教育变革的新挑战

IF 1.1 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Improving Schools Pub Date : 2018-11-01 DOI:10.1177/1365480218808892
Terry Wrigley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这个问题的范围很广,介绍了六种理解学校变革的创新和原创方法。这些作者探讨了家长网络的挑战性过程,建立足够关键的团队,在更独立的学习方法中参与儿童的偏好,组织记忆的性质以及学生和教师的期望。问题包括重要的社会正义问题,如避免城市隔离和支持跨性别和“性别膨胀”学生。第一篇文章由美国密歇根大学迪尔伯恩分校的Dara Hill撰写,内容涉及底特律市中心的家长们共同组织起来,以确保获得好的学校名额。富裕家庭从市中心搬到郊区的趋势很强烈,从而加剧了种族隔离。这篇文章描述了包括年轻专业人士在内的知识渊博的家长为避免这种情况而采取的一项举措,同时也挑战了市中心学校在问责压力下选择狭隘的回归基础的“测试教学”课程的趋势。希尔的文章包括对家长的采访记录,内容丰富,说明了在复杂的城市环境中追求进步的社会和教育价值观的斗争。它为家长参与开明的学校改革提供了一个有价值的案例研究。人们已经充分认识到合作在学校改进方面的重要性。这并不总是有价值的,正如哈格里夫斯在他对人为的同事关系的描述中反复强调的那样。在这篇文章中,以色列巴伊兰大学的Pascale Benoliel和Chen Schechter探讨了怀疑在团队合作和团队发展过程中的价值。这对于批判规范性假设和习惯做法非常重要。它们强调诸如提问、辩论、探索性学习、分析、娱乐性探索和回顾过去事件等行为。对于团队来说,学会运用不同的观点、信念和经验是很重要的。本文为团队成员和负责人发展批判立场提供了重要建议,并邀请进一步的实证研究。同样重要的是,要让学生的观点多样化,尤其是在期望学习者真正参与的环境中。这是来自赫尔辛基大学(芬兰)的Reetta Niemi、Kristiina Kumpulainen和Lasse Lipponen的课题。他们与一班8岁的学生合作,展示了钻石排名和同伴访谈如何提供工具来捕捉学生的经历和观点。芬兰修订后的国家课程涉及积极、调查、反思和交流学习,并认为游戏、想象力和艺术活动将提高批判性和创造性思维的知识和技能。这项创新研究提供了丰富的技术说明,这些技术为学生提供了信息,并加强了他们对更独立的学习形式的参与。瑞典乌普萨拉大学和哥德堡大学的Daniel Nordholm和Metta Liljenberg继续开展组织学习方面的工作,他们一直在探索学校等组织“学习”或掌握知识的方式。这与关于心灵本质的更广泛的哲学辩论有关,使用了“情境认知”或808892 IMP0010.1177/13654802218808892等概念来改善学校编辑编辑2018
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New challenges of educational change
This issue is wide-ranging in its scope, introducing six innovative and original approaches to understanding school change. These authors explore challenging processes of parental networking, building teams of sufficient criticality, engaging with children’s preferences in more independent approaches to learning, the nature of organisational memory and expectations of students and teachers. Issues include important social justice questions such as avoiding urban segregation and supporting transgender and ‘gender expansive’ students. The first article, by Dara Hill from the University of Michigan-Dearborn (USA), concerns parents in inner areas of the city of Detroit organising together to ensure good school places. There has been a strong trend of better-off families moving away from the inner areas and out to the suburbs, thus increasing segregation. The article describes an initiative by more knowledgeable parents, including young professionals, to avoid this, while also challenging the tendency for inner city schools, under pressure of accountability, to opt for narrow back-to-basics ‘teach-to-the-test’ curricula. Hill’s article includes informative transcripts of interviews with parents, which illustrate the struggle to pursue progressive social and educational values in a complex urban environment. It provides a valuable case study of parental engagement for enlightened school reform. Much has been made of the importance of collaboration in school improvement. This is not always valuable, as repeatedly emphasised by Hargreaves in his accounts of contrived collegiality. In this article, Pascale Benoliel and Chen Schechter, of Bar-Ilan University (Israel), explore the value of doubt within the processes of teamwork and team development. This is important in order to critique normative assumptions and habitual practices. They highlight behaviours such as questioning, debating, exploratory learning, analysing, divertive exploration and reviewing past events. It is important for teams to learn to engage with different standpoints, beliefs and experiences. This article provides important advice for team members and principals in developing a stance of critique and invites further empirical research. It is equally important to engage with a diversity of pupil perspectives, and particularly in contexts which expect learners to engage authentically. This is the subject of Reetta Niemi, Kristiina Kumpulainen and Lasse Lipponen from the University of Helsinki (Finland). Working with a class of 8 year olds, they show how diamond ranking and peer interviews provide tools to capture the pupils’ experiences and perspectives. Finland’s revised national curriculum involves active, investigative, reflective and communicative learning and holds that play, imagination and artistic activity will improve knowledge and skills for critical and creative thinking. This innovative research provides a rich account of techniques which inform and strengthen pupil engagement in more independent forms of learning. Continuing a body of work on organisational learning, Daniel Nordholm and Metta Liljenberg, of the universities of Uppsala and Gothenburg, Sweden, have been exploring the ways in which organisations such as schools can be said to ‘learn’ or hold knowledge. This relates to wider philosophical debates about the nature of mind, using concepts such as ‘situated cognition’ or 808892 IMP0010.1177/1365480218808892Improving SchoolsEditorial editorial2018
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来源期刊
Improving Schools
Improving Schools EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
期刊介绍: Improving Schools is for all those engaged in school development, whether improving schools in difficulty or making successful schools even better. The journal includes contributions from across the world with an increasingly international readership including teachers, heads, academics, education authority staff, inspectors and consultants. Improving Schools has created a forum for the exchange of ideas and experiences. Major national policies and initiatives have been evaluated, to share good practice and to highlight problems. The journal also reports on visits to successful schools in diverse contexts, and includes book reviews on a wide range of developmental issues.
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