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Kirjailija

Patrick Carmichael

Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 8 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 2007-2026, suosituimpien joukossa Improving Case Based Learning in Higher Education. Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.

8 kirjaa

Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 2007-2026.

Improving Case Based Learning in Higher Education

Improving Case Based Learning in Higher Education

Patrick Carmichael; Katy Jordon; Frances Tracy; Kate Litherland; Simon Morris; Agustina Martinez Garcia; Uma Patel

Routledge
2026
nidottu
Learning with cases lets students engage with authentic and complex problems and gain experience with diverse and unpredictable outcomes. Emerging technologies can support and enhance case-based learning, letting teachers and students develop learning environments as never before – but this will require responsive and participatory approaches to research, design, and development. The authors demonstrate how participatory approaches can help make educational technologies transformative, and interdisciplinary case studies show how new methods can inform: curriculum development and course redesignthe introduction of case-based teaching and learning, student research projects, and technology-enhanced learning environments across disciplinesthe development of interactive learning resources for lectures, seminars, online environments, and independent learningWhile exploring the interplay of technology and pedagogy, Improving Case Based Learning in Higher Education addresses the importance of participatory approaches, how to deal with complexity and change, and the nature of diverse learning environments.
Improving Case Based Learning in Higher Education

Improving Case Based Learning in Higher Education

Patrick Carmichael; Katy Jordon; Frances Tracy; Kate Litherland; Simon Morris; Agustina Martinez Garcia; Uma Patel

Routledge
2026
sidottu
Learning with cases lets students engage with authentic and complex problems and gain experience with diverse and unpredictable outcomes. Emerging technologies can support and enhance case-based learning, letting teachers and students develop learning environments as never before – but this will require responsive and participatory approaches to research, design, and development. The authors demonstrate how participatory approaches can help make educational technologies transformative, and interdisciplinary case studies show how new methods can inform: curriculum development and course redesignthe introduction of case-based teaching and learning, student research projects, and technology-enhanced learning environments across disciplinesthe development of interactive learning resources for lectures, seminars, online environments, and independent learningWhile exploring the interplay of technology and pedagogy, Improving Case Based Learning in Higher Education addresses the importance of participatory approaches, how to deal with complexity and change, and the nature of diverse learning environments.
Networking Research

Networking Research

Patrick Carmichael

Bloomsbury Academic
2013
nidottu
The educational world is increasingly dominated by 'network rhetoric'; not only are teachers and learners seen as participants in networks, the availability of low-cost electronic devices, collaborative environments and new forms of data 'born digital' have changed the nature of education research.How can researchers and research-informed practitioners best engage in and with networks and develop effective networking practices? How might networks and networking be conceptualized in order to frame and support their work in and on networks? How do networks relate to existing organizational forms and how might new networking practices emerge?This book draws on extensive research into educational research networks in schools, colleges and informal education settings to explore these questions. Carmichael combines theoretical insights into networks from different disciplinary backgrounds and awareness of technological developments, with the accounts of teachers, researchers, and technologists. He considers how educational research as a field is changing, how individual and collective research capacities might develop, identifies new research approaches and discusses the emerging role of the 'researcher-networker'.
Networking Research

Networking Research

Patrick Carmichael

Continuum Publishing Corporation
2011
sidottu
The educational world is increasingly dominated by network rhetoric; not only are teachers and learners seen as participants in networks, the availability of low-cost electronic devices, collaborative environments and new forms of data
Researching and Understanding Educational Networks

