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Browsing Capítulos de libros by Subject "04 Educación de calidad"
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- ItemAvanzando al desarrollo académico: programa de mentorías con enfoque de género(Ediciones UC, 2024) Véliz Calderón, Daniela Ximena; Muñoz García, Ana Luisa; Trebisacce Marchand, Catalina; Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. Facultad de Educación"Desde hace medio siglo los feminismos habitan las academias. Trabajan sostenidamente en la adversidad de los márgenes y contra la subestimación que arroja nuestras perspectivas a los confines de las bibliografías complementarias de los programas de formación. Durante todas estas décadas hemos aprendido a pensar desde epistemologías críticas y a desarrollar éticas de trabajo que procuran navegar a contrapelo de las lógicas del mercado del conocimiento. El feminismo está en el corazón de cómo generamos conocimiento, cómo escribimos, cómo citamos, cómo y con quienes trabajamos, cómo publicamos, hablamos y hacemos sentido del mundo. Este libro es una reflexión situada en el contexto de nuestro sur global, colonizado, sometido al neoliberalismo y amedrentado por las nuevas derechas. Desde aquí pensamos en torno a las experiencias de participación de los saberes feministas en las universidades y en las lógicas de producción de conocimiento en dichos espacios. Hacemos una cartografía de experiencias disímiles que, sin embargo, hacen eco aquí y allá, en diferentes puntos del continente. Lejos de producir voz homogénea en la discusión sobre género, este libro muestra, a lo largo de sus secciones y capítulos, una diversidad de aproximaciones y discusiones sobre género y/o feminismos en educación superior. No toda la discusión a este respecto se posiciona explícitamente desde teorizaciones feministas y sabemos que en los procesos de construcción de conocimiento nada está finalmente resuelto y cerrado. Cuando pensamos que avanzamos hacia una conclusión, nos encontramos con aperturas que nos dirigen a otros conocimientos, otras preguntas, otras ideas, y otras voces emergen. Tenemos el convencimiento de que siempre existe la posibilidad de dar vuelta una idea, desarrollar una perspectiva conceptual o teórica diferente frente a una problemática. La genealogía del trabajo feminista nos ha enseñado a volver a pensar y retrabajar historias, ideas, teorías y conceptos más de una vez. Resignificar y reescribir el conocimiento es parte de la tarea. "Feminismos en el umbral de la academia" representa complicidades para imaginar lo (im)posible desde los feminismos en la construcción de conocimiento en las universidades en un contexto de avances de políticas e iniciativas de género que convive con una agenda antigénero. A pesar y en contra de la indiferencia, la marginación y la persecución del pasado y del presente, los feminismos habitan nuestras universidades tensionando y traspasando los umbrales de la academia, con estrategias para sortear las ficcionales fronteras epistémicas, burocráticas, formales y políticas, construidas para dejarnos fuera.
- ItemBackground on Continuities and Discontinuities in the Transition from Early Childhood Education to Primary: The Chilean Case(Springer, Cham, 2022) Narea Biscupovich, Marigen Soledad; Godoy, Felipe; Treviño Villarreal, Juan Ernesto; Urbina-García, Angel; Perry, Bob; Dockett, Sue; Jindal-Snape, Divya; García-Cabrero, BenildeThis chapter analyses how early childhood and primary education are articulated to facilitate children’s transition in Chile in terms of institutional arrangements, curricular differentiation, and pedagogical interactions of both levels. It considers to what extent this articulation fosters either a smooth and child-respectful transition or a greater schoolification of the early childhood education (ECE) system. There have been advances in favour of having a smoother transition. The 2 years of kindergarten (for children aged 5 and 6) were included in primary schools, with the aim of easing the transition. Undoubtedly, the transition can be done more organically, but this has also led to greater schoolification. Regarding the curriculum, there are essential differences between the two levels. Notably, while personal, social, and emotional development is highly foregrounded within the early childhood level, it is not in the primary school curriculum. Also, there are schoolification problems within the early years of the primary school level. The accountability pressures for this level could also jeopardise early childhood level objectives. Finally, in terms of pedagogical practices, ECE is focused on children’s socioemotional development while this focus is gradually being lost as children are promoted through the school levels. We propose making the school ready for children, advocating for bringing into the primary school some features of the early childhood level’s pedagogical practice, so that it is more flexible and focused on children’s wellbeing.
