La importancia del lenguaje no verbal en una presentación #infografia #infographic — TIC y Formación

7 10 2019

Hola: Una infografía sobre la importancia del lenguaje no verbal en una presentación. Vía Universia Un saludo La importancia del lenguaje no verbal en una presentación The post La importancia del lenguaje no verbal en una presentación #infografia #infographic appeared first on TICs y Formación.

La importancia del lenguaje no verbal en una presentación #infografia #infographic — TICs y Formación




No more homework for children

24 09 2019


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«Education Ministry.  I need your help because I feel overwhelmed about the great quantity of homework that my children have to do each day. I agree it´s very important the excellence but I consider that children need physical activities, play some sports, be with parents and friends and do social activities out the school to have a better quality life. The real situation in my house is that my children have a life turning around homework. In some opportunities we have problems to bring them to the doctor. Frequently, homework are difficult. Many days I have worked until midnight to do them» (MEN, 2015).

This is a mother who, desperate, demands help to the Ministry of Education of Colombia. It is a real case that we can read in the website of the Ministry and could be the situation of many parents in the country. This situation doesn´t occur only in Colombia. According to Simplico (2005, p.138), parents have argued that their “children are spending too much time doing homework which has no impact on their learning”.

There are arguments in favor of the importance to assign homework to the children, but there also are arguments against. Next, I’ll present some opinions taken from research papers and parent’s blogs, and I´ll contrast the arguments in favor with those against homework.

However, The Convention on the Rights of the Child (UN, 1990) says: «States Parties recognize the right of the child to rest and leisure, to engage in play and recreational activities appropriate to the age of the child and to participate freely in cultural life and the arts». I think homework are not allowing the last principle. In consequence, children should not have homework.

Arguments against homework

1. Point of view of parents

There are parents worried about the time they need to help their children and they would like to have more free time for their children in order to do different activities. Many of them consider homework limit family participation in other activities. A survey doing by the University Adolfo Ibáñez on Chile, shown more than 85% of parents’ surveyed report their children have less than 10 hours per week to rest. Also they declared they want more free time with their children (Lincovil, 2016).

In the IB Community Blog a mother wrote, «Sometimes we spend three hours working in homework of my daughter«. Other affirmed, «When adults come home after a working day, we don´t want to continue working during the night… I really believe every teacher of my children’s school assigns homework because that is the policy» (IB World, 2017).

Parents who have battled with more and more homework night after night could «is (sic) homework just a headache—another distraction from family time and downtime, already diminished by the likes of music and dance lessons, sports practices, and part-time jobs?» (Bempechat, 2019).

Parents reported in a survey they help their children with homework: 43% of them admitted to having completed some homework for them (Young, 2010 & McClure, 2018 in ProCon.org, 2018).

The child and teen’s psychologist, Eva Dauelsberg, said that the familiar relationships suffer and there are fights between parents and children for doing homework. Not only parents don’t know the content of currently curriculum, but also they spend little time to rest with children. This situation «produces in some person, adult or children, anxiety. We are talking about mental health and these are damaging it» (Lincovil, 2016).

2. Point of view of children

Children also have been consulted about homework. Cameron and Bartel (2008 in Wright, 2010) analyzed children’s attitudes about homework trough a questionnaire asked by 2.072 children. They found that by grade four, 25% of the children were very resistant to homework. That resistance was caused by the time they need to do homework and children’s attitudes were more negative when homework consisted of the completion of a class assignment, somewhat less negative toward studying for a test, and less negative toward drill and practice. Other poll of high school students found that 59% thought they had too much homework, 43% of them said that homework was their greatest source of stress (Fratello, 2017 in ProCon, 2018).

Excessive homework leads to corruption at school: 90% of middle school students and 67% of high school students admitted they had copied someone else’s homework, and 43% of college students engaged in unauthorized collaboration to do them (AdCouncil, 2018 in ProCon.org, 2018).

The American Educational Research Association says that not only homework replace out social experience, outdoors recreation, and creative activities, but also they take time that should be devoted to sleep. «Homework are not meeting the basic needs of children and adolescents» (Kohn, 2006 in ProCon.org, 2018).

     3. Point of view of experts

Professor Cooper and his collaborators (2006) conclude that there are not strong evidences to associate doing homework with better grades in standardized tests and recommended to do more research. Recent articles, like that written by Bempechat (2018), concludes the same, «the relationship between homework and academic achievement in the elementary-school years is not yet established«. Homework is not the most effective tool for children to apply new information (Coleman, 2018 in ProCon, 2018).

