SwePub
Sök i SwePub databas

  Utökad sökning

Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Hamza Karim) "

Sökning: WFRF:(Hamza Karim)

  • Resultat 1-10 av 81
Sortera/gruppera träfflistan
   
NumreringReferensOmslagsbildHitta
1.
  • Bravo, L, et al. (författare)
  • 2021
  • swepub:Mat__t
  •  
2.
  • 2021
  • swepub:Mat__t
  •  
3.
  • Tabiri, S, et al. (författare)
  • 2021
  • swepub:Mat__t
  •  
4.
  • A. Manneh, Ilana, et al. (författare)
  • Progression in action for developing chemical knowledge
  • Annan publikation (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • In this paper, we discuss the well-known teaching challenge of how to provide undergraduate students with basic chemistry knowledge without making them experience these basics as meaningless and unintelligible. First, we situate the challenge in a classic dilemma: should we teach the necessary basic facts before the chemical explanations or should the explanations be taught before or in parallel to these facts? Here we draw on examples from interviews with graduate students reflecting on their experiences regarding their studies at the undergraduate level. Second, we suggest a way out of the dilemma, through a shift in perspective from the typical progression of facts and explanations towards a purpose and activity-based progression. We conclude with a discussion of implications of such a shift for university chemistry education together with suggestions for future research.
  •  
5.
  • A. Manneh, Ilana, 1970- (författare)
  • Supporting Learning and Teaching of Chemistry in the Undergraduate Classroom
  • 2019
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • There is agreement in research about the need to find better ways of teaching chemistry to enhance students’ understanding. This thesis aims to contribute to the understanding of how we better support teaching and learning of undergraduate chemistry to make it meaningful and intelligible for students from the outset. The thesis is concerned with examining the interactions between student, specific content and teacher in the undergraduate chemistry classroom; that is, the processes making up the three relations of the didactic triangle. The data consists of observations of students and tutors during problem-solving activities in an introductory chemistry course and interviews with graduate students.Systematic analyses of the different interactions between the student, the chemistry content, and the tutor are made using the analytical tool of practical epistemology analysis. The main findings of the thesis include detailed insights into how undergraduate chemistry students deal with newly encountered content together with didactic models and concrete suggestions for improved teaching and for supporting continuity and progression in the undergraduate chemistry classroom. Specifically, I show how students deal with the chemistry content through a complex interaction of knowledge, experiences, and purposes on different levels invoked by both students and tutors as they interact with each other. Whether these interactions have a positive or negative effect on students’ learning depends on the nature of knowledge, experiences and purposes that were invoked. Moreover, the tutor sometimes invoked other purposes than the ones related to the task at hand for connecting the activity to the subject matter in general. These purposes were not always made continuous with the activity which resulting in confusion among students. The results from these analyses were used for producing hypotheses and models that could support continuity and progression during the activity. The suggested models aim to make the content more manageable and meaningful to students, enabling connections to other experiences and purposes, and helping teachers and tutors to analyze and reflect on their teaching. Moreover, a purpose- and activity-based progression is suggested that gives attention to purposes in chemistry education other than providing explanations of chemical phenomena. The aim of this ‘progression in action’ is to engage students in activities were they can see the meaning of chemical concepts and ideas through their use to accomplish different chemical tasks. A general conclusion is that detailed knowledge about the processes of teaching and learning is important for providing adequate support to both undergraduate students and university teachers in the chemistry classroom.
  •  
6.
  • A. Manneh, Ilana, et al. (författare)
  • The role of anthropomorphisms in students’ reasoning about chemical structure and bonding
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: Asia-Pacific Forum on Science Learning and Teaching. - 1609-4913. ; 19:2
