarten, moved to Washington to run the national American Federation of Teachers. Over breakfast in March, we talked about a movement spreading across the country to hold public-school teachers accountable by compensating, promoting or even removing them according to the results they produce in class, as measured in part by student test scores. Mulgrew’s 165-page union contract takes the opposite approach. It not only specifies everything that teachers will do and will not do during a six-hour-57 ½-minute workday but also requires that teachers be paid based on how long they have been on the job. Once they’ve been teaching for three years and judged satisfactory in a process that invariably judges all but a few of them satisfactory, they are ensured lifetime tenure.

    To read more…

    Learning Journal, Volume 17, Number 1

    learning

    The first issue of Volume 17 of The International Journal of Learning has now been published.

    Volume 17, Number 1 includes:

      Teachers Facing Weakest Market in Years

      By Winnie Hu, in The New York Times

      Pelham, N.Y. — In the month since Pelham Memorial High School in Westchester County advertised seven teaching jobs, it has been flooded with 3,010 applications from candidates as far away as California. The Port Washington District on Long Island is sorting through 3,620 applications for eight positions — the largest pool the superintendent has seen in his 41-year career.

      Even hard-to-fill specialties are no longer so hard to fill. Jericho, N.Y., has 963 people to choose from for five spots in special education, more than twice as many as in past years. In Connecticut, chemistry and physics jobs in Hartford that normally attract no more than 5 candidates have 110 and 51, respectively.

      To read more…

      The Terrible Texas Textbook Showdown

      Picture Courtesy of Benjamin F. Carlson, in The Atlantic Wire

      Picture Courtesy of Benjamin F. Carlson, in The Atlantic Wire

      By Karoli, in Crooks and Liars

      On May 19th, the Texas Board of Education will meet to approve the final Social Studies curriculum and textbook changes that caused such a stir back in March.

      Since that meeting, even more changes have been proposed which, if adopted, promise to rewrite history for Texas schoolchildren to the conservative narrative. Uber-winger Don McLeroy’s proposals:

      • Undermine the doctrine of separation of church and state. McLeroy wants to substitute an unintelligible standard asking students to “contrast the Founders’ intent relative to the wording of the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause and Free Exercise Clause, with the popular term ‘Separation of church and state.’”

      To read more…

      Global Student Mobility in the Asia Pacific

      9781443819084

      Global Student Mobility in the Asia Pacific: Mobility, Migration, Security and Wellbeing of International Students, edited by Peter Kell and Gillian Vogl

      Over 2.7m students study in a country other than their own. Most of those students come from the Asia-Pacific region and undertake study in universities in the developed world. This trend is predicted to grow exponentially but features many dilemmas. In the post-9/11 global environment, international students experience hostility and harassment as well as ambivalence about their value to the academy.

      Some live an uncertain life of poverty and alienation. Many also struggle to come to terms with living and studying in a foreign land where there are concerns about international students eroding academic standards, having poor English language proficiency and being unable to “integrate” and contribute to their new communities. But some also seek to make new homes in their host countries.

      To read more…

      Improving Teaching and Learning through Assessment

      betty-mcdonald-frontImproving Teaching and Learning through Assessment: A Problem-Based Learning (PBL) Approach by Betty McDonald is now available from The Learner imprint.

      With a constant call for accountability, classroom facilitators are obligated to provide transparent assessment procedures and report results in a professional manner. Improving Teaching and Learning Through Assessment: A Problem-Based Learning Approach seeks to convey to the reader exactly what it says; a holistic approach to continuous assessment in order to improve learning.

      This book seeks to present readers with a solid background about the various kinds of assessments available. Readers are taught to design a number of fit-for-purpose assessment instruments. Throughout the text, the primary methodology used is Problem-Based Learning (PBL) that seeks to hone in students several skills like creativity, critical thinking and innovativeness.


      Learning Journal, Volume 17, Number 1 available

      learning_frontThe first issue of Volume 17 of The International Journal of Learning has now been published.

      Volume 17, Number 1 contains:

      Continue reading ‘Learning Journal, Volume 17, Number 1 available’

      About the Hong Kong Institute of Education

      hkiedplaza-1About the Hong Kong Institute of Education, the host of our 2010 Learning Conference:

      Established in 1994 and with a heritage of 70 years of teacher training dating to the former colleges of education, the Hong Kong Institute of Education (HKIEd) is the only University Grants Committee-funded institution dedicated solely to professional teacher education in Hong Kong. The HKIEd was formally established by statute in April 1994 – upon recommendation by the Education Commission in 1992 – by uniting the former Northcote College of Education, Grantham College of Education, Sir Robert Black College of Education, the Hong Kong Technical Teachers’ College and the Institute of Language in Education.

      To read more…

      For a virtual tour of the campus, please visit this link.

      For more information on the vision and mission of HKIED, please click here.

      We are very grateful to the faculty of HKIED who have helped to make the 2010 Learning Conference possible. We hope to see you there in July.