Van Voorhis (2004 in Wright, 2010) reported that many students at all grade levels have an excessive amount of homework and do more homework each night than the recommendation suggested by experts. The psychologist Dauelsberg says lack of resting time is a frequent complaint of parents and children, she has watched children stressed, tired and with physical pain like stomachache (Lincovil, 2016).

According to researcher in Education Jaime Retamal (Lincovil, 2016), the impact of homework is low and they are demotivating children to study. Maybe in the past homework could have justification, but not today.  He says: «there are a social and cultural problem around the world, homework punishes the social deprivest students because their parents can’t help them to solve doubts«. A study published in the International Journal of Education and Social Science agrees with Retamal’s position. It concludes that homework increases social inequality because it «potentially serves as a mechanism to further advantage those students who already experience some privilege in the school system while further disadvantaging those who may already be in a marginalized position (Lutz & Jayaram, 2015 in ProCon.org, 2018).

Arguments in favor of homework

1. Point of view of parents

Many parents consider homework as a very important activity to learn and fill children´s time at home. A qualitative research by Xu and Corno (1998 in Wright, 2010) found that parents and teachers share opinions about the purposes of doing homework that are to reinforce school learning and to develop abilities and skills in children. According to Kukk, Rajalaane, Liis Rei, & Piht (2015), parents help their children with homework, they accept homework as important activity that reinforce the curriculum and help children to organize their time.

A mother published in The IB Community Blog(IB World, 2017) that «homework are really important parts (sic[1]) of some curricula because help children to review the job done at class. Also allow parents to know what their siblings are learning at school». Other mother in this blog wrote, «Homework to do at home, should be mandatory«.

2. Point of view of experts

Among teachers, they have different conceptions and practices about homework for children. Xu and Corno (2003 in Wright, 2010) found out that teachers who are in favor of homework believe those are effective tools for improving academic success because homework permits students to broaden and deepen contents.  These teachers do not recognize the necessities of children related with their free time and they are convinced that homework are important either to reinforce and retain the knowledge learned at classrooms or to complement the cognitive processes. Teachers in the earlier grades assign homework also to foster responsibility and perseverance. They think the more homework, the better student’s children become.

According to the portal ProCon.org (2018), homework improve student achievements, specially grades, test results, and the likelihood to attend college. The portal refers the research of Maltese, Tai & Fan (2012 in ProCon.org, 2018) related with achievements of students in math. Students who spent between 31 and 90 minutes each day on homework «scored about 40 points higher on the SAT-Mathematics subtest than their peers, who reported spending no time on homework each day, on average«. Homework, as repetitive tasks to train for a standardized test, have good results.

A second argument in favor of homework is that they help reinforce learning and develop good study habits and skills. Kurtus (2012 in ProCon.org, 2018) says students remind only 50% of the information of the class, so they need to apply it to really learn.

And a third argument is homework allow parents to be involved with their children’s learning. Homework can also help parents to detect any learning disability of their children, allowing them to get help (Cooper, 2016 in ProCon.org, 2018).

To conclude these ideas, I can say in general homework are repetitive and long, they are not enough clear and they need help of adults to be performed. Furthermore, homework is a mean to know what children have learned and what difficulties they have.

Conclusion

Debates over the impacts of homework that teachers ask students to complete at home have been doing since the late 19th century, and today are debatable the possible positive and negative impacts on family life and children’s well-being.

As we can see, there are arguments in favor of homework. Parents and some experts believe homework reinforce the knowledge learned at school, develop abilities and allow to increase achievements in standardized test. However, there are strong arguments against homework that I synthetized in two: First, the lack of free time to do other activities and rest properly causes resistance to do homework. This causes stress, demotivation and familiar conflicts. And second, much homework are doing by parents, children have unauthorized help and in some cases, they copy them. They´re starting to live the corruption, and this isn´t a good value to learn.

According to the National Parent Teacher Association and National Education Association, homework in grades K through 2 don’t have to exceed 20-30 minutes per day, and they have to be between 30 and 60 minutes for students in grades 3 through 6 (Van Voorhis, 2004 in Wright, 2010). Other experts recommend assign short exercises of 10 minutes’ duration with clear and realistic objectives. Those exercises should be reviewed and feed backed by teachers. A good homework has a clear purpose, an objective known by students and parents and the possibility that children do it by themselves (Lincovil, 2016).

