İlköğretim Matematik Öğretmenliği Koleksiyonu
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11779/1932
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Browsing İlköğretim Matematik Öğretmenliği Koleksiyonu by Publication Category "Kitap Bölümü - Uluslararası"
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Book Part Book Part Citation - Scopus: 3Promoting Active Learning in Mathematics Teacher Education: the Flipped Classroom Method and Use of Video Content(IGI Global, 2017) Taylan, Rukiye DidemTeacher educators have a responsibility to help prospective teachers in their professional growth. It is important that teacher educators not only teach prospective teachers about benefits of active learning in student learning, but that they also prepare future teachers in using pedagogical methods aligned with active learning principles. This manuscript provides examples of how mathematics teacher educators can promote prospective teachers’ active learning and professional growth by bringing together the Flipped Classroom method with video content on teaching and learning as well as workplace learning opportunities in a pedagogy course. The professional learning of prospective teachers is framed accord- ing to the components of the Pedagogical Content Knowledge (Park & Olive, 2008; Shulman, 1986). Implications for future trends in teacher education are provided.Book Part University Students’ and Teachers’ Beliefs on Foreign Language Learning: a Match or Mismatch? in Marek Krawiec (ed.), Current Issues in Foreign Language Teaching and Learning(2016) Aktekin, Nafiye Çiğdem; Gliniecki Uysal Ayşegül...Book Part Book Part A Dilemma in Turkish Examination System: Open-Ended or Multiple-Choice?(Bialystok: E-BWN Publication, 2017) Birgili, Bengi; Kiraz, ErcanMinistry of National Education (MoNE) in Turkey, expressed the transition to Kazakh Examination System (Haberturk; 2013; Sabah, 2013; TEDMEM, 2013; TRTNews, 2013; Vatan, 2013) in evaluating student success in Turkish schools.Book Part Technology in Assessment(Routledge, 2025) Birgili, Bengi; Chue, Kah LoongGlobally, the evolution of technological trends has inspired the creation of technology-oriented assessments. As these assessments become more ubiquitous in schools, adopting new approaches is vital to ensure that education stays relevant and beneficial to students. Thus, the overall aim of this chapter is to illustrate how assessment processes and tools can be incorporated into future learning-oriented systems, with a particular emphasis on assessment as learning. This chapter will first introduce trajectories in technology-based assessment and highlight current trends in Artificial Intelligence. Second, changes in instructional and assessment approaches will be discussed. As developing metacognitive knowledge and skills is a central aim of assessment as learning, a discussion of metacognition will follow. Third, some recommendations in classroom assessment practices that teachers can undertake will be proposed. Finally, the chapter will conclude with some thoughts on the future intersections between technology and assessment.Book Part How the Cephei E-Course Syllabus Design Was Developed and Implemented(Springer International Publishing, 2022) Kurban, Fell CarolineWhile the digitalization of education has been around since the 1990s, it is only since the Covid-19 pandemic that it has really taken hold in education, when universities were forced to rapidly move online and traditional patterns of teaching were no longer viable. This pushed universities to provide a blended learning environment drawing on technologies that our students, as digital natives, had already been using on a daily basis for some time. However, blended learning is only effective if underpinned by tried and tested learning frameworks—something that many universities were not prepared for when the shift to online learning took place. The Cooperative e-learning Platform for Industrial Innovation (CEPHEI) however, was already prepared and ready for this shift, as from 2017 it had been working on the development of an e-learning platform with the aim of digitizing education while also integrating the reality of professional innovation activities into the context of education according to the demands of industry. To achieve this aim, one of the first phases of the project was to identify key learning frameworks for e-course syllabus design, based on existing research, that could be used to provide recommendations for instructors in the development of their CEPHEI courses. This chapter presents the culmination of this process and provides a framework that can be used by instructors or institutions wishing to design e-learning courses. To make these frameworks tangible for the reader, examples are given throughout the chapter from an undergraduate environmental engineering course in a civil engineering department. © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2022.