- Item¿Cómo mejorar las prácticas progresivas en la formación inicial docente? Sugerencias de distintos actores.(2023) Gómez Nocetti, Viviana De Lourdes; González Vallejos, María Paz; Gómez Zaccarelli, Florencia Sofía; Guzmán Córdova, Pilar; Red de Estudios Latinoamericanos en Educación y Pedagogía (RELEP)Buscando coincidencia entre actores, se solicitó a los coordinadores de práctica, a los supervisores y a los estudiantes en proceso de prácticas de cinco universidades chilenas, acerca de sus sugerencias para mejorar las prácticas progresivas que les ofrecen los programas de formación. La técnica de análisis temático permitió reconocer las principales áreas de preocupación, encontrando coincidencias respecto a la elección de centros, una progresión más clara y formación de supervisores y mentores.
- ItemConclusions and recommendations(Taylor and Francis, 2023) Manen, Saskia M. van; Kremer Ramírez, Klaus Nicolás; Jaenichen, Claudine; Lin, Tingyi S.; Ramírez Andersen, Rodrigo AndrésThis conclusion presents some closing thoughts of the key concepts discussed in the preceding chapters of this book. The book emphasizes the importance of structurally including design in all of its guises, methodologies and perspectives as standard practice in emergency management. It points out, in order to enable design for emergency management, a broader culture of design needs to become established within government agencies. The book offers suggestions of partners who can be engaged in co-designing, such as for-profit entities in the retail sector. It also offers another creative solution to this conundrum by showcasing the value of collaborating with higher education institutes. The book examines how to mobilize people by showcasing the interplay of various communication aspects, that is text, imagery, and an auditory component, which work in harmony to foreground urgency in a warning, and are intended to assist the audience in sense making and subsequent action taking.
- ItemConnected or Disconnected? Exploring the Relationship Between Citizenship Norms and Other Citizenship Attitudes in Young People(Routledge, 2022) Villalobos, Cristóbal; Carrasco Ogaz, Diego; Miranda Riquelme, Catalina; Morel Rioseco, María Jesús; Treviño Villarreal, Juan Ernesto; Sandoval-Hernández, AndrésCitizenship is a complex, multidimensional concept that comprises a broad set of beliefs, values, skills, knowledge, actions, and dispositions. Due to this multiplicity, the relationships between the components of citizenship are not necessarily linear or causal. Using the largest and most recent comparative study on youth citizenship, the 2016 International Civic and Citizenship Education Study, this chapter analyzes the relationship between civic norms and four attitudes: multiculturalism, gender equality, patriotism, and respect for democracy. To differentiate between different types of civic norms, five profiles of eighth-grade students are discussed: (1) comprehensive (students who express that all civic norms are important; (2) duty-based (students who support traditional norms, like obeying the law or respecting authorities); (3) socially engaged (students who support norms oriented toward helping the community and protecting the environment and human rights); (4) monitorial (students who value non-conventional forms of political participation); and (5) anomic (those with the lowest endorsement in all citizenship norms). General trends show that the profiles of civic norms endorsement vary significantly between countries, suggesting that citizenship norms are constructed contextually. There is continued relevance in exploring the contradictory relationship between patriotism and multiculturalism, or gender equality with respect to other civic attitudes.
- ItemEarly Career Academics and Internationalization(2023) Flander, Alenka; Guzmán Sobarzo, Pamela Beatriz; Probst Schilter, Carole; Tulppo, Paula; Da Wan, ChangThis chapter focuses on internationalization trends of early career academics based on the Academic Profession in the Knowledge-based Society (APIKS) global survey, involving 34,674 academics across 16 countries. The 16 countries are further categorized into: advanced, emerging European, and emerging non-European. Among the participating academics, 15,871 (45%) were early career academics. Based on these participants, this chapter examines the extent of internationalization in the training background of early career academics, as well as in their current activities of teaching, research, and external engagement. In terms of background and training, we found that across all countries, a greater number of senior than early career academics obtained their doctoral degree from a different country to the one they are working in. Specifically in teaching, we examine the international perspective, content, and student body. In research, we explore collaboration with international colleagues, characterization of primary research, publications, co-authorship, and research funding. In external engagement, we delve into the contribution to external international society. Overall, this chapter highlights various trends of internationalization within and across the three categories of countries, and underlines illuminating key factors that support as well as challenge the extent of internationalization of early career academics.