Children need time to live as children but great quantity of homework doesn’t permit it. Having good growing requires children to play because playing allows them to be creative, to explore, imagine situations, socialize and learn about not academic issues. When I talk about play, I mainly refer to the sports or playing musical instruments. In addition, I also refer to do puzzles, Lego or other arming games. Either they can run and jump with neighbors, friends, siblings, or alone if they want, or they could read stories and comics. They should have the opportunity to paint in paper, canvas or tablets. Or, incredibly, children need to get bored. All those activities need free time. When teachers assign too much homework, children do not have enough time to pick other activities to do. Not only do they spend their lives doing homework, but also they do not learn that life has many other dimensions than the academic.

In 2012, a Colombian senator proposed a law project to quit homework in order to children have free time to play. This idea was rejected by the Congress (Lincovil. 2016). The mother of the introductory paragraph received answer of the Education Ministry where it refers to the General Law of Education. This Law gives autonomy to the schools to design and implement their curriculums and to decide how much homework children have to do at home.

References

Benpechat, J. (2019). The Case for (Quality) Homework. Education Next, 19 (1). Retrieved of 

The Case for (Quality) Homework
on August 2019.

Cooper, H.; Robinson, J.C.; Patall, E.A. (2006). Does Homework Improve Academic Achievement? A Synthesis of Research, 1987–2003. Review of Educational Research, 76 (1). Retrieved of https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.3102/00346543076001001 on August 2019.

Kukk, A.; Rajalaane, R.; Liis Rei, M. & Piht, S. (2015). Parents Opinions on Homework in the II Stage of Primary School (Estonian Example). Procedia – Social and Behavioral Sciences 171.

IB World-The IB Community Blog (2017). Tareas para hacer en casa: ¿sí o no?. Retrieved of   http://blogs.ibo.org/blog/2017/06/28/tareas-para-hacer-en-casa-si-o-no/?lang=es on August of 2019.

Lincovil, M.J. (2016). ¿Sirve que los niños hagan tareas? 3 expertos opinan. Portal EligeEducar.cl. Retrieved of  https://eligeeducar.cl/sirve-que-los-ninos-hagan-tareas on August of 2019.

MEN-Ministry of Education (2015). Consulta sobre exceso de tareas. Retrieved of   https://www.mineducacion.gov.co/1759/articles-353131_archivo_pdf_Consulta_sobre_el_exceso_de_tareas.pdf on August of 2019.

ProCon.org (2018). Is Homework beneficial? – Top 3 Pros and Cons. Retrieved of   https://www.procon.org/headline.php?headlineID=005411 on August of 2019.

Simplico, J. (2005). Homework in the 21st Century: The Antiquated and Ineffectual Implementation of a Time Honored Educational Strategy. Education, 126 (1) p1. Retrieved of https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ725164 on August of 2019.

United Nations (1990). Convention on the Rights of the Child. Retrieved of https://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/crc.aspx on August of 2019.

Wright, K.M. (2010). Beliefs of Families, Students, and Teachers Regarding Homework for Elementary-aged Children. Doctoral dissertation presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Tennessee Technological University. Retrieved by Proquest.






El apoyo que brindan las TIC a las actividades escolares

10 08 2019

(desde el punto de vista de los estudiantes)

Para los estudiantes, las TIC juegan un papel importante como apoyo a la realización de actividades del día a día. En una investigación realizada en Suiza en 2015 (1) se consultó a 46 estudiantes de tres escuelas secundarias (entre 3 y 6 estudiantes en grupos focales de 1 hora de duración) acerca de los usos de las TIC en sus prácticas diarias. Los hallazgos no difieren mucho de los encontrados en otras investigaciones (ver Usos en educación superior), pero dado su carácter cualitativo, permiten conocer algunas explicaciones. Estos resultados no se pueden generalizar, pero sí nos ayudan a entender por qué usan las TIC de ciertas formas.

El principal uso de las TIC lo hacen para producir y almacenar textos más fácilmente. Los estudiantes valoran la posibilidad de tener acceso a sus trabajos rápidamente, tomar notas de forma ágil y estructurada, mover textos dentro del documento, reformular ideas y completarlas después. El procesador de texto «es más rápido de usar que el lápiz y el papel».

Otro uso que le dan a las TIC es para apoyar el trabajo en colaboración con sus pares. Los estudiantes valoran herramientas como Dropbox o Google Drive, Snapchat y Facebook y las usan para compartir información con sus compañeros, comentar las tareas y revisarlas en conjunto. Prefieren realizar este tipo de actividades fuera de los LMS institucionales, porque quieren evitar que los profesores lean los productos parciales.

