Monthly Archive for March, 2011

Finalists for the International Award for Excellence

learning_frontCongratulations to all of the finalists for the International Award for Excellence in the area of literacy and education:


Announcing the Winner of the International Award for Excellence

Congratulations to Bernard Ouma Mikume and  Samuel Ouma Oyoo the winners of the International Award for Excellence in the area of literacy and education. with their paper Improving the Practice of Giving Feedback on ESL Learners’ Written Compositions.

Abstract: There has been increased research interest in the area of feedback in students’ written compositions since Truscott’s (1996) article that strongly argued against error correction in ESL learners’ writings. Many of these research studies have, however, concentrated on the effect of teacher written corrective feedback (WCF) on ESL learners’ writing. Little attention has been given to the use of alternative feedback strategies to supplement teacher written feedback on learners’ writing. Besides, many of these studies have been more concerned with describing students’ responses rather than trying to improve teachers’ feedback practice. This study was, therefore, aimed at improving the practice of giving feedback on ESL learners’ written compositions through use of self-correction and conferencing on ESL learners’ compositions to supplement improved teacher written feedback. The study this paper draws from employed a qualitative approach within an action research design. It used a sample of Form 3 (Year 10 equivalent) ESL class in a secondary school in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Data collected from interviews, observations, informal conversations and feedback exit slips with students and the subject teacher formed the basis of reflections and analysis. The findings show that the use of these additional strategies (self-correction and conferencing on ESL learners’ compositions) can lead to improved quality of learners’ written compositions and learners’ increased motivation and confidence in writing. This study concludes by recommending the use of these strategies to improve the practice of providing feedback on ESL learners’ compositions to improve their writing skills.

The Education of Jennifer Miller: An Update from the Frontline in the Fight Against the Anti-Evolution Agenda

By Nina Bai in Scientific American

As the 2005 school year got underway, a new requirement in a Pennsylvania public school district mandated that all 9th-grade biology students listen to a statement questioning the validity of evolutionary theory and promoting intelligent design. Eleven parents of students in the Dover Area School District sued the local school board in protest. Four months later a Republican judge in a Pennsylvania federal court ruled in favor of the parents, issuing an eloquent defense of evolutionary theory—and a scathing rebuke to those who support intelligent design (ID) as a scientific alternative.

Judge John E. Jones III wrote in the 139-page decision for Tammy Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, named for one of the parents who brought the suit, that ID was not only unscientific but was also a front used by those on the school board with a religiously motivated, pro-creationist agenda.

To read more…

Happiness, Learning, and Technology: Why “Affective” Schools are the New “Effective” Schools

By Ben Williamson, in DML Central

What are the connections between emotional education and digital media and learning? Faced with a global economic recession, civic unrest, and major environmental catastrophe, governments around the world are now obsessed with cheering us all up, especially kids. Measures are being designed to gauge global, national, organizational and individual levels of happiness, and well-being is being put at the heart of public policy. Ensuring children’s happiness now and in the future is therefore becoming an urgent aim for education.

The State of Happiness

Schools are emotional places. Everyone remembers their school days through the rhythm of emotional highs and lows. From first days away from home to first dates and first loves, and from lasting friendships to last bashes at the graduation party, as well as from the playground brawl to perpetual bullying, emotional currents run right through schools. Yet the “affective life” of schools is too often ignored in favor of the so-called “effectiveness” of specific pedagogies, leadership styles, and curriculum provisions that can be used to “improve” schooling.

To read more…

Recently published in the Learning Journal

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Recently published in The International Journal of Learning:

Latest Learning Journal Papers

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Recently published in The International Journal of Learning:

Learning Journal: Recently Published

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The latest issue of The International Journal of Learning includes:

Learning Journal, Volume 17, Number 11 available

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

Volume 17, Number 11 contains:

Continue reading ‘Learning Journal, Volume 17, Number 11 available’

Urban Students Lag in Science Learning: Study

By Lauren Keiper, in Reuters

(Reuters) – Students in schools in the largest U.S. cities, many from low-income households, trail their peers elsewhere in the country in a test of science proficiency, according to a report released on Thursday.

Fourth- and eighth-graders in most of the 17 participating urban districts typically scored lower than the national average, the 2009 National Assessment of Educational Progress Science report showed.

“The results are shouting at us: Whatever we are doing in science education in these big city public schools, it isn’t working for the vast majority of our students,” said Alan Friedman, a member of the National Assessment Governing Board.

To read more…