- ItemExperiencia universitaria en pandemia: ¿Qué sabemos de los estudiantes en contexto de desventaja socioeconómica?(Centro de Políticas Públicas UC (Chile), 2022) Vizcarra Rebolledo, Hilda Ruby; Zapata Larraín, GonzaloEste artículo aborda el análisis de la experiencia estudiantil en pandemia de universitarios en contexto de desventaja socio-económica, a partir de antecedentes proporcionados por la Encuesta Nacional de Compromiso Estudiantil, ENCE 2020, y desarrollado en el marco de un curso del programa UC Propone. Los resultados sugieren que los estudiantes en desventaja socio-económica presentan diversidad en su experiencia estudiantil y algunas diferencias respecto de aquellos provenientes de sectores más acomodados. El desafío de una educación superior de calidad y con justicia social, requiere poner mayor atención no sólo a las características en el acceso de los estudiantes, sino que, a sus diversas trayectorias y necesidades para enriquecer las oportunidades de formación y promover el logro académico.
- ItemHacia intervenciones de fomento lector inicial para el hogar ajustadas a sus usuarios: aportes del Diseño Centrado en el Individuo(Ediciones Universidad Finis Terrae, 2023) Mendive Criado, Susana; Lecaros Besa, Catalina del Rosario
- ItemHow Could Be Used Student Comments for Delivering Feedback to Instructors in Higher Education?(Springer, 2024) Astudillo Laroze, Gabriel Alejandro; Hilliger Carrasco, Isabel; Baier Aranda, Jorge AndresIn higher education, open-text comments from Student Evaluations of Teaching (SET) provide valuable insights into instructional strategies. However, processing these comments can be challenging, leading to limited feedback for instructors. This research aims to develop Natural Language Processing (NLP) strategies to transform student comments into actionable feedback. Two research questions guide this study: 1) How can NLP methods diagnose the effectiveness or mismatch of instruction in higher education? and 2) How can these diagnoses inform personalized recommendations for contextually relevant teaching practices? Using cosine similarity between vector representations of student comments and literature-based statements it is diagnosed the presence of effective teaching practices. This diagnosis will inform personalized feedback recommendations. Preliminary work has used Exploratory Factor Analysis was used to analyze latent dimensions in the comment-statement similarity matrix and results suggest that correlations are linked to pedagogically relevant latent variables. This methodology seems to be a valid strategy for diagnosing the effectiveness or mismatch of teaching practices in higher education. Future research directions include exploring text data representations from different theoretical perspectives on education and investigating the impact and implementation of teaching practices suggested by language models compared to those recommended by human agents.
- ItemIntegrating SageMath and Canvas LMS as an Asynchronous and Interactive Learning Model in an Introductory Linear Algebra Course(Springer, 2024) Rojas Bruna, Carlos Eduardo; Allahbakhshi Hosseini, Mahsa MahnazThe aim of this paper is to present a model for developing computer-based laboratory activities in the undergraduate course Introduction to Linear Algebra at the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, and to discuss some of the findings observed during the implementation. The purpose of the model is to introduce students, both from the mathematics degree program and prospective secondary mathematics teachers to basic programming concepts through problem-solving, using questionnaires presented in an HTML format. To facilitate learning, these questionnaires will be solved using SageMath as a computational algebraic system of support and Canvas LMS as a learning management system. The presented model aims to leverage the advantages of digital tools to enhance the teaching and learning of linear algebra. The integration of SageMath and Canvas LMS enables an interactive and asynchronous learning experience, where students can explore mathematical concepts at their own pace and receive immediate feedback. However, it is also emphasized in the article that it is important to consider individual differences among students and adapt the model accordingly to meet their needs and abilities.