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Anthropomorphisms are widespread at all levels of the educational system even among science experts. This has led to a shift in how anthropomorphisms are viewed in science education, from a discussion of whether they should be allowed or avoided towards an interest in their role in supporting students’ understanding of science. In this study we examine the role of anthropomorphisms in supporting students’ understanding of chemistry. We analyze examples from undergraduate students’ discussions during problem-solving classes through the use of practical epistemology analysis (PEA). Findings suggest that students invoked anthropomorphisms alongside technical relations which together produced more or less chemically appropriate explanations. Also, anthropomorphisms constitute potentially productive points of departure for rendering students’ explanations more chemically appropriate. The implications of this study refer to the need to deal with anthropomorphisms explicitly and repeatedly as well as to encourage explicit connections between different parts of the explanation - teleological as well as causal.
  •  
7.
  • A. Manneh, Ilana, 1970-, et al. (författare)
  • Tutor-student interaction in undergraduate chemistry : a case of learning to make relevant distinctions of molecular structures for determining oxidation states of atoms
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: International Journal of Science Education. - : Informa UK Limited. - 0950-0693 .- 1464-5289. ; 40:16, s. 2023-2043
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • In this study, we explore the issues and challenges involved in supporting students’ learning to discern relevant and critical aspects of determining oxidation states of atoms in complex molecules. We present a detailed case of an interaction between three students and a tutor during a problem-solving class, using the analytical tool of practical epistemology analysis (PEA). The results show that the ability to make relevant distinctions between the different parts of a molecule for solving the problem, even with the guidance of the tutor, seemed to be challenging for students. These shifts were connected to both purposes that were specific for solving the problem at hand, and additional purposes for general learning of the subject matter, in this case how to assign oxidation states in molecules. The students sometimes could not follow the additional purposes introduced by the tutor, which made the related distinctions more confusing. Our results indicate that in order to provide adequate support and guidance for students the tutor needs to consider how to sequence, move between, and productively connect the different purposes introduced in a tutor-student interaction. One way of doing that is by first pursuing the purposes for solving the problem and then successively introduce additional, more general purposes for developing students’ learning of the subject matter studied. Further recommendations drawn from this study are discussed as well.
  •  
8.
  • Acher, Andrés, et al. (författare)
  • Teaching Practices in Preservice Science Teacher Education
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: Electronic Proceedings of the ESERA 2017 Conference. - Dublin, Ireland : Dublin City University. - 9781873769843 ; , s. 1903-1914
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Recent efforts to design and study Pre-service Science Teacher Education have focused on engaging future teachers in teaching practices. This focus on practices comes with an explicit intention to blend aspects of knowledge and doing that has been historically separate in other efforts to teach novice learners practical aspects of their profession. This intention brings particular challenges to EU preservice teacher preparation programs that need to reconsider how to incorporate aspects of practices into their science education courses. These challenges not only emerge from the novelty and interrelated nature of these practices, but also from lack of clear ways of articulating what these practices are and look like across international teacher educational contexts. This paper brings together four EU studies and an international discussant that explore possibilities to embrace and respond to these challenges and being a cross-contextual conversation about science teacher education. 
  •  
9.
  •  
10.
  • Almqvist, Jonas, et al. (författare)
  • Didactical Dilemmas in a Research and School Development Project
  • 2019
  • Ingår i: ECER-conference, Hamburg, 3-6 September 2019.
  • Konferensbidrag (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • In this paper, we will present a study of development dialogues between researchers and practitioners in a Swedish upper secondary school. In working with this project we have used and further developed an approach, inspired by the work of Kathleen Armour (Armour, 2014; Casey et al., 2016), that we have named Dialogue for Didactic Development (Almqvist et al., 2016; Almqvist et al., 2017; Olin et al., 2017; Olin et al. 2018). This is a method which was enacted and developed in a book project (Almqvist et al., 207) and which is now used in a large school development project in a Swedish municipality. The aim of the presentation is to describe and discuss didactical knowledge produced by researchers and practitioners together. The idea of didactic inquiry emphasizes both researchers and teachers as crucial actors in development of disciplinary knowledge about teaching (Carlgren, 2012; Ingerman & Wickman, 2015; Ko, 2018; Wickman, 2015). In our study, we highlight the notion that researchers’ and practitioners’ mutual knowledge production may have consequences for both practices. To be able do this, we turn to previous didactical research built on pragmatism, namely, the cooperative