Researching and Understanding Educational Networks

Robert McCormick; Alison Fox; Patrick Carmichael; Richard Procter

Routledge
2010
nidottu
In the twenty-first century, what could be more important than networks? Such is the power of their influence and attendant technologies that it is unsurprising that our thinking about networks is permeated with images and metaphors from electronic networks. This orientation may equally influence thinking about education, whether that is of students or teachers.Researching and Understanding Educational Networks extends the discussion of educational networks in a unique and novel way by relating it to teacher learning. Following an investigation of teacher and school networks in the UK, the authors found that theoretical perspectives taken from existing work on such networks were not adequate to provide an understanding of their potential, nor to provide the basis for researching them in ways that reflected the variety of teacher experience.This book presents analyses of the problems with existing theories of teacher learning, which for example draw on ideas of 'communities of practice', and explores what network theories can be brought to the problem of how teachers and schools create and share new knowledge about practice. Innovative networking theories discussed include:social network analysissocial capital theoriesactor-network theoryinvestigations of electronic networks including computer-meditated conferencinghow people learn at events such as conferences.Researching and Understanding Educational Networks explores a new application of networks theories derived from quite different fields of work, and extends it both by being concerned about networks beyond organisations and specifically about educational networks. Their application to educational networks, and to teacher learning in particular, is a unique contribution of the book. This enables it to be of interest to both researchers and those studying for higher degrees, including students who are professionals working in schools.
Researching and Understanding Educational Networks

Researching and Understanding Educational Networks

Robert McCormick; Alison Fox; Patrick Carmichael; Richard Procter

Routledge
2010
sidottu
In the twenty-first century, what could be more important than networks? Such is the power of their influence and attendant technologies that it is unsurprising that our thinking about networks is permeated with images and metaphors from electronic networks. This orientation may equally influence thinking about education, whether that is of students or teachers.Researching and Understanding Educational Networks extends the discussion of educational networks in a unique and novel way by relating it to teacher learning. Following an investigation of teacher and school networks in the UK, the authors found that theoretical perspectives taken from existing work on such networks were not adequate to provide an understanding of their potential, nor to provide the basis for researching them in ways that reflected the variety of teacher experience.This book presents analyses of the problems with existing theories of teacher learning, which for example draw on ideas of 'communities of practice', and explores what network theories can be brought to the problem of how teachers and schools create and share new knowledge about practice. Innovative networking theories discussed include:social network analysissocial capital theoriesactor-network theoryinvestigations of electronic networks including computer-meditated conferencinghow people learn at events such as conferences.Researching and Understanding Educational Networks explores a new application of networks theories derived from quite different fields of work, and extends it both by being concerned about networks beyond organisations and specifically about educational networks. Their application to educational networks, and to teacher learning in particular, is a unique contribution of the book. This enables it to be of interest to both researchers and those studying for higher degrees, including students who are professionals working in schools.
Improving Learning How to Learn

Improving Learning How to Learn

Mary James; Robert McCormick; Paul Black; Patrick Carmichael; Mary-Jane Drummond; Alison Fox; John MacBeath; Bethan Marshall; David Pedder; Richard Procter; Sue Swaffield; Joanna Swann; Dylan Wiliam

Routledge
2007
sidottu
Learning how to learn is an essential preparation for lifelong learning. Whilst this is widely acknowledged by teachers, they have lacked a rich professional knowledge base from which they can teach their pupils how to learn. This book makes a major contribution to the creation of such a professional knowledge base for teachers by building on previous work associated with ‘formative assessment’ or ‘assessment for learning’ which has a strong evidence base, and is now being promoted nationally and internationally. However, it adds an important new dimension by reporting the conditions within schools, and across networks of schools, that are conducive to the promotion, in classrooms, of learning how to learn as an extension of assessment for learning. There is a companion book, Learning How to Learn in Classrooms: Tools for schools (also available from Routledge), which provides practical resources for those teachers looking to put into practice the principles covered in this book.
Improving Learning How to Learn

Improving Learning How to Learn

Mary James; Robert McCormick; Paul Black; Patrick Carmichael; Mary-Jane Drummond; Alison Fox; John MacBeath; Bethan Marshall; David Pedder; Richard Procter; Sue Swaffield; Joanna Swann; Dylan Wiliam

Routledge
2007
nidottu
Learning how to learn is an essential preparation for lifelong learning. Whilst this is widely acknowledged by teachers, they have lacked a rich professional knowledge base from which they can teach their pupils how to learn. This book makes a major contribution to the creation of such a professional knowledge base for teachers by building on previous work associated with ‘formative assessment’ or ‘assessment for learning’ which has a strong evidence base, and is now being promoted nationally and internationally. However, it adds an important new dimension by reporting the conditions within schools, and across networks of schools, that are conducive to the promotion, in classrooms, of learning how to learn as an extension of assessment for learning. There is a companion book, Learning How to Learn in Classrooms: Tools for schools (also available from Routledge), which provides practical resources for those teachers looking to put into practice the principles covered in this book.