Un último uso corresponde al manejo de información. Al respecto, los estudiantes consideran que deberían utilizar los celulares en el aula para buscar información. Sin embargo, la mayoría de los profesores cree que usan estos dispositivos para ver sus redes sociales y les cuesta saber cuándo los usan con propósitos educativos. En un caso mencionaron a un profesor que promueve el uso de celulares en clase para buscar significados de los conceptos que está tratando, para presentar videos que le faciliten las explicaciones, hacer cálculos o buscar información. Los estudiantes valoran que estos dispositivos son fáciles de llevar, pero prefieren usar los computadores pues el área de la pantalla les permite trabajar varias cosas simultáneamente.

En síntesis: los estudiantes utilizan las TIC en el aula para tomar notas, para compartir información con sus pares y para consultar información.

Referencia: (1) Olofsson, A., Lindberg, O. and Fransson, G. (2018), «Students’ Voices about Information and Communication Technology in Upper Secondary Schools», International Journal of Information and Learning Technology, Vol. 35 No. 2, pp. 82-92. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJILT-09-2017-0088





¿Usan internet para recrearse y no para aprender?

9 11 2014

Según el estudio Contexto escolar y social del aprendizaje en Colombia (los resultados aún no aparecen publicados en la página del ICFES),  los estudiantes usan internet para ocio y no para estudiar. No es un resultado que sorprenda. La experiencia trabajando en educación y el testimonio frecuente de muchos maestros así lo sugiere: los estudiantes entran a internet a jugar, a compartir en redes sociales o a ver videos. Todo ello con fines recreativos y con poca frecuencia para apoyar su aprendizaje.

En 2011 se publicó el estudio La generación interactiva en Iberoamérica 2010 (Bringé, Sadaba y Tolsá, 2011) en el que los resultados para Colombia muestran que niños y adolescentes entran a internet principalmente para visitar páginas web, como se puede ver en la siguiente tabla:

Usos de internet por escolares en Colombia 1

Usos de internet por escolares en Colombia 1

Usos de internet por escolares en Colombia 2

Usos de internet por escolares en Colombia 2

Usos de internet por escolares en Colombia 3

Usos de internet por escolares en Colombia 3

Fuente de la tabla

Los niños y adolescentes que participaron en este estudio (7.110 estudiantes colombianos mediante encuesta online) usan Internet «para visitar páginas web», lo que no dice mucho. Lo interesante es ver el detalle de lo que hacen en esas páginas, que es lo que muestran los demás datos: entran a ver o compartir videos (no sabemos si algunos sean educativos), a chatear (puede ser sobre las tareas que estén realizando), a redes sociales (también podría ser para hacer tareas), a jugar (hay muchos juegos educativos), etc.

También dicen Bringué y sus colegas (2011, p 133):

Si hay algo que caracteriza a la Generación Interactiva, a la luz de los datos, es su preferencia mayoritaria por el ocio y el entretenimiento mediado por la tecnología.

Según el estudio del ICFES los niños y adolescentes que presentaron las pruebas SABER (más de un millón cien mil estudiantes) dejan claro que el uso de internet tiene poca relación con temas educativos (al menos es la conclusión del titular de prensa de El Tiempo).

¿Por qué ocurre esto? No lo dicen los estudios, pero podemos aventurarnos a dar algunas respuestas.

Bringué y colegas (2011) indagaron sobre la cantidad de horas que los niños y adolescentes dedican a hacer tareas en sus casas. Estas son las cifras:

Horas semanales dedicadas a hacer tareas

Horas semanales dedicadas a hacer tareas

Es poco tiempo semanal, lo que da pie a  pensar en la primera alternativa para responder a la pregunta por qué no usan internet con fines educativos: porque no lo necesitan. O no les dejan tareas, o no hacen tareas.

¿Y cuánto tiempo dedican a Internet? Casi la misma cantidad de tiempo:

Horas semanales de uso de internet

Horas semanales de uso de internet

Fuente del gráfico

Ahora, supongamos que el tiempo que están en internet lo dedican a actividades educativas. ¿Qué clase de actividades realizan?

En el 2013, Chile aplicó la prueba SIMCE-TIC a una muestra representativa conformada por 11.185 estudiantes de Segundo Medio (décimo grado) con el fin de conocer el nivel de desarrollo de las Habilidades TIC para el Aprendizaje que han alcanzado. Los resultados, según la página de Enlaces (2014) muestran avances en la apropiación de las TIC para usos básicos:

…El 46,9% de los estudiantes se encuentran en un nivel Inicial. En tanto un 51,3% de los estudiantes se encuentran en un nivel Intermedio y un 1,8% en nivel Avanzado. En términos generales, los resultados indican que los estudiantes han logrado las habilidades necesarias para comunicarse con sus pares y buscar información en medios digitales. Sin embargo, las habilidades cognitivas más complejas que implican el procesamiento y generación de información son logradas por un porcentaje muy menor de los estudiantes.