engineering and the didactic modeling approaches (cf. Hamza et al., 2018; Joffredo-Le Brun et al., 2018; Sensevy et al., 2013; Wickman et al, 2018). In our work, we have combined this line of didactical research with theories, methodologies and results from the field of action research (Almqvist et al., 2016; Almqvist et al., 2017; Olin et al., 2017; Olin et al. 2018). Action research contributes to this in many ways, but especially in its interest in changes of practices and what is at stake for the participants in collaborative work (cf. Edwards-Groves et al., 2016). The combination of these approaches makes it possible to study teachers’ and school leaders’ practice. In this work, the dialogue between participants (both practitioners and researchers) is central, both as a base for development and as a unit of analysis. Meetings between practitioners and researchers are being arranged and developed in the project. One ambition is to create knowledge in the intersection between the two fields of action research and didactics, two fields that are both interested in the development of the teacher profession and school development. If and how the collaboration between researchers and teachers may occur is, in this perspective, not an uncontested area of knowledge, and depends on underlying views of theory and practice as well as how professional learning may be framed (Carlgren, 2012; Hamza et al, 2018). Thus, one crucial question in development work is how the relation between the participating actors in a practice is constituted. Hence, the basic idea of the project is to use research and practice in reflection on and development of concrete didactic dilemmas. In our previous studies in the project, we have concentrated on the two forms of recognition identified by Ricœur, namely recognition of oneself and the notion of mutual recognition between participants (Almqvist et al., 2016; Olin et al., 2017; Olin et al. 2018). In this paper we focus on the third form of recognition, namely recognition of something. We understand this as the didactical dilemmas recognized by the practitioners in the project. Method The empirical material analyzed in this study is produced in a research and development project in Landskrona, a municipality in the southern part of Swedish. The project centers on school development on the basis of teaching challenges. In the very center of the work are didactical dilemmas identified and described by practitioners. These dilemmas are written as cases by the practitioners, describing the problem that they have identified, together with a description of how the dilemma is handled by them in practice. Three experts (researchers and teachers) from different fields contribute with comments on the case from their different perspectives. The comment is based on the case and has to be of a reasoning nature. It can, for example, be about (1) Strengthening: The arguments and points presented by the case author are highlighted, confirmed and discussed. (2) Supplementing: The comment points to things that may be missing in the description of the case and complements additional aspects of how the dilemma has been dealt with in other contexts. (3) Problematizing: The starting points on which the case is based are challenged and nuanced. In this way, the commentary is about changing focus and suggesting alternative ways of understanding the current dilemma. A collaborating author (researcher) pulls together and summarizes the case and the different comments, and finally, the practitioner discusses and reflects on the comments. We see the last section of each dialogue as very central. This is where the practitioner’s voice and agency become most evident in the dialogue. The empirical material consists of eleven didactical development dialogues organized in eleven chapters in a forthcoming anthology. For the study presented in this paper, we have made a qualitative analysis of the chapters, focusing on the practitioners’ dilemmas. More specifically, we have concentrated on the last section of the case descriptions, analyzing the knowledge that is expressed in practitioners’ reflections about their own development based on their case description and the three comments they have received. Expected Outcomes In the analysis of the dialogues, we have found three categories of dilemmas, with sub-categories. These correspond very well with the three different kinds of relations expressed in the didactical triangle, namely teacher-student, teacher-content and student-content. Our findings about practitioners’ identification and handling of didactic dilemmas are the following. First, the teachers handle dilemmas related to the relation between teacher and student. This concern issues such as individualization while working with large heterogenic student groups, teaching students to become independent, teachers’ and students’ respective responsibilities in the classroom, and how to act in and change the school system in order to enhance the prerequisites for teaching. Secondly, the teachers handle dilemmas related to the relationship between teacher and educational content. They select, opt out and organize educational content and teaching method, teach study technique and hand out homework. Thirdly, teachers handle dilemmas related