- ItemMoving Beyond Vocabulary: EFL Preservice Teachers’ Challenges Integrating Content and Language(Springer Science and Business Media B.V., 2024) Barahona M.; Hao Jing© The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2024.This chapter reports on a study that explored how a group of EFL preservice teachers integrated content and language as they planned a Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) unit designed for young learners. This classroom-based study was designed in an initial English language teacher education programme in Chile and was offered in a didactics course. In this course, a range of teaching strategies were taught—including CLIL and Reading to Learn (R2L)—to prepare preservice teachers to integrate content and language into their classrooms. Specifically, in this chapter we analyse five unit plans designed by 15 Chilean preservice teachers and their associated reflections on the challenges they faced planning the integration of content and language. Results of the research suggested that although participants attempted to integrate content and language in a balanced way, units tended to be content-focused, and the language elements were largely limited to vocabulary teaching. Therefore, the integration was not necessarily pedagogically effective in its guiding ambition. Yet, there were some well-intentioned efforts to integrate language and content as participants designed reading and writing activities which encouraged the use of vocabulary in a meaningful way, with some evidence of the implementation of some R2L principles. Given this context, the chapter seeks to further understand how EFL preservice teachers learn to teach CLIL, as well as providing several recommendations on how to assist future teachers move most effectively beyond vocabulary teaching when integrating content and language in EFL teaching context.
- ItemPerspectivas sobre la diversidad: reflexión e interacción en el aula de la Educación Primaria chilena(Editorial USACH, 2024) Assael Budnik, Cecilia; Villalta Páucar, Marco Antonio; Martinic, Sergio; Rebolledo Etchepare, Jéssica Verónica
- ItemPublic affairs education in Latin America and the shape of the state: the cases of Brazil, Chile, and Colombia(Edward Elgar Publishing, 2022) Corrêa Gomes, Ricardo; Sanabria-Pulido, Pablo; Pliscoff, Cristian; Carvalho Teixeira, Marco AntonioThis chapter explores, from a comparative perspective, the current state of public administration education in three Latin American countries, each with strong similarities and different traditions and emphases on their public administration structures. In doing so, we aim to analyze how the shape and the type of the State have influenced public affairs education in the three countries. We will offer in the first part an overview of public administration in Latin America. In the second section, we will delve into the evolution and the current state of public affairs education at three different levels (undergraduate, master, and doctoral). Finally, according to the analysis in section 2, we will display a comparative analysis aiming to disentangle the particular focus in each country, the differences, and the commonalities to see whether there is a Latin American way of teaching public affairs.
- ItemScience Learning in Non-formal Settings(2024) Cândido Vendrasco, Natália; Pugliese, AdrianaNon-formal science education settings, such as zoos, aquariums, botanical gardens, science centers, and museums, can significantly contribute to people’s interest and understanding of science and public participation in science-related civic issues. In Latin America, the emergence of these settings was late, but they increasingly present characteristics of the identity and context of the region. This chapter aims to discuss specific issues in the context of museums in Latin America, rethinking how science education is conducted in these countries, in order to understand the existing diversity and advance practices that promote equality and social inclusion in the context of the demands of Latin American audiences. In particular, the barriers and potentialities of the physical contexts of these settings are discussed, and human mediation is proposed as an important tool to transform visits to these spaces into more inclusive experiences.
- ItemScience Teacher Trainers in Higher Education: An Exploratory Study on Conceptions of Gender and Science Education(Springer, 2024) Palomera Rojas, Pamela Veronica; Verdugo Castro, Sonia; García Holgado, Alicia; Meneses, Alejandra; Martínez Galaz, CarolinaThe aim of this research was to characterise from the gender ideologies the conceptions about the relationship between gender and science education of university professors who train science teachers. The study is of an exploratory-descriptive nature and was carried out during the first four-month period of the 2022–2023 academic year in a Spanish public university with a long history in the training of science teachers. Among the participants there are 5 men and 5 women; they have a long career in the academic field, carry out research in their scientific discipline and teach in disciplinary areas and in the training of science teachers. The main results show that, among the conceptions of university professors, there is a recognition of the gender gaps in science education, and they are able to recognise the different biases and stereotypes existing in the sciences. In spite of this, the professors consider that gender mainstreaming in their teaching practices is not very useful because they teach scientific issues of the field, which are not gendered. In summary, although there is knowledge of the differences that occur due to gender issues, opposing views still persist, which leads to the need to delve deeper into these issues.