Si se puede generalizar el caso chileno a Latinoamérica, los estudiantes usan internet para acceder a información, pero no tienen las habilidades necesarias para evaluarla, crear nueva información, organizarla, analizarla o integrarla. El gráfico del informe de Enlaces (2013) así lo muestra:

SIMCE TIC 2013

SIMCE TIC 2013

Los resultados anteriores sugieren que en alguna medida los estudiantes usan internet con fines educativos, pero es un uso básico. Me atrevo a pensar que lo hacen para realizar tareas que probablemente resuelven copiando y pegando la información que encontraron en la primera página que les arrojó el buscador (no es una exageración, esto lo encontramos en una investigación con estudiantes de educación superior).

Lo expuesto previamente muestra que  los estudiantes no están alcanzando una adecuada alfabetización informacional, fundamental dentro de las habilidades del Siglo XXI. Esto implica que no se están formando ciudadanos competentes para manejar información, para evaluar si lo que encuentran en las redes o lo que les proveen los medios es confiable o verídico, para generar nuevos productos de conocimiento a partir de diversas fuentes o para solucionar problemas cotidianos que requieran de información. No se está formando, como debiera ser, el pensamiento crítico.

Tenemos parte de la responsabilidad en que los estudiantes no utilicen internet para aprender. Es importante generar ambientes de aprendizaje, proyectos, tareas o actividades que les permitan fortalecer la competencia para manejo de información en todas sus dimensiones. Dejar de lado la asignación de tareas que impliquen repetición o recolección de información y plantear tareas más creativas, de análisis, opinión, diseño, en las que los estudiantes tengan que comunicar sus propias ideas, en distintos formatos (texto, imagen, audio) luego de documentarse en múltiples fuentes de información.

 

Referencias

Bringé, Sadaba y Tolsá (2011). La generación interactiva en Iberoamérica 2010. Consultado el 8 de noviembre de 2014 en http://www.generacionesinteractivas.org/upload/libros/La%20Generacion%20Interactiva%20en%20Iberoamerica%202010.pdf

El Tiempo (2014). Jóvenes colombianos usan computadores para ocio y no para estudiar.Consultado el 8 de noviembre de 2014 en http://www.eltiempo.com/estilo-de-vida/educacion/computadores-y-educacion-en-colombia/14769338

Enlaces (2013). SIMCE TIC. Evaluación de habilidades TIC para el aprendizaje. Resultados nacionales. Consultado el 8 de noviembre de 2014 en http://www.enlaces.cl/tp_enlaces/portales/tpe76eb4809f44/uploadImg/File/2014/documentos/simcetic/Resultados_SIMCE_TIC_2013.pdf

Enlaces (2014). SIMCE TIC  Resultados 2013. Consultado el 8 de noviembre de 2014 en http://www.enlaces.cl/index.php?t=44&i=2&cc=2441&tm=2

 

 





Leer hoy

2 03 2014

Tradicionalmente se ha entendido la lectura como ese proceso de asignarle significado racional a un conjunto de signos (letras, signos de puntuación, de interrogación, números).

Con el paso de los años esta concepción ha ido variando.

Ahora somos conscientes de que el conjunto de signos que se pueden leer no se limita solamente a los verbales mencionados. También leemos estímulos visuales, auditivos y táctiles y les damos sentido. Se lee un libro, pero también se lee un gesto, un movimiento, una situación, un sonido. Es una lectura multimodal.

También reconocemos que al leer se asigna un significado y un sentido no solo racional sino emocional y afectivo. Leemos y sentimos.

Emociones

Se dice que una imagen vale más que mil palabras. Cuánto valdrá entonces una imagen acompañada de texto, de sonido, de textura y por qué no, de olor.

Distintas pruebas estandarizadas internacionales informan que nuestros niños no saben leer. No comprenden lo que leen. Luego su acceso a comprender el mundo en el que viven, representado verbalmente, es limitado.

Es probable que leer multimodalmente les ayude a mejorar la comprensión de su realidad.





12 excelentes bancos de imágenes gratuitos

30 11 2013

See on Scoop.itRecursos y herramientas

Aunque en la categoría de bancos de imágenes hay decenas de opciones para obtener fotos de alta calidad sin tener que preocuparse de derechos de autor, nunca

See on wwwhatsnew.com