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Project Aims
(a) to consult with members of the Dyslexia Task Force groups, North and South (DENI, DES) and ascertain their views and perspectives on the provision of support for pupils with dyslexia ten years on.
(b) to consult with key stakeholders, North and South and to ascertain their views and perspectives on the provision of support for pupils with dyslexia and
(c) to clarify present policy in the area of dyslexia support, North and South and to identify strategic policy which informs good practice.
Contacts
- Dr Therese McPhillips, St. Patrick’s College, Drumcondra
- Dr Ann Marie Casserly, St Angela’s College, Sligo
- Mrs Donna Hazzard, St Mary’s University College, Belfast
- Mrs Gillian Beck, Stranmillis University College, Belfast
- Dr Bairbre Tiernan, St Angela’s College, Sligo
Amount Granted
[£5000 2013-2014]
Project Aims
The aim of the project is to test the theory that, in the context of what has been argued to be a new educational settlement (Vickers 2008) where education and employment now overlap, the transformative possibilities for workplace learning for you people are created, or not, by the learning ethos of the workplaces in which they engage and that this learning ethos is in part created by the presence of young people. Yet attention to the relevance of this dimension is in itself framed by the learning ethos of schools and teachers.
Contacts
- Dr Annelies Kamp, Dublin City University
- Ms Dorothy Black, University of Ulster
Amount Granted
[£5300 2013-2014]
Project Aims
(a) to prepare a summary of existing research on best practice in effective fundamental movement skill development in the work place (within and beyond education)
(b) to analyse different models of fundamental movement skill training in physical education teacher education in two research sites, and to compare them with each other and the existing literature on effective fundamental movement skill training,
(c) to provide an opportunity for researchers/teachers/lecturers in contact with the two research sites to comment on current practice and to identify gaps in their training and preparation for becoming an effective fundamental movement skill teacher
(d) to prepare a position statement on effective fundamental movement skill training in physical education teacher education that can inform practice in the two research sites, underpin joint research publications and provide a rationale for further collaborative research funding.
Contacts
- Dr Susan Crawford
- Dr David McKee
Amount Granted
[£5000 2013-2014]
Project Aims
This project is a direct result of the 2012 Annual SCoTENS Conference, and aims to (a) Identify, investigate and case-report the nature and detail of teaching and learning activities within a number of creative classrooms, north and south and (b) contribute to developing better international understanding of the issue of creativity in the classroom and so to a more complete definition of the creative classroom itself and the learning experiences this affords.
Contacts
- Dr. Anne McMorrough, Marino Institute of Education
- Ms. Nicola Marlow, University of Ulster
Amount Granted
[£5000 2013-2014]
Project Aims
This project aims to explore the role of primary education in the teaching of political history, with particular emphasis on teaching contested or controversial history in the context of the decade of commemorations
Contacts
- Dr Fionnuala Waldron, St Patrick’s College , Drumcondra
- Dr Alan McCully, University of Ulster
Amount Granted
[£1400 2013-2014]
Project Aims
To hold a conference which will take place in May 2013 in the School of Education in UCD for doctoral students in education on the island of Ireland. This is the fifth Doctoral Conference that SCoTENS has co-funded
Contacts
- Dr Dympna Devine, University College Dublin
- Prof. Jannette Elwood, Queen’s University Belfast
Amount Granted
[£4000 2013-2014]
Project Aims
The Programming Studio, a virtual learning environment hosted by QUB will offer a pilot group of post-primary school ICT teachers an opportunity to experience programming as a ‘digital literacy’ by mastering the programming language(s) identified above through games-based learning. The wider skill of ‘computational thinking’ at the heart of computer programming will be embedded in the Programming Studio game plan.
Contacts
- Dr Pamela Cowan, Queen’s University Belfast
- Dr Elizabeth Oldham, Trinity College Dublin
- Dr Ann Fitzgibbon, Trinity College Dublin
Amount Granted
[£5,500 2013-2014]
Project Aims
This project aims to examine the interaction between Pedagogical Content Knowledge (PCK) and school and classroom setting with a view to identifying the factors that support or inhibit teachers in the implementation and development of the methodologies and approaches introduced during ITE
Contacts
- Dr Fionnuala Waldron, St. Patrick’s College, Drumcondra
- Dr Richard Greenwood, Stranmillis University College
- Dr Maeve Liston, Mary Immaculate College, Limerick
Amount Granted
[£3290 2013-2014]
Exploring Japanese research lessons study as a model of peer to peer professional learning
This study seeks to explore the use of Research Lesson Study (RLS), a long -established professional development strategy in Japan, as a model of school-based and peer-to-peer professional development for teachers which is new to Northern Ireland and the Republic. Broadly stated, RLS involves between 3-5 teachers forming a group that plans lessons, observes them being taught by each other and analyses them with a view to improving practice. There are various approaches to RLS but this proposal seeks to adapt the successful work of Dudley (2005), which was arguably the first formal application of RLS techniques for professional development anywhere in Ireland or the UK.
The focus of this small-scale study is to examine this relatively new professional learning tool in a secondary level school in Sligo and Belfast. The key research questions are:
- Can RLS offer an effective school-based and peer-to-peer approach to staff development in schools?
- What factors facilitate or hinder the improvement of pedagogy and ultimately learning through RLS?
Contacts
Professor John Gardner, Queen’s University Belfast
Mr Gerard Devlin, Queen’s University Belfast
Dr Debie Galanouli, Queen’s University Belfast
Dr Mary Magee, St Angela’s College, Sligo
Ms Kathryn McSweeney, St Angela’s College, Sligo
Effective mentoring within physical education teacher education
The aim of this research project is to:
- Prepare a summary of existing research on best practice in effective mentoring in the work place, within and beyond education
- Analyse three different models of mentoring in PETE (physical education teacher education) in three research sites, and to compare them with each other and the existing literature on effective mentoring.
- Provide an opportunity for mentors in the three research sites to comment on current practice and it identify gaps in their training and preparation for becoming an effective mentor.
- Prepare a position statement on effective mentoring in PETE, using the format of a collaborative seminar that can inform practice in the three research sites, underpin joint research publications and provide a rationale for further collaborative research.
Contacts
Dr Fiona C Chambers, University College Cork
Mr Walter Bleakley, University of Ulster at Jordanstown
Dr Deirdre Brennan, University of Ulster at Jordanstown
Children exposed to domestic abuse
Helping student teachers understand their role in primary school settings
This research project will undertake an audit in the participating institutions to identify the extent to which the topic of domestic abuse is included in the undergraduate education curriculum. Results from the audit will be used to inform the development and evaluation of a tailored education programme with student teachers. The aim of the education programme is to increase student teachers knowledge and understanding of domestic abuse and the impact it has on primary school aged children’s learning, development, behaviour and relationships within an educational context. The use of actors in the education programme provides an opportunity to address real life situations in a safe environment.
Contacts
Dr Bronagh McKee, Stranmillis University College
Ms Stephanie Holt, Trinity College Dublin
This research project aims to:
Map the third level education infrastructure of the island of Ireland in an effort to gauge its preparedness to exploit creative economy growth. The particular focus will rest on courses and qualification geared at the future creative industry workers.
The primary goal of this project is to map the Irish education system’s ability to match the growth of the Creative Industries, attract them to these shores, and encourage indigenous creative industries through the provision of a dynamic creative workforce with internationally recognised qualifications.
Dr Patrick Collins, NUI Galway
Professor Nola Hewitt-Dundas, Queen’s University Belfast
[2012-2013 SCoTENS Grant £3,000]
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