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The author, a professor of English linguistics at Freiburg University, was a member of the German Council of Science and Humanities (Wissenschaftsrat) from 2006 to 2012 and, in this capacity, was involved in this advisory body’s rating and assessment activities. The present contribution focusses on issues arising in the rating of research output in the humanities and is informed by his dual perspective, as planner and organizer of the ratings undertaken by the Wissenschaftsrat and as a rated scholar in his own discipline, English and American Studies.
In a year of many anniversaries – the death of Charlemagne 814, Council of Constance 1414, Congress of Vienna 1814, the outbreak of World War 1914 – it was appropriate to remember Bouvines 1214 for, as Pierre Monnet and Claudia Zey note in their Introduction (p. 9–15), it marked an important event in Franco-German relations with which all these events are in one way or another bound up. These two authors attach much importance to Georges Duby and his study of the battle, making it clear that the book is not about a single event, but concerned to contextualize and set it in the longue durée, hence the timespan of the title. ...
Kinsmen of the President
(2016)
Being a journalist in Nigeria is very risky business especially when you decide to go against the grain and print the truth. Jerry comes to see just how risky his job is when he is whisked away to jail after publishing a particularly scathing article. While in custody we see the prison system through his eyes and he takes us back as he feeds us with anecdotes of his former life.
Insights into Uganda
(2016)
Insights into Uganda' is a selection of newspaper articles written by columnist Kevin O'Connor for the Sunday Monitor, drawn almost entirely from 2007 to 2015. Divided into 13 chapters ranging from sex to religion and from inequality to the environment, the 193 articles are always thoughtful, often provocative and sometimes humorous. The text is further enlivened by Moses Balagadde's cartoons. Kevin provides a multitude of insights into Ugandan society, which amply reflect both the title of his column, Roving Eye, and his catchphrase, 'For the observer of human behaviour every scene has its interest'.
One of the most important shifts in mathematics learning and instruction in the last decades has taken place in the conception of the subject matter, changing from a perspective of mathematics as composed of concepts and skills to be learned, to a new one emphasizing the mathematical modelling of the reality (De Corte, 2004). This shift has had, as it is to be expected, an impact on classroom processes, and changed instructional settings and practices.
Instructional explanations, the object of study in the present work, are an interesting topic in that landscape, since they continue to be a typical form of classroom discourse, especially −but no exclusively−when new contents are introduced to the students (e.g. Leinhardt, 2001; Perry, 2000; Wittwer & Renkl, 2008). Consequently, good teachers are also supposed to be good explainers, independently whether they are the main speaker, or play the role of moderator in exchange between students (e.g. Charalambous, Hill, & Ball, 2011; Danielson, 1996; Inoue, 2009).
Despite the central role that instructional explanations play in classroom practices, current instructional quality models, which describe how effective teaching practices should look like, do not consider instructional explanations as a key element (Danielson, 1996; Klieme, Lipowsky, Rakoczy, & Ratzka, 2006; Pianta & Hamre, 2009). Moreover, aside from a few notable exceptions (Duffy, Roehler, Meloth, & Vavrus, 1986; Leinhardt & Steele, 2005; Perry, 2000), instructional explanations have not been investigated empirically within other traditions either. Thus, there is scarce of empirical work about instructional explanations and their potential contribution to promote students’ learning.
The purpose of the present work is to examine instructional explanations from a theoretical perspective as well as empirically, in order to characterize them and investigate their association with students’ learning outcomes. The underlying theoretical framework chosen to organize the study is the one proposed by Leinhardt (2001) with some adaptations according to pertinent complementary literature (Drollinger-Vetter & Lipowsky, 2006; Leinhardt & Steele, 2005).
The empirical work of this dissertation was carried out in the context of the project “Analysis of mathematic lessons” (FONIDE 209) funded by the Chilean Ministry of Education during 2007. This study, in turn, was embedded in the international extension of the research project the ‘‘Quality of instruction, learning, and mathematical understanding’’ carried out between 2000 and 2006 by the German Institute for International Educational Research (DIPF) in Frankfurt, Germany, and the University of Zurich in Switzerland (e.g. Klieme & Reusser, 2003; Klieme et al., 2006). According to the design of the original project, the study considers the inclusion of different perspectives, namely, teachers, students and external observers, by means of questionnaires, tests and classroom observation protocols.
The examination of instructional explanations in this dissertation begins in chapter 2 with the review of relevant literature and introduction of the theoretical background underpinning the study of instructional explanations. This theoretical review comprises three subsections, the first one describing the evolution of the process-product-paradigm into the actual instructional quality models that are presented in a next step. The second subsection includes a detailed theoretical presentation of explanations and instructional explanations, addressing the main theoretical issues and giving examples of the few empirical works about instructional explanations found in the literature. Finally, the third subsection with the description of Chilean teaching practices in order to contextualize the study.