to the relationship between student and educational content, which means that they handle dilemmas concerning for example students’ difficulties to understand a task or a content of some kind and students’ different prerequisites for learning. The study indicates that the researchers and practitioners who are participating in the development dialogues mutually contribute to the construction of knowledge. The dilemmas that the teachers identify are in a way very general, but they are also specific and situational in the sense that they concern the teachers’ work in specific classrooms. In development dialogues, teachers and researcher contribute with new ways of understanding and dealing with didactical dilemmas. This becomes very obvious when reading and analyzing the concluding remarks made by the practitioners. References Almqvist, J., Hamza, K., Olin, A. (2016). Didactical investigations for professional development. Paper presented at ECER in Dublin, August 22-26 Almqvist, J; Hamza, K. & Olin, A. (Eds.)(2017). Undersöka och utveckla undervisning [Investigating and Developing Teaching]. Lund: Studentlittteratur. Armour, K.(Ed.)(2014). Pedagogical cases in physical education and youth sport. Oxon: Routledge. Casey, A.; Goodyear, V. & Armour, K. (Eds.)(2016). Digital technologies and learning in physical education. Pedagogical cases. Oxon: Routledge. Carlgren, I. (2012). The learning study as an approach for “clinical” subject matter didactic research. International Journal for Lesson and Learning Studies, 1(2), 126-139. Edwards-Groves, C.; Olin, A & Karlberg-Granlund, G. (2016). Partnership and recognition in action research: understanding the practices and practice architectures for participation and change. Educational Action Research, 24(3), 321-333. Hamza, K., Palm, O., Palmqvist, J., Piqueras, J., & Wickman, P.-O. (2018). Hybridization of practices in teacher-researcher collaboration. European Educational Research Journal, 17(1), 170-186 Ingerman, A., & Wickman, P.-O. (2015). Towards a teachers' professional discipline: Shared Responsibility for didactic models in research and practice. In P. Burnard, B.-M. Apelgren & N. Cabaroglu (Eds.), Transformative teacher research (pp. 167-179). Rotterdam: Sense Publishers. Joffredo-Le Brun, S.; Morellato, M.; Sensevy, G. & Quilio, S. (2018). Cooperative engineering as a joint action. European Educational Research Journal, 17(1), 187-208. Ko, P.Y. (2018): Beyond labels: what are the salient features of lesson study and learning study?, Educational Action Research. Published online 11 October 2018. Olin, A., Almqvist, J & Hamza, K. (2017). Didactics, dialogue and development. Paper presented at the ECER conference, August 22-25, 2017. Olin, A., Lenzen, B & Sensevy, G (2018). Professional development and recognition. Paper presented in the double symposium Comparative Didactic Analyses of Science Education and Physical Education and Health in Sweden, Switzerland and France, at ECER in Bolzano. Sensevy G, Forest D, Quilio S, et al. (2013) Cooperative engineering as a specific design-based research. ZDM – The International Journal on Mathematics Education 45(7): 1031–1043. Wickman, P.-O. (2015). Teaching learning progressions: An international perspective. In N. G. Lederman & S. K. Abell (Eds.), Handbook of Research on Science Education (2nd ed., pp. 145-163). New York: Routledge. Wickman, P.-O., Hamza, K., & Lundegård, I. (20
  •  
Skapa referenser, mejla, bekava och länka
  • Resultat 1-10 av 81
Typ av publikation
tidskriftsartikel (29)
konferensbidrag (22)
bokkapitel (9)
annan publikation (6)
samlingsverk (redaktörskap) (4)
doktorsavhandling (4)
visa fler...
bok (1)
forskningsöversikt (1)
licentiatavhandling (1)
visa färre...
Typ av innehåll
refereegranskat (51)
övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt (26)
Författare/redaktör
Hamza, Karim (37)
Hamza, Karim, 1967- (13)
Hamza, Karim M. (10)
Lopes, L. (5)
Losada, M. (5)
Romano, M. (5)
visa fler...
Davies, E. (5)
Martin, J. (5)
Aytac, E (5)
Davies, RJ (5)
Hompes, R (5)
Lakkis, Z (5)
Shaikh, (5)
Tsarkov, P (5)
Silva, M. (5)
Moore, R. (5)
Russ, J. (5)
Sharma, N. (5)
Singh, R. (5)
Nowak, K. (5)
Costa, M. (5)
Patel, P. (5)
Khan, A. (5)
Abate, E. (5)
Lee, M (5)
Ali, M (5)
Ali, S (5)
Salem, H (5)
Shah, S (5)
Desai, A. (5)
Evans, J. (5)
Young, R. (5)
Sharma, P. (5)
Abdalla, M. (5)
Santos, R. (5)
Conti, L. (5)
Sherif, A. (5)
Bhalla, A (5)
Green, S (5)
Pereira, R (5)
Wójcik, Andrzej (5)
Khan, T. (5)
Smith, L (5)
Smith, J. (5)
Cox, D (5)
Vitali, A (5)
Michel, M (5)
Emile, S (5)
Ghosh, D (5)
Lawday, S (5)
visa färre...
Lärosäte
Stockholms universitet (56)
Uppsala universitet (14)
Göteborgs universitet (11)
Karolinska Institutet (10)
Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan (6)
Malmö universitet (2)
visa fler...
Högskolan i Halmstad (1)
Linköpings universitet (1)
Mittuniversitetet (1)
visa färre...
Språk
Engelska (67)
Svenska (14)
Forskningsämne (UKÄ/SCB)
Samhällsvetenskap (71)
Naturvetenskap (4)
Medicin och hälsovetenskap (2)
Humaniora (2)

År

Kungliga biblioteket hanterar dina personuppgifter i enlighet med EU:s dataskyddsförordning (2018), GDPR. Läs mer om hur det funkar här.
Så här hanterar KB dina uppgifter vid användning av denna tjänst.

 
pil uppåt Stäng

Kopiera och spara länken för att återkomma till aktuell vy