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1
Große Hoffnungen, große Hürden : Der Einfluss von bilingualem Lernen im außerschulischen Lernort Labor auf Leistung, Verständnis, Selbstkonzept, und Kreativität ...
Roth, Tamara. - : University of Bayreuth, 2022
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2
Knowledge Building with Low Proficiency English Language Learners: Facilitating Metalinguistic Awareness and Scientific Understanding in Parallel
Tsuji, Wakana. - : University of Toronto, 2022
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3
The Unfamiliar as Object of an Empirical Science ...
Krope, Peter. - : Zenodo, 2017
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4
The Unfamiliar as Object of an Empirical Science ...
Krope, Peter. - : Zenodo, 2017
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5
Student interview for Place-Based WAC/WID writing instruction in Tropical Plant and Soil Sciences, clip 5 of 15
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6
Análisis de with orientado a la traducción mediante un corpus monolingüe (inglés) de textos biomédicos
Tabacinic, Karina Ruth. - : Universitat Jaume I, 2015
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7
Saying it again: enhancing clarity in English as a lingua franca (ELF) talk through self-repetition
In: Text & talk. - Berlin [u.a.] : Mouton de Gruyter 32 (2012) 5, 593-613
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OLC Linguistik
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8
Müssen Klienten ihre Berater verstehen? Ein Plädoyer für eine multi-perspektivische Betrachtung
In: Sozialwissenschaften und Berufspraxis ; 29 ; 1 ; 20-29 (2012)
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9
The study of English literary texts in a monocultural secondary school context and students' attitudes to the 'cultural other'.
Vlahakis, Mary. - 2012
Abstract: The aim of this research was to investigate how far the study of English literary texts, focused on ‘cultural or marginalised others’, could provide a substitute in imagination for the students’ lack of actual experience with the ‘cultural other’ and lead to a positive change in their understanding and attitudes. The students were from an Independent College in the northern suburbs of Adelaide, South Australia, where the predominance of Anglo-Australian culture made it difficult for the students to interact with others from different cultural backgrounds. Three main theorists were used to underpin the study and to analyse the data: Florian Znaniecki’s humanistic sociological concepts of group values and individual attitudes; Louise Rosenblatt’s educational theory of aesthetic reading and transactional experience emphasizing what should transpire between reader and the literary text; and Lev Vygotsky’s psychological theory of the imaginational processes in ‘higher mental development’. Over four years, the researcher, who was also the teacher, used an English classroom as the field of observation and investigation of students’ thoughts and feelings about ‘cultural others’. The literary texts studied as part of the English curriculum included those specifically chosen for their portrayal of themes related to people who were culturally different than the students. Four small scale qualitative studies were carried out at four different year levels. Prior to the study of selected texts in Years Nine and Ten, classes were asked to explain in writing what they knew and felt about the cultural group concerned. After study of the texts was completed, the students gave written responses to questions about the meaning and understanding of the text. The in-depth linguistic analysis of the students’ written comments, to the open ended questions, revealed what understanding and positivity of attitudes the students had toward people from other cultures before and after the study of the literary texts. In the Year Nine study, the topic of investigation concerned Aboriginal people in Australia and the Year Ten topic was on Italian immigrants in Australia post World War Two. For Year Eleven, the teacher/researcher provided a ‘memoir’ on the dialectical discussions with the students on two World War One texts: one written by a German soldier and the other a poem written by a British soldier. In Year Twelve, when the students chose their own texts for study, they responded to four final evaluating questions concerning what values they had gained from their years of studying English literary texts. Overall, these small scale studies demonstrated that the aesthetic study of literary texts over four years could stimulate the students’ higher mental processes of imagination. In general, participants emerged with a deepened understanding and greater positive attitudes toward the ‘cultural other’. In their own minds, the students’ monocultural experiences had been extended through the study of literary texts, although these attitudes were not yet tested by actual contact with multicultural ‘others’ in Australia. ; Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Education, 2012
Keyword: literature for intercultural understanding; monocultural schools; attitudes to cultural others; humanistic co-efficient; aesthetic reading of texts; scientific concepts
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2440/86233
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10
An exploration of High School (12-17 Year Old) students' understandings of, and attitudes towards Biotechnology processes
In: Research outputs pre 2011 (2006)
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11
Applications in pharmacokinetic modeling
Arnold, Esther. - : uga, 2003
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12
Tropes are for kids: Young children's developing understanding and use of narrative, scientific, and poetic written discourse genres.
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