- ItemSocial and Field Work Abilities of Teaching Professors(Routledge, 2022) Reyes Quilodrán, Claudia; Miranda Sánchez, Paula; Guerra Aburto, LilianaIn Chile, the development of professional abilities for social work students has long been an issue in undergraduate education because it requires that professors develop specific activities, methodologies, and techniques to ensure that students acquire the necessary abilities for their field practicum. This chapter contributes to the existing body of knowledge by offering some answers to this inquiry. The chapter characterises the professional abilities that a professor, who conducts professional practice in the field, should have in order to contribute to the social work curriculum. In the first part, professional practice in the School of Social Work at the Catholic University of Chile is described. The professional practice model and its three dimensions are described. The three aspects are the following: student training, supervision, and process management. The model identifies how professors transfer professional skills and technical knowledge to students and evaluate their technical-professional knowledge and abilities during the field practicum. Finally, the features that a professor should have in order to contribute to the formation of professional skills in social work students are established. Semi-structured interviews are conducted with the professors, and an online questionnaire with open-ended questions are sent to graduate students who graduated in the last five years and to students who are currently in a professional practice.
- ItemTeachers’ beliefs about poverty: a barrier we must face(IntechOpen Limited, 2022) Gómez Nocetti, Viviana; González Vallejos, María Paz; Gutiérrez Rivera, Pablo SebastiánThe poorest children have the lowest educational results, which the neoliberal model has deepened. The State transferred its responsibility to private and municipalities through supply subsidies, but the amount did not ensure quality. To solve this problem, it provides an additional subsidy for each “priority” child, demanding accountability, but with high institutional and individual consequences. But the gap remains, and teachers are held accountable for these low results. The literature shows that teachers hold beliefs that prevent them from dealing constructively with this reality. Beliefs about poverty were investigated by asking 828 teachers from low and lower-middle SES schools with standardized test scores above and below the average of similar schools to point out four characteristics of vulnerable schools. The data were analyzed by means of thematic and semantic field analysis. A shared narrative was found, independent of the type of school, attributing failure to the degraded context that surrounds it, from which the families and children come. Neoliberal policies based on accountability have intensified the work of the teacher and the constant threat has led them to self-defense. There is an urgent need to change the approach if opportunities for the poorest children are to be improved.
- ItemTransitioning face-to-face courses to online format(Unesco, 2023) Bachmann C., Ingrid; Keith, Susan; Cozma, RalucaThere are many reasons for instructors to switch from in-person to online courses. The transition may be planned (because, for instance, of student demand for an online version of a course or a remote audience for the course) or unplanned (e.g., as the result of an emergency preventing face-to-face, on-campus learning, sometimes when the course has already started). Regardless of the specific scenario, however, one thing is clear: Instructors moving courses from face-to-face to online delivery cannot simply do the same things they would have in a traditional classroom. For online courses to work, journalism instructors need to rethink the way they teach and organize courses and reassess their methods of evaluation, oftentimes with no previous training on the matter (Delaney and Betts, 2020). Indeed, the key in this transition is adaptation, rather than mere replication. Accepting change and embracing new opportunities may make the whole experience less daunting for instructors and students (see Bazluki and Milman, 2019). While there is no one-size-fits-all way to teach – online or otherwise – the challenge of transitioning to remote classes goes better with a five-fold approach in which instructors get some clues from their own students, focus on learning outcomes rather than specific activities, adjust their procedures, organize and manage their lessons, and clearly communicate with students about the course. Each of these steps is further developed below.
- ItemUtilización de TIC e indagación científica para el desarrollo de la creatividad en el ambiente escolar(Centro de Políticas Públicas UC, 2016) Salinas Espinosa, Alvaro; Maturana Uribe, Camila Jesús; Castillo Sacaan, María Francisca del; Miranda, Valentina; Padilla Toledo, Janina Valentina; Quezada González, Daniela Paz; Ramírez, Carolina; Saa Muñoz, Nicole Betzabé del Carmen; Silva Hope, Mara
- ItemWeird readings and little machines: Against reading engagement(John Benjamins, ) Véliz Córdova, SoledadReading engagement is presented as an affect that organizes the relationships between children and books. The OECD-PISA reading framework has co-opted engagement as an attentive, involved, and joyful relationship with literature. A reading assemblage is offered to explain how engagement is instrumental to producing readers as bodies with potential for human capital, that is, children. The author uses a literary encounter to propose weird readings as an affect that breaks into the reading assemblage, complicating joy and pleasure, and as the affect that precludes the possibilities of creating relationships with materialities (books) from outside a reading assemblage.