Chapter 3 presents the research questions and lists the associated work hypotheses that are investigated throughout this work. Chapter 4 includes the methodological aspects of the work, indicating the description of the sample, design of the study, the methods used the gather the data and the analyses chosen to answer the proposed research questions.
Chapter 5 contains the presentation of results, which are organized by research question, starting with the results from quantitative analyses and continuing with the results from qualitative analyses. This chapter closes with a general summary of the results organized according to the central themes of the study. Finally, chapter 6 concludes with a discussion of the link between the results and the instructional explanations literature and research, or lack thereof, that originally motivated the research questions addressed in this study. This chapter finishes with a discussion of the limitations of the study and the implications of its results, as well as an examination of areas where the research on instructional explanations can be fruitfully expanded in the future.
Critical Theory is the key-word representing all the universe of thought commonly known as „Frankfurt School”. Within it, Theodor Wiesengrund Adorno and Herbert Marcuse are not so far each other, as instead are Max Horkheimer and Marcuse – considering what I in this paper define as the conservative turn of the director of the Institut für Sozialforschung. Whereas Adorno refuses any engagement in the political and lives as an obsession the theory-praxis relation, Marcuse is closer to a certain critical Marxism and to the student movements of Sixities and Seventhies. The crucial issue of the theory-praxis relation comes back clearly in the distance between Marcuse and the other two maîtres à penser, about their judgment on the ’68 movement.
It is widely thought that the international community, taken as a whole, is required to take action to prevent terrorism. Yet, what each state is required to do in this project is unclear and contested. This article examines a number of bases on which we might assign responsibilities to conduct counterterrorist operations to states. I argue that the ways in which other sorts of responsibilities have been assigned to states by political philosophers will face significant limitations when used to assign the necessary costs of preventing terrorism. I go on to suggest that appealing to the principle of fairness—which assigns obligations on the basis of benefits received from cooperative endeavours—may be used to make up the shortfall, despite this principle having received relatively little attention in existing normative accounts of states’ responsibilities.
The Methodological seminar was conducted by the scientific journal “Philosophy of Education” (Institute of Higher Education, National Academy of Educational Sciences of Ukraine). The participants of the seminar were Prof. Panos Eliopoulos (University of Peloponnese, Greece), Lyudmyla Gorbunova, Mykhailo Boychenko, Olga Gomilko, Mariia Kultaieva, Volodymyr Kovtunets, Sergiy Kurbatov, Anna Laktionova, Tetiana Matusevych, Natalia Radionova, Iryna Stepanenko, Maya Trynyak and Viktor Zinchenko. On March 30, 2016, a methodological seminar was conducted at the Institute of Higher Education NAES of Ukraine. This seminar was devoted to the discussion of educational problems in the area of mass culture, and relative opportunities for the development of individuality. The report «Mass culture, education and the perspective of individuality» was made by Panos Eliopulos, professor of Peloponnese University, a member of journal’s «Філософія освіти. Philosophy of Education” editorial board. The scientists from the Institute of Higher Education, Institute of Philosophy of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Skovoroda National Pedagogical University of Kharkiv participated in this event. Designated issues were observed primarily from the point of view of the Frankfurt School representatives, as well as representatives of modern critical philosophy of education and critical pedagogy. It was emphasized that T.Adorno’s ideas and ideas of other Frankfurt School members, which were developed in the middle of the last century, continue to be relevant in current socio-cultural contexts. The technical rationalism which became the rationalism of dominance in the context of technological civilization, could not provide the way toward the liberation of man and the development of his or her individuality. Market society with its instrumental rationality leads to homogenization and standardization of mass culture and as a result, we have a semi-education, leading to destruction of personality and social pathologies. The panelists agreed that semi-education reflects the crisis of ideals of education and training as far as a suspension of human emancipation process. Due to suspension of the creative process of a person formation, replacing it by the processes of stereotyping based on mimetic rationality, culture itself loses creative potential. The process of degradation of education and culture in the semi-education eventually leads to its destruction at theoretical level and the elaboration of the practice of anti-education. Only through returning of the individual and maintaining his or her social importance due to the tools of holistic education it is possible to overcome such stereotyping. For Frankfurt School members, and those who share their ideals, true education in its meta-theoretical sense becomes the important factor, contributing to the emancipation of society and individual. This idea is particularly important in the context of contemporary challenges and threats from instrumentalization of approaches to the process of transformation of the Ukrainian culture and education.
Telling and selling literary fiction in early Malay language newspapers in colonial Indonesia
(2016)
When newspapers in the colloquial Malay language appeared in the Dutch East Indies in the middle of the nineteenth century, they did more than just publish news reports and advertisements. They also created a new platform for the telling and distribution of literary fiction. In effect, literary texts soon played an important role in the vernacular print media. The first part of this article analyses the attraction of newspaper literature from the perspective of both the reader and the editor in general and gives a survey of the various forms of literary genres which can be found in newspapers in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. In the second part, one particular serialized novel will be discussed in detail to demonstrate how the mode of publication also influenced the way stories were told.